skin report final with pictures
TRANSCRIPT
INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM (SKIN)
largest single organ of the body
15–20% of total body weight
Surface area of 2m2
Thickness varies from 0.5 to 4.0mm
composed of :
epidermis (ectodermal origin)
dermis (mesodermal origin)
subcutaneous tissue/ hypodermis (a loose connective tissue
that may contain pads of adipocytes)
FUNCTIONS:
Protective barrier against injury or invasion by microorganisms
Sensory – pain, touch and pressure
Thermoregulatory – thorough skin’s insulating components (fats) and
mechanisms for accelerating heat loss (sweat production)
Metabolic –synthesis of vitamin D3 from UV light
Sexual Signaling – features of skin (pigmentation and hair)
Two Principal Layers:
1. Epidermis
2. Dermis
*hypodermis
– Beneath the dermis
- Layer of looser connective tissue that is not part of the skin but
minimizes injury to it by permitting some degree of mobility of skin
over underlying structures
- In some regions of the body, it may consist mainly of adipose tissue
* Mucocutaneous junctions – epidermis is continuous with the
epithelium lining those structures (lips, nose, eyelids, anus, and vagina.)
1. Epidermis
surface epithelium - Stratified squamous epithelium
0.07-0.12mm in thickness (over most of the body), but may reach
0.8mm on palms and 1.4mm on the soles of the feet
at birth it is already thicker at these sites than elsewhere, and
continuous pressure and friction on these surfaces in postnatal life
result in additional thickening.
Layers of the Epidermis:
Stratum Basale
- Single layer of basophilic columnar cells on the basement membrane
at the dermal-epidermal junction
- Sometimes referred to as stratum germinativum
- deepest layer of the five layers of the epidermis
- Primarily made up of basal keratinocyte cells, which can be considered the stem cells of the epidermis.
- Characterized by mitotic activity and is
responsible (in conjunction with the initial
portion of the next layer for the production of
epidermal cell
- -All keratinocytes in the stratum basale
contain intermediate filament composed of
keratins
- Cells attach to one another by numerous desmosomes, and to basal lamina
by numerous hemidesmosomes.
o Hemidesmosomes- are very small stud- or rivet-like structures on the
inner basal surface of keratinocytes in the epidermis of skin. They
connect the basal face to other cells.
o Desmosomes-binds the cells of this layer together in their lateral and
upper surface. Link two cells together.
Stratum Spinosum
- layer of the epidermis found between the stratum granulosum and
stratum basale. - Also referred to as the "spinous" or "prickle-cell" layer.
- Normally the thickest epidermal layer is about 4-6 rows of cells
- Consist of polyhedral or slightly flattened cell with their long axis
parallel to the surface of the epithelium
- Have central nuclei with nucleoli and cytoplasm actively synthesizing
keratin filament
- Tonofibrils-are cytoplasmic protein structures in epithelial tissues that
converge at desmosomes and hemidesmosomes.
- Cytoplasm less basophilic is drawn into short cellular extensions
around the tonofibrils on the both sides of each desmosomes,leading to the short spine or prickle appearance of
the cell surface
- Lateral surfaces have short processes that interdigitate with those of neighbouring cells.
- Contain few ribosomes than stratum basale
- Presence of bundles of keratin filaments that radiate from
perinuclear region and end in the numerous desmosomes
along the boundary between adjacent cells (prominent
feature)
Stratum Granulosum
3-5 layers of cells that are considerably flatter than those of
the stratum spinosum
Contain many lamellar bodies (may occupy as much as
15% of the cell volume)
Presence of irregularly shaped keratohyalin granules in the
cytoplasm, which stain intensely in basic dyes (most
distinct feature)
Do not have limiting membrane, and bundles of keratin
filaments may be incorporated in their periphery, or may
pass through them
Stratum Lucidum
May be present in the thick skin between stratum
granulosum and stratum corneum, but not in thin
skin.
