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PLANT TISSUES

Celeste Roderno-Desingaño
Two Major Categories of Plant Tissues

 1. Meristematic Tissue
     A. Apical Meristems
     B. Lateral Meristems

 2. Permanent Tissue
     A. Dermal (Surface Tissue)
     B. Fundamental Tissue (Ground Tissue)
     C. Vascular Tissue
MERISTEMATIC TISSUE
      Composed of immature cells and are regions of active cell
       division.
      Tend to be small, have thin walls and rich in cytoplasm.
      Found in the growing tips of the roots and stem.

A. Apical Meristems
     Responsible for increase in length of the plant body.
     Found on root tips and apical buds

B. Lateral Meristems
      Responsible for increase in girth or diameter
      Ex: Cambium present in woody plants and produce the cork
PERMANENT TISSUE
A. Dermal (Surface Tissue)
       Forms the protective outer
        covering of the plant body
   A.1. Epidermis
          Produce cutin to protect
           plants against loss of water
          Produce root hairs for
           absorption of water and
           minerals
   A.2. Periderm
          Replaces the epidermis
          Constitutes the corky
           outer bark of old trees.
PERMANENT TISSUE   B. Fundamental (Ground Tissue)
                       Used in the production and
                         storage of food and in the
                         support of plant.
                      B.1. Parenchyma
                          Parenchyma on leaves
                            function for
                            photosynthesis
                          Mechanical strength by
                            maintaining turgidity and
                            also store waste products.
                      B.2. Collenchyma
                          Support of stems and
                            adapt themselves to the
                            rapid elongation of leaves.
                      B.3. Sclerenchyma
                          Provides elasticity,
                            flexibility, and rigidity to
                            the plant body forming
                            support.
PERMANENT TISSUE
C. Vascular Tissue
   C.1. Xylem
      Primarily functions for
         the transport of water
         and dissolved substances
         upward in the plant body.

  C.2. Phloem
     Primary functions in the
        transport of organic
        materials such as
        carbohydrates and amino
        acids.
ANIMAL TISSUES
Animal Tissues
   Developed from the primary germ layers of
    the embryo:
       Ectoderm
       Mesoderm
       Endoderm
   There are 4 types of tissues:
       Epithelial tissue
       Connective tissue
       Muscular tissue
       Nervous tissue
I. EPITHELIAL TISSUE
   Made up of continuous sheets of densely packed
    cells, with little space or intercellular material
    between them.
   A basement membrane is usually present.

Functions:
1. Forms the covering or lining of all free body surfaces,
    both internal and external to protect cells from
    mechanical injury and water loss.

2. Some has special functions of absorption, secretion,
    excretion, sensation and respiration.
Classification of Epithelial Tissue
based on Shape and Arrangement of Cells
   Simple squamous –found in the lens of the eye and inner ear

   Stratified squamous – forms the external layer of the skin and
    lines the mouth and pharynx.

   Cuboidal – mostly found lining small ducts and tubules of the
    kidney and the glands

   Simple columnar – found in the trachea, bronchi, digestive tract
    and secrete fluids and absorb digestive food.
II. CONNECTIVE TISSUE
Functions:
     Serves as binding substance
     Provides framework
     Has essential role in transport, protection and repair.

Classification of Connective Tissue
A. Connective Tissue Proper
B. Cartilage
C. Bone
D. Blood (Vascular Tissue)
A. Connective Tissue Proper
                 Very variable but intercellular matrix
                  always contains numerous fibers.

              2 Types of Connective Tissue Proper
              1. Loose Connective Tissue
                 Made up of highly elastic fibers with few
                  scattered thin collagen fibers.
                 This tissue fills the space between
                  organs and serves as packing materials
                  surrounding the elements of other
                  tissues
                 This binds muscle cells together and
                  binds skin to underlying tissues
                 Ex. Adipose tissue, areolar tissue
A. Connective Tissue Proper
2. Dense Connective Tissue
 Made up of thick collagen fibers and
   dark, compressed cells between the
   fiber bundles.

