Lab 3
Tissues (Part 2)
Before you come to lab:
- Make sure that you’ve completed Part 1 of the
System Assignment for tissues.
- You can either do this alone or with your lab
group.
- When you come to lab, you (or your group) should have
a first draft of your identification key.
During the lab period (work on Part 2 of Sys. Assgn.
first; worry about Histology Notebook later, if you have
time):
- This week, there are two main goals.
- First, you will look at a variety of tissues
under the microscope to determine if your
identification key works.
- Second, you will begin the process of adding
tissues to your Histology Notebook.
- Clear off some room on your lab bench and get your
assigned microscope.
- At the front of the room, there are slide trays that
have the following tissues on them:
- simple squamous epithelium –
Brief Atlas: Plate 2 (p. 3); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 2.1 (p. 19)
- stratified squamous epithelium –
Brief Atlas: Plate 7 (p. 5); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 2.18 (p. 23), Fig. 2.20 (p. 24)
- simple cuboidal epithelium –
Brief Atlas: Plate 3 (p. 3); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 2.5 (p. 20)
- stratified cuboidal epithelium –
Brief Atlas: Plate 8 (p. 5); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 2.27 (p. 26)
- simple columnar epithelium –
Brief Atlas: Plate 4 (p. 4), Plate 5 (p. 4),
Plate 45 (p. 19)
- pseudostratified columnar
epithelium – Brief Atlas: Plate 6
(p. 4)
- areolar connective tissue –
Brief Atlas: Plate 11 (p. 6); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 4.4 (p. 40)
- adipose connective tissue –
Brief Atlas: Plate 12 (p. 6); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 4.5 (p. 40)
- dense irregular connective
tissue – Brief Atlas: Plate 14 (p.
7); Histology Atlas: Fig. 4.6 (p. 41)
- dense regular connective tissue
– Brief Atlas: Plate 15 (p. 7);
Histology Atlas: Fig. 4.7 (p. 41)
- hyaline cartilage – Brief
Atlas: Plate 17 (p. 8); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 5.3 (p. 45)
- compact bone – Brief
Atlas: Plate 20 (p. 9); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 6.4 (p. 53)
- smooth muscle – Brief
Atlas: Plate 32 (p. 13); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 9.3 (p. 76)
- skeletal muscle – Brief
Atlas: Plate 28 (p. 12); Histology
Atlas: Figs. 9.6-9.8 (p. 78)
- cardiac muscle – Brief
Atlas: Plate 31 (p. 13); Histology
Atlas: Fig. 9.13 (p. 81)
- Begin to test your key.
- See if the questions you asked on your key can be
readily answered by looking at the tissue under the
microscope.
- If not, then change the questions.
- Your questions don’t have to sound scientific (as
long as they aren’t wrong and they help you identify
the correct tissue).
- “Do I see tree trunks?” or “Do I see cells in
Swiss cheese?” are fine questions, as long as
they’re used to help you identify bone and
hyaline cartilage, respectively.
- I suggest that you set up two or three microscopy
stations at your bench with a different slide on each
scope. Have all lab group members rotate between the
scopes, making sure you can tell the differences
between the tissues.
- Remember: All slides will have a free edge that’s
produced by hacking at the tissue with a knife. This
isn’t a biological free edge.
- Also remember: Not all slides are created equal.
Sometimes, it’s just a bad slide.
- Once I’ve looked at your key and have given you
comments on it, I’ll assign you a number that corresponds
to your unknown slide.
- Use this slide to complete Part 3 of the System
Assignment.
- For your Histology Notebook:
- We’ll begin with the epithelial tissues and
selected connective tissues.
- There’s no way you’ll get this all done in
lab; in fact, it will probably take a couple of
weeks. That’s okay. Take your time.
-
simple squamous epithelium
– Brief Atlas: Plate 2 (p. 3);
Histology Atlas: Fig. 2.1 (p. 19)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: free edge, epithelial
cell, nucleus
-
stratified squamous
epithelium – Brief Atlas:
Plate 7 (p. 5); Histology Atlas: Fig. 2.18
(p. 23), Fig. 2.20 (p. 24)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: free edge, epithelial
cell, nucleus, basement membrane
-
simple cuboidal epithelium
– Brief Atlas: Plate 3 (p. 3);
Histology Atlas: Fig. 2.5 (p. 20)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: free edge, epithelial
cell, nucleus, basement membrane
-
stratified cuboidal
epithelium – Brief Atlas:
Plate 8 (p. 5); Histology Atlas: Fig. 2.27
(p. 26)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: free edge, epithelial
cell, nucleus, basement membrane
-
simple columnar epithelium
– Brief Atlas: Plate 4 (p. 4), Plate 5 (p.
4), Plate 45 (p. 19)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: free edge, epithelial
cell, nucleus, basement membrane
-
pseudostratified columnar
epithelium – Brief Atlas:
Plate 6 (p. 4)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: free edge, epithelial
cell, nucleus, basement membrane, cilia
- Answer Question 2:
Explain why this tissue is called
pseudostratified.
-
areolar connective tissue –
Brief Atlas: Plate 11 (p. 6);
Histology Atlas: Fig. 4.4 (p. 40)
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: fibroblast nucleus,
elastic fibers, collagen fibers, ground
substance
-
adipose connective tissue –
Brief Atlas: Plate 12 (p. 6);
Histology Atlas: Fig. 4.5 (p. 40)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: adipocyte, nucleus, fat
droplet
- Answer Question 3:
Explain why you cannot see any cytoplasmic
details in these cells.
-
dense regular connective
tissue – Brief Atlas: Plate
15 (p. 7); Histology Atlas: Fig. 4.7 (p.
41)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: collagen fibers,
fibroblast nucleus
-
dense irregular connective
tissue – Brief Atlas: Plate
14 (p. 7); Histology Atlas: Fig. 4.6 (p.
41)
- Recommended # of pages: 1
- Draw at 400x total magnification.
- Label the following: collagen fibers,
fibroblast nucleus
By the next lab:
- Using your tissue ID key, complete Part 3 in the
System Assignment for the tissues.
- Continue drawing the epithelial tissues and the
connective tissues proper in your Histology Notebook.
- Again, you won’t have finished these in the lab
time, but you should expect to come in on your own
time to get them drawn. Procrastination will
definitely catch up with you!
- Continue the process of learning the terms that deal
with regional anatomy (“Naked Man” – Marieb
Figure 1.7; p. 14).
- Pick 11 more terms on the anterior view and 7
more on the posterior view, and learn those.
Additional resources:
- This website has three short
interactive quizzes that you can take to test your
knowledge of tissues. This is a good test of your
tissue ID key, as well.