Appears thin and clear
1 or 2 rows of flat, translucent keratinocytes
Stratum Corneum
Latin for 'horned layer
outermost layer of the epidermis
Consists of 15-20 layers of flattened, non-nucleated keratinized cells
Cytoplasm is filled with bifringent filamentous keratins
Squames or horny cornified cells-fibrillar and amorphous proteins with
thickened plasma membranes
form a barrier to protect underlying tissue from infection, dehydration,
and chemicals
Desquamation-the process of cell shedding from the surface of the
stratum corneum, balances proliferating keratinocytes that form in the stratum
basale.
Thick skin
10-20 layers of cells – keratinocytes
Keratin – cytoskeletal protein synthesizes in large amounts after it
enlarge and differentiate in their transit towards the surface
Polymerizes into 10 nm intermediate filaments that
gradually come to constitute 80%, or more of the cell
volume.
20-30 days – transit time of keratinocytes from basal layer to surface.
Cytomorphosis of keratinocytes – sequence of cytological changes the
cells undergo in their upward movement.
Stratum Lucidum and Granulosum in Thick Skin
In keratinocytes moving upward from the stratum Spinosum
differentiation proceeds with the cells becoming filled with numerous
large, amorphous masses of protein called keratohyaline granules
which are highly basophilic.
Cells that contain such granules form a stratum granulosum (G) only
three to five cells thick, where keratin filaments are cross-linked with
filaggrin and other proteins from these granules to produce tight
bundles filling the cytoplasm and flattening the cells.
Smaller organelles called lamellar granules undergo exocytosis in this
layer, secreting a lipid-rich layer around the cells which makes the
epidermis impermeable to water.
Together the lipid envelope and the keratin-filled cells determine most
of the physical properties of the epidermis.
The cells leaving the stratum granulosum, still bound together by
desmosomes, undergo terminal differentiation and in thick skin
appear as a dense, thin layer called the stratum lucidum (L).
The acidic proteins in the granular, basophilic masses are dispersed through the tonofibril bundles, giving the cells
of this new layer an eosinophilic, clear appearance.
In the most superficial layers, the stratum corneum (C), the cells are fully differentiated and have lost nuclei and
cytoplasm.
They consist only of flattened, keratinized structures called squames bound by hydrophobic, lipid-rich
intercellular cement and at the surface they are worn away (thick skin) or flake off (thin skin).
Melanocytes
Skin color is the result of several factors, the most important of
which are the keratinocytes' content of melanin and carotene and
the number of blood vessels in the dermis.
a specialized cell found among the cells of the basal layer and in
the hair follicles
Eumelanin - brownish black pigment
pheomelanin (phaios, dusky, + melas, black) - pigment found in
red hair
Melanocytes are neural crest derivatives which migrate into the developing epidermis' stratum basale, where
eventually one melanocyte accumulates for every five or six basal keratinocytes (600–1200/mm2 of skin).
They have rounded cell bodies and form hemidesmosomes with the basal lamina, but no desmosomes with
adjacent keratinocytes.
Long irregular dendritic extensions from each melanocyte branch into the epidermis, running between the cells of
the basal and spinous layers and terminating in invaginations of the neighboring five to ten keratinocytes.
A melanocyte is a pale-staining cell with numerous small mitochondria, short cisternae of rough endoplasmic
reticulum (RER), and a well-developed Golgi apparatus
Pigmentation
1. Carotene – inherent yellowish color (precursor of
vitamin A)
2. Hemoglobin - pink tint (oxygenated haemoglobin of
blood in the underlying capillary bed of the dermis)
3. Melanin – shades of brown to black
-produced by melanocytes present in varying
numbers in basal lamina of epidermis
- synthesized from tyrosine which is
transformed into 3-4 dihydrophenylalanine (dopa),
and then to dopaquinone, which is converted to
melanin.