   Functions: (1) for flexibility and
    support, (2) shock absorption and (3)
    reduction of friction.

   Ex. Tendon, ligament, urinary tract
    and collagen
Elastic cartilage – yellow
    B. Cartilage
                                                 2.
                                                      color, greater flexibility and
                                                      elasticity and found in the
   Made up of cartilage cells known as
                                                      external ear, Eustachian
    chondrocytes found in cavities called
                                                      tube and epiglottis
    lacunae
                                                 3.   Fibro cartilage – resembles
   Scattered irregularly in matrix that appears
                                                      a tendon but not covered by
    transparent and homogenous but
                                                      perichondrium
    composed of dense collagen fibers and
    elastic fibers embedded in a rubbery ground
    substance.
   Produced by chondroblast in the process
    called chondrification.
   Provides smooth surfaces and maintain the
    shape of the area.

Types of Cartilage
1.  Hyaline cartilage –nose, larynx, trachea,
    bronchi, ends of ribs and surfaces of
    bones.
C. Bone (Osseous tissue)
                        Has hard, relatively rigid matrix which
                         contains numerous collagen fibers and
                         a surprising amount of water,
                         impregnated with mineral salts such
                         as calcium carbonate and calcium
                         phosphate.

                        Bone is a living tissue with cells called
                         osteocyte and masked collagenous
                         fibers embedded in a matrix containing
                         ostein.

                        Covered with fibrous membrane –
                         periosteum

                        Lines the bone marrow cavity-
                         endosteum

                        Functions: (1) support; (2) protection;
                         (3) assisting for movement and (4)
                         storage of minerals
Classification of Bone According to Shape
1.   Long Bone                       Example:
        Composed of middle          Humerus and Femur bone
         portion, the diaphysis or
         shaft, within which is a
         cavity, and the epiphysis
         or ends of the bone.
2.   Flat Bone                       Example:
        Lacks a bone marrow
                                     Cranial Bone and Scapula bone
         cavity.
3.   Irregular Bone                  Example:
        Neither long nor flat and
                                     Metacarpal and Metatarsal
         also lacks marrow cavity
                                        bone
Osteon or Haversian System-basic unit of bone
   Lamellae                     Canaliculi
     Series of concentric         Minute channels that
      rings or circles of           linked lacunae together
      matrix around a large         which provide routes
      central Haversian             by which nutrients can
      canal                         reach the osteocytes
   Lacunae                         and the removed waste
     Small spaces in
                                    materials
      between the lamellae       Haversian Canals
      which contain the            Central tubes which

      osteocytes                    contain blood vessels
   Osteocyte                       and nerves.
     Bone cell
C. Bone
 Contains bone marrow (Yellow and red
  marrow)
Yellow marrow
 consists of fat cells, blood vessels, and
  a minimal framework of reticular cells
  and fibres.
Red marrow
 consists of numerous blood cells of all
  kinds, as well as the substances from
  which these cells are formed
 The functions of red marrow are (1) the
  formation of red blood cells
  (erythrocytes), blood platelets,
  granulocytes, and to a lesser extent
  monocytes and lymphocytes, and (2)
  the destruction of old (c.120 days),
  worn-out erythrocytes.
D. Blood (Vascular Tissue)
   Consists of cells, matrix and fibers

3 Components of Blood

1. Erythrocyte (RBC)
   small, concave, disc-shaped cells
    that lack nuclei during maturation in
    mammals
   Formed in the bone marrow
   They arise from normally nucleated,
    rapidly dividing connective tissue
    cells of the bone marrow
   Contains hemoglobin
D. VASCULAR TISSUE
2. Leukocyte (WBC)
 Bigger than erythrocyte and
   have large, often irregularly
   shaped nuclei
 Defenses against disease
   and infection
 Act as phagocytes, engulfing
   and destroying bacteria and
   remnants of damaged tissue
   cells
 Produce powerful enzyme

