Epithelial Tissue Basics - Cellular Linings Unveiled
- Sheets of contiguous cells; cover body surfaces, line cavities, form glands.
- Key Characteristics:
- Cellularity: Predominantly cells, minimal extracellular matrix.
- Specialized Contacts: Intercellular junctions (e.g., desmosomes, tight junctions).
- Polarity: Distinct apical (luminal) and basal (abluminal) surfaces.
- Support: Rests on a basement membrane, anchored to connective tissue.
- Avascular: Lacks blood vessels; innervated.
- Regeneration: High mitotic activity for repair.
- Primary Functions: Protection, secretion, absorption, excretion, filtration, diffusion, sensory reception.

⭐ Epithelium is avascular and receives nutrients by diffusion from the underlying connective tissue, which is highly vascular.
Classifying Epithelia - Shape & Layer Showdown
-
Categorized by:
- Cell Shape:
- Squamous (flattened)
- Cuboidal (cube-shaped)
- Columnar (tall, rectangular)
- Number of Layers:
- Simple (single layer)
- Stratified (multiple layers)
- Pseudostratified (single layer, nuclei at different levels, all cells on basement membrane)
- Cell Shape:
-
Common Examples:
- Simple Squamous: Lining blood vessels (endothelium), body cavities (mesothelium), alveoli.
- Simple Cuboidal: Kidney tubules, thyroid follicles, gland ducts.
- Simple Columnar: Stomach, intestines (often with microvilli/cilia).
- Pseudostratified Columnar: Trachea, bronchi (typically ciliated).
- Stratified Squamous: Epidermis (keratinized), esophagus, vagina (non-keratinized).
- Stratified Cuboidal/Columnar: Ducts of sweat, salivary glands (rare).
⭐ Transitional epithelium (urothelium), found lining the urinary bladder, ureters, and renal pelvis, is specialized for distension and is impermeable to urine.

Cell Junctions & Surfaces - Sticking & Specializing
- Zonula Occludens (Tight Junctions): Seals paracellular pathway.
- Proteins: Claudins, Occludins.
- Function: Regulates solute passage; barrier.
- Zonula Adherens (Adherens Junctions): Links actin cytoskeletons.
- Proteins: Cadherins (E-cadherin), Catenins.
- Function: Mechanical adhesion.
- Macula Adherens (Desmosomes): Links intermediate filaments.
- Proteins: Desmogleins, Desmocollins (Cadherin family); Plakins.
- Function: Strong spot adhesion; resists shearing forces.
- Gap Junctions: Direct cell-to-cell communication.
- Proteins: Connexins (form connexons).
- Function: Passage of ions, small molecules.

- Apical Surface Specializations:
- Microvilli: ↑ Surface area for absorption (e.g., small intestine, kidney tubules). Core: Actin filaments.
- Cilia: Motile; move substances (e.g., respiratory tract, fallopian tube). Core: Microtubules (9+2 axoneme).
- Stereocilia: Long, non-motile microvilli; absorption/sensory (e.g., epididymis, inner ear).
⭐ Pemphigus vulgaris is an autoimmune disease targeting desmogleins (components of desmosomes), leading to acantholysis and intraepidermal blistering.
- Basal Surface Specializations:
- Basal Lamina: Attachment, filtration. Components: Laminin, Type IV collagen.
- Hemidesmosomes: Anchor basal cells to basal lamina. Proteins: Integrins, Plectin, BPAG1e (BP230).
Glandular Epithelium - Secretory Superstars
Specialized for secretion. Two main types: Exocrine (ducts) & Endocrine (ductless, hormones).
- Exocrine Glands:
- Secretion Mechanisms:
- Merocrine (Eccrine): Exocytosis (e.g., salivary, pancreas). Most common.
- Apocrine: Apical cytoplasm lost (e.g., mammary glands).
- Holocrine: Whole cell lysis (e.g., sebaceous glands). 📌 Holo = Whole.
⭐ Holocrine glands (e.g., sebaceous glands of the skin) release their secretions by complete cell lysis, where the entire cell disintegrates to release its product.
- Structure: Classified by duct (simple/compound) & secretory unit (tubular/acinar).
- Secretion Mechanisms:
- Cellularity:
- Unicellular: e.g., Goblet cells (mucus).
- Multicellular: e.g., Salivary glands.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- All epithelia rest on a basement membrane (basal & reticular laminae).
- Key junctions: zonula occludens (seals), desmosomes (strong adhesion), gap junctions (communication).
- Apical specializations: microvilli (absorption), cilia (motility), stereocilia (sensory).
- Endothelium (simple squamous) lines vessels; mesothelium lines serous cavities.
- Pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium is characteristic of the upper respiratory tract.
- Transitional epithelium (urothelium) lines the urinary bladder, allowing distension.
- Stratified squamous epithelium provides protection; keratinized (epidermis) or non-keratinized (oral cavity).
Continue reading on Oncourse
Sign up for free to access the full lesson, plus unlimited questions, flashcards, AI-powered notes, and more.
CONTINUE READING — FREEor get the app