- may be as few as 1000/mm2 on the arms and thighs,
and as many as 4000/mm2 on the face and neck
4. Pheomelanin – slightly different pigment of red hair
Dendritic (Langerhans)Cell
-Antigen presenting dendritic cell
-Usually most clearly seen in the spinous layer
-2-8% of the epidermal cell
-Bone marrow-derived, blood-borne cell
-Capable of binding, processing and presenting antigen to T
lymphocytes
-Immune cells in the dermis
Characteristics
1. Solitary cell type widely distributed in the epidermis
2. Stellate in form and has a heterochromatic nucleus of
irregular shape, surrounded by pale staining cytoplasm.
3. Contain small membrane bounded granules of unusual type,
called Birbeck granules
4. Can be distinguished from keratinocytes by their irregular nuclear shape,
their lack of bundles of keratin filaments, and the absence of
desmosomes .
5. located in the upper part of the stratum spinosum
6. May number as high as 800/mm2 and make up 3-8% of the cell
population of the epithelium.
7. Participate in the body’s immune responses
8. Have surface markers and receptors similar to those T-lymphocytes and macrophages
9. Occur in other stratifies squamous epithelia, including the oral cavity, esophagus and vagina.
Tactile(Merkel)Cells
-Epithelial tactile cells are mechanoeceptors
-Resembles pale-staining keratinocytes with keratin filament in
their cytoplasm and few, if any, melanosomes
-Characteristic feature: small, Golgi-derived dense-core
neurosecretory granules containing peptides like those of
neuroendocrine cells
-Derived from neural crest cells
-Located at the basal epidermal layer in areas of high tactile
sensitivity and at the bases of hair follicles
-Basolateral surfaces of the cells contact expanded terminal disc of
unmyelinated sensory fibers that penetrate the basal lamina
Characteristics
1. Small numbers are found in the basal layer of the epidermis
over the entire body.
2. More abundant in fingertips, which have an important role in
sensory reception.
3. Nucleus is deeply invaginated and the cytoplasm contains may dense cored granules 80-130nm in diameter and
intermediate filaments
4. Have mechanoreceptor function sensing pressure
5. Also occur in the epithelium of the oral mucosa
Function:
-related to the diffuse neuroendocrine system
-contribution as mechanoreceptors in the sense of touch
2. DERMIS
- Is the connective tissue that supports the epidermis and
binds it to the subcutaneous (hypodermis).
- immediately beneath the epidermis
- Makes up the greater part of the thickness of the skin
- Ranges in thickness from 0.6mm, in the thin skin of the
eyelids, to 3mm or more, on the palms and soles of the
feet.
- Usually thinner in female than in men
- The surface is very irregular and has many projections
(dermal papillae) that interdigitate with projections (epidermal pegs or ridges) of the epidermis.
-
- Contains two layers:
Papillary layer
o Outermost
o Thin in diameter
o Constitutes the major part of the dermal
papillae
o Composed of loose connective tissue with
fibroblast and other connective tissue cells such as
mast cells and macrophages
o Extravasated leukocytes are also seen in this
layer
o From this layer, anchoring fibrils of type VII collagen insert into the
basal lamina and bind the dermis to the epidermis
Reticular layer
o deeper layer
o thicker in diameter
o composed of irregular dense connective tissue
(mainly bundles of type I collagen), and has more
fibers and fewer cells than the papillary layer
o a network of elastic fibers is also present, providing
elasticity to the skin
BASEMENT MEMBRANE
- Is always found between the stratum basale and the papillary layer of the dermis and follows the contour of the
interdigitations between these layers.
- The basement membrane is a composite structure consisting of the basal lamina and the reticular lamina and
can usually be seen with the light microscope.
- Nutrients from keratinocytes must diffuse into the avascular epidermis from the dermis vasculature through this
basement membrane.
SUBCUTANEOUS TISSUE
SUBCUTANEOUS LAYER
o Also known as hypodermis or superficial fascia –
contains fat cells that vary in number in different
regions of the body and vary in size according to
nutritional state
o Consists of loose connective tissue that binds the
skin loosely to the subjacent organs, making it
possible for the skin to slide over them
o Adipose cell tend to accumulate in the hypodermis
of the abdomen and buttocks, and may reach a thickness of 3cm or more.
o Panniculus adiposus – subcutaneous layer of adipose cells.
