Slides of Histology

Learning Objectives

  • Be able to describe the functions of cells commonly found in connective tissue and identify them.
  • Be able to recognize interstitial (fibrillar) collagens and elastic fibers at the light and electron microscopic levels.
  • Be able to distinguish between type I collagen, type III (reticular) collagen, and elastic fibers when appropriately stained material is presented.
  • Be able to use knowledge about the physical characteristics of collagen and elastin in explaining the functions of tissue where these molecules occur in large quantities (e.g., coarse type I collagen fibrils present in dense connective tissue compared to more delicate type III fibers found closer to the interface of cells and the extracellular matrix).
  • Be able to recognize different types of connective tissue (e.g., dense irregular, dense regular, loose, adipose) and provide examples where they are found in the body.
  • Be able to recognize a basement membrane (or basal lamina) in sections or micrographs where the structure is conspicuously present and understand its functions.

The information below can also be accessed here.

Loose Connective Tissue

  • Slide 29 (small intestine, H&E) WebScope

Look at the connective tissue in the submucosa which is the lighter staining area [example] between the intestinal epithelium and the smooth muscle layer. In this area note the irregular, wavy collagen fibers arranged singly or in small groups. The collagen of fibrous supporting tissues, the dermis of the skin, tendon, ligaments and bone is type I collagen, which provides tensile strength. The background will be clear, reflecting a “ground substance”-rich connective tissue. Look for elongated nuclei, usually solitary, from which a modest amount of tapered cytoplasm extends from either one or both poles of the nucleus. These are fibroblasts [example](as opposed to clusters of similar appearing elongate nuclei that are usually smooth muscle cells or Schwann cells in a nerve that you will learn to recognize soon). Note that the nucleoplasm of a fibroblast has a generally fine stippled (dot-like) chromatin pattern with occasional coarse chromatin clumps (heterochomatin) and one or two nucleoli. Look for more examples of fibroblasts and note that you rarely see much cytoplasm and that the nuclei of these cells can be quite condensed and hyperchromatic depending upon the plane of section or the metabolic state. You should be able to recognize a range of nuclear morphologies and be able to identify the cells as fibroblasts. Most of the rounded cells you may see in the submucosa are likely white blood cells (monocytes, macrophages, and occasional neutrophils) that have migrated out into the tissue.

Now look at the region immediately underneath the intestinal epithelium (which is called the lamina propria [example]). This region is also a loose, irregular connective tissue but can be so extensively infiltrated by white blood cells and plasma cells that the supporting fibers and ground substance are obscured. Neutrophils and macrophages are also present and both are discussed below.

Plasma Cells

Look for plasma cells within the lamina propria of slide 29 [example]. They are round to oval shaped cells with a distinct cell boundary and a nucleus set to one side. Note the coarse chromatin clumps organzed as radial spokes in the round nuclei which is therefore often described as having a “clockface” or “wagon-wheel” appearance. You should note that the cytoplasm is quite basophilic (i.e. “base loving” so it binds hematoxylin and stains dark blue/purple), and, in well fixed tissue, the cytoplasm in many of the plasma cells is frequently granular (the rough endoplasmic reticulum, really) rather than smooth or even in appearance.

Find the Golgi complex, a pale or slightly eosinophilic (=eosin “loving”, an area rich in membranes containing basic amino acids, syn. = acidophilic) region adjacent to the cell nucleus. The Golgi complex in these particular plasma cells is usually in the form of a fine crescent adjacent to the nucleus and it takes some practice to recognize.

Recall that the primary function of plasma cells is antibody secretion, so they are a prominent constituent of loose connective tissue wherever antigens may enter the body, such as the gastrointestinal, urogenital, and respiratory tracts. Plasma cells may also be found within the connective tissue of many of the glands that secrete into these regions. An excellent example of this is slide 40 from the trachea (part of the respiratory tract). Look at the areas outlined in the orientation diagram of the trachea and locate the loose, cellular connective tissue within the glands (the “glands” are coiled tubes of columnar epithelial cells; some the epithelial cells are tall and eosinophilic, whereas others are shorter and more basophilic). In addition to some fibroblasts and a few delicate collagen fibers, you should see quite a few plasma cells [example] amongst the epithelial tubes.

