human anatomy (biol 1010) e. goffe [email protected] office 1132f (providence)

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Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe [email protected] Office 1132F (Providence)

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Page 1: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Human Anatomy(BIOL 1010)

E. [email protected] 1132F (Providence)

Page 2: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

What is Anatomy?Anatomy (= morphology): study of body’s structurePhysiology: study of body’s function

Structure reflects Function!!! Structure reflects Function!!! Branches of Anatomy Gross: Large structures Surface: Landmarks Histology: Cells and Tissues Developmental: Structures change through life Embryology: Structures form and develop before birth

Page 3: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Hierarchy of the Body

Moleculesmade of chemicals (4 macromolecules in body) carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids

Cellsmade of molecules cells and organelles

Tissuemade of cells epithelial, connective, muscular, nervous

Organsmade of tissues made of >1 type of tissue

Systemsmade of organs 11 systems in human body

Organismsmade of systemsPg 3

Page 4: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Anatomical DirectionsAnatomical positionRegions Axial vs. Appendicular

Anatomical Directions-It’s all Relative! Anterior (ventral) vs. Posterior (dorsal) Medial vs. Lateral Superior (cranial) vs. Inferior (caudal) Superficial vs. Deep Proximal vs. Distal

Anatomical Planes Frontal = Coronal Transverse = Horizontal = Cross

Section Sagittal

Pg 6

Page 5: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Embryology: growth and development

of the body before birth

38 weeks from conception to birthPrenatal period Embryonic: weeks 1-8 Fetal: weeks 9-38

Basic adult body plan shows by 2nd month Skin = epidermis, dermis Outer body wall=muscle,

vertebral column and spinal cord Body cavity and digestive tubes Kidney and gonads Limbs=skin, muscle, bone

Page 6: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Weeks 5-8 and Fetal Period

Second month, tadpole person Tail disappears Head enlarges Extremities form (day 28, limb buds appear) Eyes, nose, ears form Organs in place

Fetal Period Rapid growth and maturation Organs grow and increase in complexity

& competence

Page 7: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

4 Types of Tissue

1)Epithelium

2)Connective

3)Muscle

4)Nervous

Page 8: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Tissues: groups of cells closely associated that have a similar structure and perform a related function

Four types of tissue Epithelial = covering/lining Connective = support Muscle = movement Nervous = control

Most organs contain all 4 typesTissue has non-living extracellular material between its cells

Page 9: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

EPITHELIAL TISSUE: sheets of cells cover a surface or line a cavity (tissue type #1)

Functions Protection Secretion Absorption Ion Transport Slippery Surface

Page 10: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Characteristics of Epithelium

CellularitySpecialized ContactsPolarity Apical vs. Basal

Supported by Connective TissueAvascularInnervatedRegenerative

Page 11: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Classification of Epithelium-based on number of layers and cell shape

Layers Simple Stratified Psuedostratified

Stratified layers characterized by shape of apical layerShapes Squamous Cuboidal Columnar Transitional Pg 71

Page 12: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Can You Identify the Classes of Epithelium?

A B

C

D

E

Quiz!!

Page 13: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Features of Apical Surface of Epithelium

Microvilli: (ex) in small intestine

Finger-like extensions of the plasma membrane of apical epithelial cell

Increase surface area for absorption

Cilia: (ex) respiratory tubes

Whip-like, motile extension of plasma membrane

Moves mucus, etc. over epithelial surface 1-way

Flagella: (ex) spermatoza

Extra long cilia Moves cell

Page 14: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Features of Lateral Surface of Epithelium

Cells are connected to neighboring cells via: Proteins-link cells together, interdigitate Contour of cells-wavy contour fits together Cell Junctions

Desmosomes-adhesive spots on lateral sides linked by proteins/filaments, holds tissues

together Tight Junctions-at apical area, plasma membrane of

adjacent cells fuse, nothing passes

Gap junction- spot-like junction occurring anywhere made of hollow cylinders of

protein, lets small molecules pass

Page 15: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Pg 80

Desomosomes

Page 16: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Features of the Basal Surface of Epithelium

Basement membrane = Sheet between the epithelial and connective tissue layers Attaches epithelium to connective tissue below Basal lamina: thin, non-cellular, supportive sheet

Made of proteins Superficial layer Acts as a selective filter Assists epithelial cell regeneration by moving new cells

Reticular fiber layer Deeper layer Support

Page 17: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Name that Epithelial Feature!