 Lymphocytes –specialized
   cells that play a central role
   in immune reactions by
   producing antibodies.
D. VASCULAR TISSUE
3. Platelets (Thrombocyte)
 Small, non-nucleated,
   colorless, round or oval
   biconcave corpuscle produced
   by a giant cell called
   megakaryocyte found in the
   bone marrow.
 Functions for blood clotting

4. Plasma
 Liquid component of blood.

5. Hemoglobin
 The protein constituent of
   blood
III. MUSCLE TISSUE
    Function: responsible for movement in higher animals,
     heat production and maintenance of posture.

Types of Muscle Tissue
a. Striated or Voluntary Muscle (Skeletal Muscle)
     Has cross-striations (A-I bands) and can be controlled at
      will
     Consists of myofibrils which contains actomyosin.
     Sarcomere-the functional/structural unit of muscle
      contraction
b. Smooth or Involuntary Muscle (Visceral Muscle)
     Spindle-shaped cells which are thickened at the middle
      but tapered towards ends. Without striation and
      responsible for involuntary movements of internal organs

c. Cardiac Muscle
    Striated and branched muscle fibers
    Found exclusively in the heart (myocardium) and is
     involuntary in movement.
IV. NERVOUS TISSUE
    Highly specialized for the
     conduction of nerve impulses.

 Division of Nervous Tissue
 a. Nervous Tissue Proper
    Has specialized conducting
     cell called neuron, linked
     together to form pathways.

 b. Interstitial Tissue (Neuroglia)
     Supports the neuron
   1. Cell body (soma/cyton)          NEURON
   Enclosed by a membrane,
    with nucleus, cytoplasm and
    cellular organelles.

   Produces proteins and energy
    required for the function of the
    neuron.

2. Dendrites

   Numerous extensions that is
    short and branched

   receive signals from sensory
    receptors

   Connect with other neurons to
    collect stimuli and pass these
    on to the cell body
NEURON
   3. Axon

   Projections from the cell body
    that is long and thin

   conducts nerve impulses

   Any long axon is also called a
    nerve fiber

   Covered by myelin sheath

4. Terminal Branches/ Synaptic
     Terminals

   Attached to receptors of the
    body
Types of Neurons
1. Motor Neurons/Efferent
      Accept nerve impulses
       from the CNS
      Transmit them to
       muscles or glands
2. Sensory Neurons/Afferent
      Accept impulses from
       sensory receptors
      Transmit them to the
       CNS
3. Interneurons/Association
      Convey nerve impulses
       between various parts of
       the CNS