Basement membranes. This section of kidney shows the typical basement
membranes (arrows) of several tubules and of structures within the single
glomerulus included here. In renal glomeruli the basement membrane, besides
having a supporting function, has an important role as a filter.
VESSELS AND SENSORY RECEPTORS
- Connective tissue of the skin contains a rich network of blood and lymphatic vessels
- Blood vessels that nourish the cells of the skin form two major plexuses:
Deep at the interface between hypodermis and dermis
Superficially between the papillary and reticular dermal layers
- A variety of sensory receptors are present in skin, including bot hsimple nerve endings with no glial or
collagenous covering and more complex structures with sensory fibers enclosed by glia and delicate connective
tissue capsules.
- The unencapsulated receptors include the following:
Tactile discs
o Associated with the epidermal tactile cells, which function as receptors for light touch.
Free nerve endings
o Found in the papillary dermis and extending into lower epidermal layers, which respond primarily
to high and low temperatures, pain, and itching
o Also functions as tactile receptors
Root hair plexuses
o Is a web of sensory fibers surrounding the bases of hair follicles in the reticular dermis that
detects the movements of the hairs.
- The following encapsulated receptors are tactile mechanoreceptors:
Tactile corpuscles (Meissner’s corpuscles)
o Elliptical structures
o About 30 – 75 µm
o Perpendicular to the epidermis in the
dermal papillae and papillary layer of
the fingertips, palms and soles
o They detect light touch
Lamellated (Pacinian) corpuscles
o Large oval structures
o Approximately 0.5 mm by 1 mm
Tactile (Merkel) cell
Epithelial tactile cells in the basal epidermal
layer of skin with high tactile sensitivity are
neural crest—derived cells that function as
mechanoreceptors. TEM of a tactile cell
from the finger epidermis of a 21—week
fetus shows a mass of dense—core
cytoplasmic granules (G) near the
basolateral cell membrane, which is in direct
contact with the expanded ending of a
nerve (N). X14,000. Inset: Granules are
similar in morphology and content to the
granules of many neuroendocrine cells.
a) Tactile corpuscle b) Lamellated corpuscle
o Found deep in the reticular dermis or hypodermis with an outer capsule and 15 to 50 thin,
concentric lamellae of flat Schwann-type cells and collagen surrounding a highly branched,
unmyelinated axon.
o Specialized for sensing coarse touch, pressure (sustained touch), and vibrations with distortion of
capsule amplifying a mechanical stimulus to the axonal core where an impulse is initiated.
Krause corpuscles and Ruffini
corpuscles
o Pressure-sensing
mechanoreceptors in the dermis
o Are more poorly characterized
structurally
- The encapsulated, lamellated, mechanoreceptors
are also found in the connective tissue of organs
located deep in the body, including the wall of
the rectum and urinary bladder, where they also
produce the sensation of pressure when the
surrounding tissue is distorted.
HAIR:
Elongated keratinized structures derived from invaginations of the epidermal epithelium called hair follicles.
Extends downward to the dermis, and sometimes a short distance into the subcutaneous tissue
Hairs are absent only on the palms and soles, the lateral aspect of the feet, the glans penis, clitoris, and the labia
minora
There are about 800hairs/mm2 on the face, but on the rest of the body they number only about 60hairs/mm
2
• On eyelids, no hairs other than the eyelashes project beyond their follicle, but on the head, hairs may grow to well
over 1m in length.
• The color, size, shape, and texture of hair vary according to age, genetic background, and region of the body.
Parts of hair
1. Hair follicle • the point from which the hair grows. It is a tiny
cup-shaped pit buried in the fat of the scalp. 2. Hair bulb
• A terminal dilation of the hair follicle during
anagen.