Slide 40 is also a very good specimen to examine the pseudostratified, ciliated columnar epithelium of the trachea. Note also that the basement membrane underlying this particular epithelium is especially prominent. Type IV collagen, which does not form fibrils, but rather a fine meshwork, is present in all basement membranes. The basal lamina is anchored to the underlying connective tissue by fine fibrils of type VII collagen (you obviously can’t tell this looking at it in the light microscope, but you should recall this from lecture).

Neutrophils

  • Slide 29 (small intestine, H&E) WebScope

Look in the lamina propria amongst the plasma cells and you will find neutrophils that have emigrated from the bloodstream into the tissue space as part of the immune response. Neutrophils can be identified by their granular cytoplasm and their multilobular, condensed nuclei. Because of their nuclear morphology, they are frequently also called “polymorphonuclear leukocytes” (aka “PMNs” or “polys”). Neutrophils generally enter tissues in large numbers only in response to a disease stimulus. However, as seen in this slide, it is quite normal to find them in tissues such as the gut where foreign substances frequently invoke an inflammatory response. You will study neutrophils in much greater detail in other sequences and in your histopathology course, but it is useful for now to at least be able to recognize them in various tissues and organs.

Macrophages

With low power, locate the medulla (the interior) of the lymph node. Look for a region characterized by interlacing cords of cells. Macrophages are the biggest, rounded cells that are floating free in the spaces between the cords of cells. Many of the free cells in these medullary sinuses cannot be identified; however, the large rounded cells, with eccentrically placed, vesicular nuclei are the ones you should try to find.

Many of these macrophages contain phagocytosed red blood cells or the brownish breakdown pigment, hemosiderin (which is the result of lysosomal action on the ingested red blood cells.). Be sure you can identify a macrophage and not just a bunch of cells superimposed upon one another. Macrophages can be seen also in the subcapsular sinus (the lighter staining area just under the capsule at the periphery of the lymph node).

The “mononuclear phagocyte system” (also called the “reticuloendothelial system” for historic reasons) consists of free and fixed macrophages throughout the body. These cells are important in removing all kinds of debris from the body as well as playing a major role in the immune response.

Fat Cells

Slide 152 is a section from the pharynx. Locate the large clear circles [example] in the connective tissue that sits beneath the epithelium. These are fat cells (or adipocytes). In white or unilocular adipose tissue, lipids are stored as a single, non-membrane bound droplet in these cells. A fatty tissue called brown or multilocular fat, produced during fetal development, has adipocytes that contain multiple fat droplets. Brown fat is important for thermoregulation in newborns and hibernating mammals. In humans, brown fat is widely distributed throughout the body in the first decade of life, but it then disappears except for regions around the kidney, suprarenal glands, aorta, neck and mediastinum. None of our slides of adult tissue shows any brown fat, however this rather unique tissue can be seen in slide H2 [example], which is from a developing fetus.

Look for adipose tissue in Slide #30 which is taken from abdominal mesentery (the connective tissue that suspends the viscera within the abdominal cavity). Some of the individual fat cells are often broken during tissue preparation, but the overall impression of what the tissue looks like is the important point.

Mast Cells

  • Slide 160 (stomach, PAS & Azure II) WebScope

Mast cells can only be definitively recognized with special stains such as Azure II and toluoidine blue that identify the heparin storage granules (Azure metachromatically stains the heparin purple). Mast cells are most abundant in the connective tissue associated with the lining of the digestive and respiratory systems, and your collection just so happens to contain a tissue section from the stomach that has been stained with PAS and Azure II. As you look at this section, you will see a very obvious layer of mucous epithelial cells (PAS also reacts with the carbohydrate-rich mucin). However, to see the mast cells, you will need to look deeper in the submucosawhere you should find small, ovoid cells amongst the collagen fibers with spherical, eccentric nuclei and intensely basophilic (dark purple to black) granules [example]. The granules are often so dark that they obscure the nucleus.

