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Epithelial Tissue

Epithelial tissue, or epithelium, has the following general characteristics:

  • Epithelium consists of closely packed, flat cells. There is little intercellular material.

  • The tissue is avascular, or without blood vessels. Nutrient and waste exchange occurs through neighboring connective tissues by diffusion.

  • The upper surface of epithelium is free, or exposed to the outside of the body or to an internal body cavity. The basal surface rests on connective tissue. A thin, extracellular layer called the basement membrane forms between the epithelial and connective tissue.

  • Cell division in epithelium occurs readily to replace damaged cells.

There are two kinds of epithelial tissues:

  • Covering and lining epithelium covers the outside surfaces of the body and lines internal organs.

  • Glandular epithelium secretes hormones or other products.

Epithelium that covers or lines

Epithelial tissues that cover or line surfaces are classified by cell shape and by the number of cell layers. The following terms are used to describe these features:

Cell shape:

  • Squamous cells are flat. The nucleus, located near the upper surface, gives these cells the appearance of a “fried egg.”

  • Cuboidal cells are cube or hexagon shaped with a central, circular nucleus. These cells produce secretions (sweat, for example) or absorb substances (digested food, for example).

  • Columnar cells are tall with an oval nucleus near the basement membrane. These thick cells serve to protect underlying tissues or may function to absorb substances. Some have microvilli, minute surface extensions, to increase surface area for absorbing substances, while others may have cilia that help move substances over their surface (such as mucus through the respiratory tract).

  • Transitional cells range from flat to tall cells that can extend or compress in response to body movement.

Number of cell layers:

  • Simple describes a single layer of cells.

  • Stratified describes epithelium consisting of multiple layers.

  • Pseudostratified describes a single layer of cells of different sizes, giving the appearance of being multilayered.

Names of epithelial tissues include a description of both their shape and their number of cell layers. The presence of cilia may also be identified in their names. For example, simple squamous describes epithelium consisting of a single layer of flat cells. Pseudostratified columnar ciliated epithelium describes a single layer of tall, ciliated cells of more than one size. Stratified epithilieum is named after the shape of the outermost cell layer. Thus, stratified squamous epithelium has outermost layers of squamous cells, even though some inner layers consist of cuboidal or columnar cells. These and other epithelial tissues are illustrated in Figure 1 .





Figure 1

Types of epithelial tissues.


Glandular epithelium

Glandular epithelium forms two kinds of glands:

  • Endocrine glands secrete hormones directly into the bloodstream. For example, the thyroid gland secretes the hormone thyroxin into the bloodstream, where it is distributed throughout the body, stimulating an increase in the metabolic rate of body cells.

  • Exocrine glands secrete their substances into tubes, or ducts, which carry the secretions to the epithelial surface. Examples of secretions include sweat, saliva, milk, stomach acid, and digestive enzymes.

Exocrine glands are classified according to their structure (see Figure 2 ):

Exocrine glands are also classified according to their function (see Figure 3 ):

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