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.
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