(name and location on cell)

CiliaTight junctionMicrovilliBasement membrane

2

3

4

1

3

1

2

4

Page 18: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Glands: epithelial cells that make and secrete a water-based substance w/proteins

Exocrine Glands Secrete substance onto body

surface or into body cavity Have ducts (simple vs.

compound) Unicellular (goblet cells) or

Multicellular (tubular, alveolar, tubuloalveolar)

(ex) salivary, mammary, pancreas, liver

Goblet cell in small intestine

Page 19: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Glands: epithelial cells that make and secrete a water-based substance w/proteins

Endocrine Glands Secrete product into blood stream Either stored in secretory cells or in follicle

surrounded by secretory cells Hormones travel to target organ to

increase response (excitatory) No ducts (ex) pancreas, adrenal,

pituitary, thyroidThyroid gland: hormone in follicles

(F) released into capillaries (C)

Page 20: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

4 Types of Connective Tissue

1) Connective Tissue Proper

2) Cartilage3) Bone Tissue4) Blood

Page 21: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Connective Tissue (CT): most abundant and diverse tissue

(tissue type #2)

Four Classes Functions include connecting, storing & carrying nutrients, protection, fight infection CT contains large amounts of non-living extracellular matrix Some types vascularized All CT originates from mesenchyme

Page 22: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

1) Connective Tissue Proper

Two kinds: Loose CT & Dense CTPrototype: Loose Areolar Tissue Underneath epithelial tissue Functions

Support and bind to other tissue Hold body fluids Defends against infection Stores nutrients as fat

Each function performed by different kind of fiber in tissue

Page 23: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Fibers in Connective TissueFibers For Support Reticular: form networks for structure &

support (ex) cover capillaries Collagen: strongest, most numerous, provide

tensile strength (ex) dominant fiber in ligaments Elastic: long + thin, stretch and retain shape (ex) dominant fiber in elastic cartilage

Page 24: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

In Connective Tissue Proper

Fibroblasts: cells that produce all fibers in CT, produce + secrete protein subunits to make them, produce ground matrixInterstitial (Tissue) Fluid: derived from blood in CT proper; medium for nutrients, waste + oxygen to travel to cells; found in ground matrixGround Matrix (substance): part of extra-cellular material that holds and absorbs interstitial fluid, jelly-like with sugar & protein molecules

Page 25: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Defense from Infection

Areolar tissue below epithelium is body’s first defenseCells travel to CT in blood Macrophages-eat foreign particles Plasma cells-secrete antibodies, mark

molecules for destruction Mast cells-contain chemical mediators for

inflammation response White Blood Cells = neutrophils, lymphocytes,

eosinophils-fight infection

Ground substance + cell fibers-slow invading microorganisms

Page 26: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Areolar Connective Tissue Model

Pg 85Histological slide

Page 27: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Specialized Loose CT ProperAdipose tissue-loaded with adipocytes, highly vascularized, high metabolic activity Insulates, produces energy, supports

(eg) in hypodermis under skin

Reticular CT-contains only reticular fibers Forms caverns to hold free cells

(eg) bone marrow, holds blood cells Forms internal “skeleton” of some organs

(eg) lymph nodes, spleen

Page 28: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Dense/Fibrous Connective Tissue

Contains more collagen Can resist extremely strong pulling forcesRegular vs. Irregular Regular-fibers run same direction, parallel to pull

(eg) fascia, tendons, ligaments Irregular-fibers thicker, run in different directions

(eg) dermis, fibrous capsules at ends of bones

Dense regular

Dense irregular

Page 29: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Components of CT Proper Summarized

