Cells, Tissues and Skin Review
Importance of Understanding Cells
- Fundamental for comprehending human anatomy and physiology.
- All body functions depend on individual and combined activities of cells.
- Key role in homeostasis, with disease processes occurring at cellular level.
Levels of Structural Complexity
- Microscopic Level: Atoms, Organelle, Cell.
- Chemical Level: Molecules & Macromolecules.
- Tissue: Combination of cells.
- Organ: Group of tissues.
- Organism: Complete living entity.
- Organ System: Related organs functioning together.
Learning Objectives
- Identify cellular organelles and their functions.
- Describe plasma membrane structure and selective permeability.
- Explain transport processes: simple diffusion, facilitated diffusion, osmosis, active transport.
- Describe resting membrane potential and its maintenance.
- Identify four primary tissue types and their functions.
- Describe skin structure and functions.
- Explain tissue repair mechanisms.
Cellular Organelles
- Common Features:
- Plasma membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus.
- Organelles: perform specific functions for cell specialization.
- Key Organelles:
- Nucleus: Control center, houses DNA.
- Ribosomes: Protein synthesis.
- Endoplasmic Reticulum: Synthesizes/stores proteins and lipids.
- Golgi Apparatus: Modifies, packages proteins and lipids.
- Mitochondria: Powerhouse, produces ATP through cellular respiration.
- Lysosomes: Digests biological material and recycles molecules.
Plasma Membrane Structure
- Composed of phospholipid bilayer:
- Phosphate heads: hydrophilic.
- Lipid tails: hydrophobic.
- Selectively permeable, allowing specific substances to cross.
- Contains integral and peripheral proteins for transport functions.
Transport Processes
- Passive Transport: No energy needed; includes simple diffusion, facilitated diffusion, and osmosis.
- Active Transport: Requires ATP; substances move against concentration gradient (e.g., Na+/K+ pump).
- Types of Diffusion:
- Simple Diffusion: Lipid-soluble substances.
- Facilitated Diffusion: Large or lipid-insoluble substances via proteins.
- Osmosis: Water movement across membranes.
Tonicity
- Isotonic: No change in cell size.
- Hypertonic: Cell shrinks.
- Hypotonic: Cell swells; can burst.
Resting Membrane Potential
- Charge difference across membrane due to ion distribution.
- Sodium (Na+) & potassium (K+) concentration gradients established by pumps.
- Average RMP is -70 mV.
Tissue Types and Functions
- Nervous Tissue: Communication; includes neurons.
- Muscle Tissue: Movement; types include skeletal, cardiac, and smooth.
- Epithelial Tissue: Protection, absorption, secretion, and filtration.
- Connective Tissue: Supports and binds tissues; includes diverse types like bone, blood, and cartilage.
Skin Structure and Functions
- Composed of 4 primary tissues: epithelial, connective, smooth muscle, and nervous.
- Three main regions:
- Epidermis: Protective layer.
- Dermis: Contains blood vessels, nerves, and glands.
- Hypodermis: Connective/adipose tissue anchoring skin.
- Functions: sensation, protection, metabolic functions, and thermoregulation.
Tissue Repair
- Involves inflammation, organization, and maturation.
- Minor wounds involve epidermis; major wounds affect both epidermis and dermis.
- Stages:
- Inflammation: prepares wound for repair.
- Organization: restores blood supply and collagen synthesis.
- Maturation: remodels collagen, returns to normal appearance or fibrosis.