• Made up of epithelial cells (keratinocytes)
similar to those in the basal and spinous layers
of epidermis. They divide constantly and then
undergo keratinization, differentiating into
specific cell types.
Dermal Papilla- inserts into the base of
the hair bulb and contains a capillary
network required to sustain the hair
follicle.
Hair root- the epidermal cells covering
the dermal papilla.
Internal root sheath- completely surrounds the initial part of the hair shaft but degenerates
above the level of the attached sebaceous glands.
Tactile
receptor
External root sheath- covers the internal sheath and extends all the way to epidermis, where it is
continuous with the basal and spinous layers.
3. Hair shaft.
The part of the hair seen above the skin
It is made up of dead cells that have turned into
keratin and binding material, together with small
amounts of water.
This structure explains why we do not feel any pain
while our hair is being cut.
Medulla of the hair - A large, vacuolated,
and moderately keratinized cells. It is the
innermost layer of the hair shaft and is seen
only in large and thick hairs.
Hair cortex- A heavily keratinized,
compactly grouped fusiform cells. It is the
middle layer of the hair shaft made of keratin
fibers.
Hair cuticle- A thin layer of heavily
keratinized, shingle-like cells covering the
cortex. The outermost layer of the hair shaft.
Glassy membrane- An acellular hyaline layer with thickened
basement membrane separating the hair follicle from the
dermis.
Arrector pili muscle- A small bundle of smooth muscle cells
running from a midpoint on the connective tissue sheath
(surrounding dermis) to the dermal papillary layer.
Contraction of these muscles pulls the hair shaft to a
more erect position producing tiny bumps on the skin
surface called the goose bumps where each contracting
muscle distorts the attached dermis.
Nail
- hard, flexible plates of keratin on the dorsal surface of each distal
phalanx
*Parts*
Nail Plate
- The hard part of the nail. Made of keratin.
- Protects the nail bed
Free edge
- The very hardest part of the nail.
- The extension of the nail plate.
- Protects the fingertip.
Lunula
- Half-moon part of the nail.
- No real function.
- Creates the shape of the nail.
- The white color indicates the transition stage of the nail
from live to dead.
Nail Grooves
- The two runners that keep the nail growing in a straight
line.
Nail Walls or Nail Fold
- Sides of the nails, the fleshy parts.
- Protects the edges of the nail plate.
Cuticle
- Protects the matrix.
- The cuticle is dead skin.
Matrix
- The only living part of the nail.
- Any damage to the matrix is irreparable.
- The matrix is where the nail grows from, and where
new nail cells are formed.
Nail Bed
- This lies below the nail plate.
- It contains the blood vessels and nerve endings.
- The nail bed supplies nutrients to the matrix.
Hyponychium
- The top part of the nail seal.
- Protects against infection of the nail bed.
Dermatoglyphs – alternating ridges and grooves on the finger pads
o Distinct pattern of arches, loop, whorl – basis of the individuality of fingertips.
*Importance*
- The fingernail acts as a protective plate and enhances sensation of the fingertip. - The nail acts as a counterforce to the fingertip providing even more sensory input when an object is touched.
Sebaceous gland
Appendages of the hair follicles and are found throughout the dermis,
except where hairs are lacking (palms, soles, and sides of feet)
1 or 2 are associated with each hair follicle
Numbers 400-800/cm2 on the face, forehead, and scalp, but over the
rest of the body their numbers are very much lower.
It is 0.2-2.0mm in diameter and are located above the origin of the
arrector pilli muscle
Ducts open into the follicular canal around the hair shaft.
Sebum
– secretion that is composed of mixture of triglycerides, cholesterol, and
waxes.
Maintain soft texture of thin skin and flexibility of the hairs
Eccrine sweat glands
Widely distributed throughout the skin
Coiled tubular glands, with their secretory portion deep in the dermis, or in
the hypodermis.