Cells Matrix

Fibroblasts Gel-like ground substance

Defense cells-macrophages-white blood cells

Collagen fibersReticular fibersElastic fibers

Adipocytes

Page 30: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

2) CartilageChondroblasts produce cartilageChondrocytes mature cartilage cellsMore abundant in embryo than adultFirm, FlexibleResists compression

(eg) trachea, meniscus

80% waterAvascular (chondrocytes can function w/low oxygen)

NOT InnervatedPerichondrium-dense, irregular connective tissue around cartilage

growth/repair of cartilage resists expansion during compression of cartilage

Page 31: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Cartilage in the Body

Three types: Hyaline

most abundant fibrils in matrix support via flexibility/resilience (eg) at limb joints, ribs, nose

Elastic many elastic fibers in matrix

too great flexibility (eg) external ear, epiglottis

Fibrocartilage resists both compression and

tension (eg) meniscus, annulus

fibrosus

Pg 125

Page 32: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Histology of Cartilage

Hyaline Cartilage

Page 33: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Histology of Cartilage

Elastic Cartilage

Page 34: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Histology of Cartilage

Fibrocartilage

Page 35: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Components of Cartilage Summarized

Cells Matrix

Chondrocytes Gel-like ground substance

Chondroblasts(in growing cartilage)

Lots of water

Some have collagen and elastic fibers

Page 36: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

3) Bone Tissue:(a bone is an organ)

Well-vascularized Function: support (eg) pelvic bowl, legs protect (eg) skull, vertebrae mineral storage (eg) calcium, phosphate (inorganic

component) movement (eg) walk, grasp objects blood-cell formation (eg) red bone marrow

Osteoblasts: secrete organic part of bone matrix

Osteocytes: mature bone cells, maintain bone matrix

Periosteum: external layer of CT surrounds bone

Endosteum: internal layer of CT lines cavities and covers trabeculae

Page 37: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Compact bone: dense, external layer Haversian system = osteon

long, cylindrical structures run parallel to long axis of bone within each osteon, groups of concentric tubes (lamella) Lamella: layer of bone matrix all fibers run in same direction fibers on each lamella runs in opposite directions to one near it Haversian canal-runs through center of osteon, contain blood

vessels and nerves Interstitial Lamella- pieces of bone matrix between osteon Osteocytes between osteons

Bone Anatomy: Compact bonePg 128

Page 38: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Haversian System = Osteon

lamella

osteon

Pg 131

Pg 132

lamella

Page 39: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Spongy bone (cancellous bone): internal layer Trabeculae: small, needle-like pieces of bone

form honeycomb each made of several layers of lamellae +

osteocytes no canal for vessels space filled with bone marrow not as dense, no direct stress at bone’s center

Bone Anatomy: Spongy bone

Pg 130

Page 40: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

12

3

4

Spongy Bone

Compact Bone

Lamella

Haversian canal

2

1

3

4

Page 41: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Histology of Bone

“Ground” Compact Bone

Page 42: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Components of Bone Tissue Summarized

Cells Matrix

Osteocytes Gel-like ground substance calcified with inorganic salts

Osteoblasts Collagen fibers

Page 43: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

4) Blood: Atypical Connective Tissue

Function: Transports waste, gases, nutrients,

hormones through cardiovascular system Helps regulate body temperature Protects body by fighting infection

Derived from mesenchymeHematopoiesis: production of blood cells Occurs in red bone marrow In adults, axial skeleton, girdles, proximal

epiphyses of humerus and femur

Page 44: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Blood CellsErythrocytes: (RBC) small, oxygen-transporting

most abundant in bloodno organelles, filled w/hemoglobinpick up O2 at lungs, transport to rest of body

Platelets = Thrombocytes: fragments of cytoplasm

plug small tears in vessel walls, initiates clotting

Leukocytes: (WBC) complete cells , 5 types

fight against infectious microorganisms

stored in bone marrow for emergencies

Page 45: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Histology of Blood and Vessel Blood Smear

Page 46: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Histology of Blood Vessels

Artery Vein

Page 47: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Components of Blood Summarized