Reticular tissue

  • Slide 27 (lymph node, H&E) WebScope
  • Slide 28 (lymph node, silver stain) WebScope

The fine collagenous network that provides support in the bone marrow, lymphatic organs, around individual smooth muscle cells, and beneath most epithelia is composed mainly of Type III collagen. The collagen has an associated carbohydrate moiety (uncharacterized) that can reduce Ag+ to metallic Ag revealing a network (reticulum) of fine, black fibrils. These are termed reticular (or rarely, argyrophilic= “silver loving”) fibers. On slide #27 look at the accumulations ofdarkly stained cells (lymphocytes in a lymph node). Note at high power that fibrils or fibers of any type cannot be readily observed. Now with slide #28 (make sure your slide is stained with silver; it should say “Ag” on the label!), note how a network of fine black fibrils is present in this same tissue following silver staining. These are reticular fibers, found in skin, muscle and blood vessels. The reticular fibers provide physical support for all the cells present in tissues subject to stretching. You are not responsible for recognizing reticular fibers unless a silver stain is used.

Please remember that virtually all cells (except for those in the brain and spinal cord) are provided with some degree of support by collagen (reticular fibers) even though that may not be apparent with H&E staining. (Masson Trichrome and silver staining are frequently used in pathology to determine if connective tissue has proliferated–a sign of damage and attempted repair–in the liver, kidney and lung.)

Dense Connective Tissue

Dense Irregular Connective Tissue

The area beneath the stratified squamous epithelium shown in slide 33 is the dermis, which is composed of dense irregular connective tissue. In this section, the fibers clearly predominate. This slide has been stained with iron hematoxylin and eosin so you can see collagen fibers(orange) as well as elastic fibers (purple/black) in the dermis [example]. Note how the diameter of the fibers varies with location. In the region immediately beneath the epidermis you can see how the elastic fibers are interconnected forming an elaborate, delicate net of fibers [example]amongst thin strands of collagen. However, deeper in the dermis, the collagen and elastic fibers are much thicker.

Slide 250 which you used to look at stratified squamous non-keratinizing epithelium is also useful for the study of connective tissue (we will also use this slide to study smooth muscle and peripheral ganglia). Be sure you look at both the H&E and Masson trichrome-stained slides as they provide an excellent opportunity to see how collagen stains in connective tissue when either stain is applied. When we study smooth muscle and peripheral nerve tissue we will come back to this slide to try and distinguish between collagen fibers and fascicles of smooth muscle and/or nerve fibers and ganglia.

NOTE: Slide 250 illustrates a point about the limits of classification schemes. Even though we try to set up rigid categories (e.g. “loose” versus “dense” connective tissue), sometimes it is not always possible to classify connective tissue in a given section; it may be a little loose, a little dense, a little fatty, etc. In these particular instances, don’t worry so much about trying to exactly classify the tissue per se, but at least try to identify the cellular and extracelluar components that you can (also bear in mind that you can’t always definitely identify every cell) and think how its overall appearance reflects its function.

Dense Regular Connective Tissue

Collagenous

  • Slide 106 (plantar skin and tendon, H&E) WebScope
  • Slide 112 (plantar skin and tendon, H&E) WebScope

Slide 106 and 112 have bits of well preserved flexor tendon at the top of the section (the tissue at the very top of slide 112 is actually skeletal muscle -which you’ll study in the next lab; the tendon is just below it). Note the regular orientation of the collagen fibers (there’s a bit a “waviness” but you should get the idea). You should also observe that there aren’t a lot of cells, a characteristic of “dense” connective tissue. The very small cracks between the fibers are just artifacts of shrinkage that occured during tissue preparation. Of course, there are some places where there are breaks in the dense regular connective tissue of the tendon containing loose connective tissue associated with nerves and blood vessels or the occasional bit of adipose tissue.

Elastic tissue

These slides are examples of regularly arranged sheets (lamellae) of elastin. Slide 36 is stained with aldehyde fuchsin and Masson trichrome (Aldehyde Fuchsin, Fe. Hem. & Mass.), so the elastic lamellae are purple. Slide 88 is stained with H&E where the concentric rings of elastic lamellae are intensely stained with eosin giving a glassy red appearance [example] (one of the few places where elastin is easy to recognize in H&E sections).