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Plant and animal tissues

  • 2. Two Major Categories of Plant Tissues 1. Meristematic Tissue A. Apical Meristems B. Lateral Meristems 2. Permanent Tissue A. Dermal (Surface Tissue) B. Fundamental Tissue (Ground Tissue) C. Vascular Tissue
  • 3. MERISTEMATIC TISSUE  Composed of immature cells and are regions of active cell division.  Tend to be small, have thin walls and rich in cytoplasm.  Found in the growing tips of the roots and stem. A. Apical Meristems  Responsible for increase in length of the plant body.  Found on root tips and apical buds B. Lateral Meristems  Responsible for increase in girth or diameter  Ex: Cambium present in woody plants and produce the cork
  • 4. PERMANENT TISSUE A. Dermal (Surface Tissue)  Forms the protective outer covering of the plant body A.1. Epidermis  Produce cutin to protect plants against loss of water  Produce root hairs for absorption of water and minerals A.2. Periderm  Replaces the epidermis  Constitutes the corky outer bark of old trees.
  • 5. PERMANENT TISSUE B. Fundamental (Ground Tissue)  Used in the production and storage of food and in the support of plant. B.1. Parenchyma  Parenchyma on leaves function for photosynthesis  Mechanical strength by maintaining turgidity and also store waste products. B.2. Collenchyma  Support of stems and adapt themselves to the rapid elongation of leaves. B.3. Sclerenchyma  Provides elasticity, flexibility, and rigidity to the plant body forming support.
  • 6. PERMANENT TISSUE C. Vascular Tissue C.1. Xylem  Primarily functions for the transport of water and dissolved substances upward in the plant body. C.2. Phloem  Primary functions in the transport of organic materials such as carbohydrates and amino acids.
  • 8. Animal Tissues  Developed from the primary germ layers of the embryo:  Ectoderm  Mesoderm  Endoderm  There are 4 types of tissues:  Epithelial tissue  Connective tissue  Muscular tissue  Nervous tissue
  • 9.
  • 10. I. EPITHELIAL TISSUE  Made up of continuous sheets of densely packed cells, with little space or intercellular material between them.  A basement membrane is usually present. Functions: 1. Forms the covering or lining of all free body surfaces, both internal and external to protect cells from mechanical injury and water loss. 2. Some has special functions of absorption, secretion, excretion, sensation and respiration.
  • 11. Classification of Epithelial Tissue based on Shape and Arrangement of Cells
  • 12. Simple squamous –found in the lens of the eye and inner ear  Stratified squamous – forms the external layer of the skin and lines the mouth and pharynx.  Cuboidal – mostly found lining small ducts and tubules of the kidney and the glands  Simple columnar – found in the trachea, bronchi, digestive tract and secrete fluids and absorb digestive food.
  • 13. II. CONNECTIVE TISSUE Functions:  Serves as binding substance  Provides framework  Has essential role in transport, protection and repair. Classification of Connective Tissue A. Connective Tissue Proper B. Cartilage C. Bone D. Blood (Vascular Tissue)
  • 14. A. Connective Tissue Proper  Very variable but intercellular matrix always contains numerous fibers. 2 Types of Connective Tissue Proper 1. Loose Connective Tissue  Made up of highly elastic fibers with few scattered thin collagen fibers.  This tissue fills the space between organs and serves as packing materials surrounding the elements of other tissues  This binds muscle cells together and binds skin to underlying tissues  Ex. Adipose tissue, areolar tissue
  • 15. A. Connective Tissue Proper 2. Dense Connective Tissue  Made up of thick collagen fibers and dark, compressed cells between the fiber bundles.  Functions: (1) for flexibility and support, (2) shock absorption and (3) reduction of friction.  Ex. Tendon, ligament, urinary tract and collagen
  • 16. Elastic cartilage – yellow B. Cartilage 2. color, greater flexibility and elasticity and found in the  Made up of cartilage cells known as external ear, Eustachian chondrocytes found in cavities called tube and epiglottis lacunae 3. Fibro cartilage – resembles  Scattered irregularly in matrix that appears a tendon but not covered by transparent and homogenous but perichondrium composed of dense collagen fibers and elastic fibers embedded in a rubbery ground substance.  Produced by chondroblast in the process called chondrification.  Provides smooth surfaces and maintain the shape of the area. Types of Cartilage 1. Hyaline cartilage –nose, larynx, trachea, bronchi, ends of ribs and surfaces of bones.