Cells Matrix

Erythrocytes (red blood cells)

Plasma (liquid matrix)

Leukocytes(white blood cells)

NO fibers

Platelets

Page 48: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Muscle Tissue (tissue type #3)

Muscle cells/fibers Elongated Contain many myofilaments: Actin & Myosin

FUNCTION Movement Maintenance of posture Joint Stabilization Heat Generation

Three types: Skeletal, Cardiac, Smooth

Page 49: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Skeletal Muscle Tissue(each skeletal muscle is an organ)

Cells Long and cylindrical, in bundles Multinucleate Obvious Striations

Skeletal Muscles-VoluntaryConnective Tissue Components: Endomysium-surrounds fibers Perimysium-surrounds bundles Epimysium-surrounds the muscle

Attached to bones, fascia, skinOrigin & Insertionpg 235

Page 50: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Cardiac MuscleCells Branching, chains of cells Single or Binucleated Striations Connected by Intercalated

discs

Cardiac Muscle-InvoluntaryMyocardium-heart muscle Pumps blood through vessels

Connective Tissue Component Endomysium: surrounding cells

Pg 244

Page 51: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Smooth Muscle Tissue

CellsSingle cells, uninucleateNo striations

Smooth Muscle-Involuntary2 layers-opposite orientation (peristalsis)

Lines hollow organs, blood vesselsConnective Tissue Component

Endomysium: surrounds cells

Pg 246

Page 52: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Histology of Muscle Tissue

SMOOTH

CARDIAC

SKELETAL

Page 53: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Nervous Tissue

Neurons: specialized nerve cells conduct impulses Cell body, dendrite, axon

Interneuron: between motor & sensory neuron in CNSCharacterized by: No mitosis (cell replication) Longevity High metabolic rate

pg 322

Page 54: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Nervous Tissue: control

Support cells (= Glial): nourishment, insulation, protection Satellite cells-surround cell bodies

within ganglia Schwann cells-surround axons Microglia-phagocytes Oligodendrocytes-produce myelin

sheaths around axons Ependymal cells-line brain/spinal cord,

ciliated,help circulate CSF

Brain, spinal cord, nerves

Page 55: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Neuronal Anatomy

Synapse: cell junction where neurons communicateOne direction: presynaptic neuron, postsynaptic neuronPresynaptic neuron

Synaptic vesicles fuses w/presynaptic membrane

Neurotransmitters released, diffuse across synaptic cleft, bind to postsynaptic membrane ٠Creates impulse (action potential) in that neuron

٠Cycle repeats

pg 325

Page 56: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Histology of Neuron

Page 57: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Integumentary System

Skin Epidermis = epithelium Dermis = connective tissue

Hypodermis = connective tissueSkin Appendages = outgrowths of epidermis Hair follicles Sweat and Sebaceous glands Nails

Page 58: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Integumentary System

Functions Protection

Mechanical, thermal, chemical, UV Cushions & insulates deeper organs Prevention of water loss Thermoregulation Excretion

Salts, urea, water Sensory reception

Page 59: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Layers of the Epidermis Stratum corneum

Dead keratinocytes

Stratum lucidumDead keratinocytes

Stratum granulosumKeratinocytesTonofilamentsLamellated & keratohyaline granules

Stratum spinosumKeratinocytesTonofilamentsLangerhans cells

Stratum basaleKeratinocytesMelanocytesMerkel receptors

Page 60: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Dermis

Highly innervatedHighly vascularizedCollagen & Elastic fibersMany cell types

FibroblastsMacrophagesMast cellsWhite blood cells

Papillary layer (20%) Areolar CT Hair follicles

Reticular layer (80%) Dense Irregular CT Glands

Sebaceous glands Sweat glands

Smooth muscle fibers

Page 61: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

Hypodermis

Also called superficial fasciaAreolar & Adipose Connective TissueFunctions Store fat Anchor skin to muscle, etc. Insulation

Page 62: Human Anatomy (BIOL 1010) E. Goffe eggoffe@ccri.edu Office 1132F (Providence)

“May I please be excused? My brain is full!!”