Two other locations where elastic fibers can be readily seen in H&E sections are in the lamina propria of the pharynx (slide 152 WebScope) and the trachea (slide 40 WebScope). Unlike the tissue of the aorta which would be classified as “regular,” these tissues are obviously irregular but they’re mentioned here for the purpose of illustrating how aggregates of elastic fibers appear in H&E-stained sections. Just as in the H&E-stained aorta, the elastic fibers in the pharynx and trachea are glassy and orange-red –they appear as stippled dots because they’ve been cut in cross section.

Electron Micrographs

  • 26 Connective Tissue – Dense Irregular Webscope

Dense Connective Tissue. Note the alternating layers of fibroblasts and collagenous fiber bundles. Make sure you can see the difference between cross sectioned and longitudinally sectioned collagenous fibrils. In dense connective tissue, which type of cell is most common? (CT7)

  • 18 Loose Connective Tissue – Lamina propria of tracheal mucosa Webscope

Loose Connective Tissue. In this micrograph of loose connective tissue of the tracheal mucosa numerous (labeled) cells of the connective tissue are present. Note the relative size of the different cell types, their shapes, amount of rough ER and variously sized granules and inclusions. Then use your text and atlas to review the diagnostic features of each connective tissue cell present in the micrograph. Note the paucity of collagen fibrils. What was present in the “empty” looking intercellular space? (CT10)

  • 27 Elastic Connective Tissue – Junction of Media and Adventilia of artery Webscope

Observe the branching nature of the elastic fiber and the “mantle” of elastic microfibrils. The cross banding of the collagenous fibrils is easily observed.

  • 28 Collagen and Elastin – Cross section of Chorda Tendinea Webscope

Observe the mixture of collagen and elastic fibers in this cross section of chorda tendinea. Although collagen fibers mostly fill the view, there are numerous elastic fibers, which provide the elasticity essential for the function of the tissue.

  • 29 Tendon – Longitudinal section Webscope

Note the uniform distribution of regularly arranged collagen fibers (type I).

  • 25 Connective Tissue – Fibroblast Webscope

Observe the large amount of rough endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in these cells. Is this an indication of an active or inactive cell? (CT9) Test your ability to identify different organelles at this magnification!

Mast cells contain a mixture of granule types reflective of the variety of substances they secrete. Histamine and heparin are found in the more “regular” looking granules (evenly dark and round). Other secretory products include leukotrienes and other phospholipid derivatives, which are made from the sheets of membranes arranged as lamella, whorls, or even scroll-like bodies within the more irregular appearing granules. What are the secretory products of the mast cell? (CT11)

Tissue macrophages can be found in many different organs. As they have a phagocytic function, removing pathogens and cell debris, macrophages usually contain abundant primary and secondary lysosomes.

This electron micrograph shows a typical secretory cell, a plasma cell, which secretes immunoglobulin protein. Many of the major types of cellular organelles are visible in this image. In the nucleus, areas of euchromatin and heterochromatin can easily be identified. Use these micrographs to review the structure of organelles. Be sure you recognise favourable sections of the nucleas, mitochondria, and rough ER.

This electron micrograph depicts mature fat cells. You can see one large lipid droplet in the cytoplasm of each cell. The nuclei of many cells are not included in the field of view. Brown fat cells would have several small lipid droplets all of which would be roughly the same size. Remember that each fat cell is enclosed by a thin basal lamina (Unfortunately, in these examples you can’t see the basal lamina). Where are the nuclei of the fat cells? (CT8)

Review Questions

  1. What type of epithelium lines the luminal surface of the intestine?

  2. Why is rough endoplasmic reticulum basophilic?

  3. What type of lining epithelium is present in the pharynx?

  4. Can you see a nucleus in each fat cell?

  5. What do mast cells do?

  6. Why do cells actively secreting proteins exhibit basophilic cytoplasm?

  7. In dense connective tissue, which type of cell is most common?

  8. Where are the nuclei of fat cells?

  9. Is rough ER an indication of an active or an inactive cell?

  10. What was present in the “empty” looking intercellular space?

  11. What are the secretory products of the mast cell?