  • 17. C. Bone (Osseous tissue)  Has hard, relatively rigid matrix which contains numerous collagen fibers and a surprising amount of water, impregnated with mineral salts such as calcium carbonate and calcium phosphate.  Bone is a living tissue with cells called osteocyte and masked collagenous fibers embedded in a matrix containing ostein.  Covered with fibrous membrane – periosteum  Lines the bone marrow cavity- endosteum  Functions: (1) support; (2) protection; (3) assisting for movement and (4) storage of minerals
  • 18. Classification of Bone According to Shape 1. Long Bone Example:  Composed of middle Humerus and Femur bone portion, the diaphysis or shaft, within which is a cavity, and the epiphysis or ends of the bone. 2. Flat Bone Example:  Lacks a bone marrow Cranial Bone and Scapula bone cavity. 3. Irregular Bone Example:  Neither long nor flat and Metacarpal and Metatarsal also lacks marrow cavity bone
  • 19. Osteon or Haversian System-basic unit of bone  Lamellae  Canaliculi  Series of concentric  Minute channels that rings or circles of linked lacunae together matrix around a large which provide routes central Haversian by which nutrients can canal reach the osteocytes  Lacunae and the removed waste  Small spaces in materials between the lamellae  Haversian Canals which contain the  Central tubes which osteocytes contain blood vessels  Osteocyte and nerves.  Bone cell
  • 20. C. Bone  Contains bone marrow (Yellow and red marrow) Yellow marrow  consists of fat cells, blood vessels, and a minimal framework of reticular cells and fibres. Red marrow  consists of numerous blood cells of all kinds, as well as the substances from which these cells are formed  The functions of red marrow are (1) the formation of red blood cells (erythrocytes), blood platelets, granulocytes, and to a lesser extent monocytes and lymphocytes, and (2) the destruction of old (c.120 days), worn-out erythrocytes.
  • 21. D. Blood (Vascular Tissue)  Consists of cells, matrix and fibers 3 Components of Blood 1. Erythrocyte (RBC)  small, concave, disc-shaped cells that lack nuclei during maturation in mammals  Formed in the bone marrow  They arise from normally nucleated, rapidly dividing connective tissue cells of the bone marrow  Contains hemoglobin
  • 22. D. VASCULAR TISSUE 2. Leukocyte (WBC)  Bigger than erythrocyte and have large, often irregularly shaped nuclei  Defenses against disease and infection  Act as phagocytes, engulfing and destroying bacteria and remnants of damaged tissue cells  Produce powerful enzyme  Lymphocytes –specialized cells that play a central role in immune reactions by producing antibodies.
  • 23. D. VASCULAR TISSUE 3. Platelets (Thrombocyte)  Small, non-nucleated, colorless, round or oval biconcave corpuscle produced by a giant cell called megakaryocyte found in the bone marrow.  Functions for blood clotting 4. Plasma  Liquid component of blood. 5. Hemoglobin  The protein constituent of blood
  • 24. III. MUSCLE TISSUE  Function: responsible for movement in higher animals, heat production and maintenance of posture. Types of Muscle Tissue a. Striated or Voluntary Muscle (Skeletal Muscle)  Has cross-striations (A-I bands) and can be controlled at will  Consists of myofibrils which contains actomyosin.  Sarcomere-the functional/structural unit of muscle contraction b. Smooth or Involuntary Muscle (Visceral Muscle)  Spindle-shaped cells which are thickened at the middle but tapered towards ends. Without striation and responsible for involuntary movements of internal organs c. Cardiac Muscle  Striated and branched muscle fibers  Found exclusively in the heart (myocardium) and is involuntary in movement.
  • 25. IV. NERVOUS TISSUE  Highly specialized for the conduction of nerve impulses. Division of Nervous Tissue a. Nervous Tissue Proper  Has specialized conducting cell called neuron, linked together to form pathways. b. Interstitial Tissue (Neuroglia)  Supports the neuron
  • 26. 1. Cell body (soma/cyton) NEURON  Enclosed by a membrane, with nucleus, cytoplasm and cellular organelles.  Produces proteins and energy required for the function of the neuron. 2. Dendrites  Numerous extensions that is short and branched  receive signals from sensory receptors  Connect with other neurons to collect stimuli and pass these on to the cell body
  • 27. NEURON  3. Axon  Projections from the cell body that is long and thin  conducts nerve impulses  Any long axon is also called a nerve fiber  Covered by myelin sheath 4. Terminal Branches/ Synaptic Terminals  Attached to receptors of the body
  • 28. Types of Neurons 1. Motor Neurons/Efferent  Accept nerve impulses from the CNS  Transmit them to muscles or glands 2. Sensory Neurons/Afferent  Accept impulses from sensory receptors  Transmit them to the CNS 3. Interneurons/Association  Convey nerve impulses between various parts of the CNS