Slender ducts ascends through these layers to open at a sweat pore on the
surface of the skin
Secretory portion is lined by cuboidal, or low columnar, epithelium
containing 2 cell types, designated light cell (clear cells), and dark cells, on
the basis of their appearance in stained histological sections.
Light cell – pyramidal in form
- Base in contact with the basal lamina between myepithelial cells
- Plasmalemma at cell base is elaborately infolded
- Egress of their secretion is via intercellular canaliculi that open into the
duct
- Cytoplasm is rich in glycogen, but contains no secretory granules
Dark cell – inverted pyramid in form
- With a broad adlumenal end tapering down to a small adlumenal end, that does not reach the basal lamina.
- Small , dark staining nucleus, a prominent Golgi complex, long mitochondria, and a few cisternae of rER
- Apical cytoplasm contains many moderately dense secretory granules
- Contains glycoprotein
- Long duct of the gland is line by and epithelium consisting of two layers of cuboidal cells.
Myoepihelial cell – between epithelium and its basal lamina. Contract to press the secretion out of the gland.
- Number between 3 million and 4 million, and their aggregate weight is roughly equivalent to that of a kidney.
- Innervated by cholinergic nerves
Apocrine sweat glands
- Second kind of sweat
- Found in the skin of axilla, mons pubis, and in the circumanal region
- Located deep in the dermis
- Larger than the eccrine sweat glands
Merocrine - mode of secretion
- Duct opens in the canal of the hair follicle
- Secretory portion of the tubular gland is lined by cells that are usually cuboidal, but they may be squamous if
the gland is distended with secretion.
- Apical cytoplasm contains large secretory granules
- Slightly viscous fluid that is oderless when secreted, after modification by bacteria residing on the skin, it
acquires an odor.
- Secretory activity does not begin until puberty
- In women, there is an enlargement of the cells, and of the lumen of axillary apocrine sweat glands, during
premenstrual phase of the cycle, followed by regression during menses.
- Innervated by adrenergic nerves
Nerves
- Free endings
- Penetrate the epidermis and terminate in the stratum granulosum
- Sense of pain or temperature
- Axons of other myelinated nerves end in disk-like expansions, called Merkel endings, that are in contact with
Merkel cells at the base of the epitheliuim.
- Function is still unknown
- Encapsulated endings
Pacinian corpuscles – in the dermis and hypodermis are ovoid structures up to
1mm in length.
- The axon of the myelinated nerve penetrates into the core of the
corpuscles, where it is surrounded by 20-60 concentric lamellae
consisting of very thin, flat cells separated by narrow spaces that are
filled with gelatinous material.
- Resembles an onion in cross section
Meissner’s corpuscles – pear shaped structures made up of flattened
cell oriented transversely, resulting in a ladder-like appearance in
section.
- The nerve axons loses it sheath, enters one pole of the
corpuscle, and pursues a spiral or zigzag course among the
flat cells in its interior.
- Meissnr’s corpuscles are found in occasional dermal papillae.
Such ending are probably mechanoreceptor sensing slight
deformation of the skin.
Kraus’s end bulbs – small spheroidal bodies in the papillary
layer of the dermis.
- They bear a superficial resemblance to Pacician
corpuscles, but are much smaller and lack concentric
lamellae.
- Their sensory modality is unclear.
Medical Applications
Skin cancer - shows an increased incidence in fair-skinned individuals residing in
regions with high amounts of solar radiation.
Psoriasis - greater epidermal thickness and more rapid renewal of
epidermis -- abnormal keratinization with a defective skin barrier.
Malignant melanoma is an invasive tumor of melanocytes.
Addison disease - lack of cortisol from the adrenal
cortex -- increase the pigmentation of the skin.
Albinism - a hereditary inability of the melanocytes to
synthesize melanin
Vitiligo - causes a patchy loss of pigment in the skin
bullous pemphigoid - blistering disorder
pemphigus - blistering disorder caused by autoimmune damage to intercellular junctions between keratinocytes.
acne - a chronic inflammation of obstructed sebaceous glands common during and after puberty.