Transcript for:
Identifying Different Types of Epithelium

so what i'm going to do is show you one example  of each and then ask a series of questions to   see if you can identify the epithelium i just  showed you using the techniques i just explained   so when you're identifying epithelium you  really need to ask yourself two questions first   how many layers of cells am i seeing and what are the shape of those cells that i'm  seeing so when you're seeing one layer of cells   that is a simple epithelium    multiple layers of cells would be a stratified epithelium and our three possible shapes are squamous which are flat cuboidal which are squares   and columnar which are columns  the only slight trouble occurs when sometimes cuboidal cells  they might look a little bit rectangular so in  that case look at the nuclei if the nuclei is a   nice little circle it's going to be cuboidal  if it is an oval it is going to be columnar so on our first example we are  seeing a singular layer of square   shaped cells and that's why this  is simple cuboidal so you're seeing that in a couple examples on this slide if you were unable to tell what shape these  cells were look at the circular nuclei remember   simple cuboidal has circular  nuclei   In our next example you're seeing the basement membrane remember  epithelium always has to be attached to something   and that something is the basement membrane and  you have a single row of cells going off this way   and a separate singular layer of cells going  off this way and you can see little rectangular   outlines which is how you know this is simple  columnar now if you couldn't see the outlines   you can also look for those oval shaped nuclei  you can also look sometimes but not always   you'll have these specialized little  cup shaped cells called goblet cells in the next slide what you're seeing  is the same type of epithelium at two   different magnifications so when you're looking  at it at a high high magnification you can see   one layer of flat cells so this is simple squamous in this example your first instinct is  to probably think that you're seeing   multiple layers of cells because you're seeing  multiple layers of nuclei but what you're   actually seeing is you have a little short  cell here and then you have some tall cells   but they're all attached to the basement membrane  so this is really only one layer so this is the   ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium it  is called ciliated because it has cilia on top   pseudo stratified "pseudo" means fake like  pseudoscience is fake science pseudostratified   means fake layers and the taller  cells would be column shaped in this example so this is the basement  membrane down here you're seeing many cells so it is stratified and if you pay attention  to the shape of the cells at the top   you can see they're very flat little pancakes so this is stratified squamous even though  the cells towards the bottom are more   cube shaped we only care about the cells  on the top when we're picking the name and this last example does not follow the  naming pattern so it is stratified because   there are multiple little layers of  cells stacked on top of each other   but they're not really squamous they're not  columnar they're not cuboidal so this just gets   its own name this is transitional epithelium  so if you're looking at an epithelium that's   stratified and you feel confused about the  shape it's probably transitional your other   hint is if you look at the top usually the  cells at the top look like little bubbles so now i want you to think for  yourself what am i looking at how many layers what is the shape so what you're seeing is simple columnar because  we have a row of cells going in this direction   a row of cells going in that  direction and these nice oval nuclei   also kind of a giveaway is the goblet cells  not every single example of simple columnar   has goblet cells but if you see goblet  cells it's pretty safe to say it is simple columnar so the answer to what this is you're seeing one  layer of squashed cells so it is simple squamous so looking at this example i'm asking  about these cells here and here and here so we are seeing one layer of  square cells so it is simple   cuboidal so we have one layer of square cells here  a basement membrane and then a different layer of   square cells here they're not perfect squares they  are a little dome-y at the top but you definitely   shouldn't confuse this with transitional  because transitional is very clearly stratified so we're seeing multiple layers of cells the  ones near the top are squash little pancakes   that's how we know it is stratified squamous so i'm interested in this part of the slide you're seeing multiple layers of cells because  you have all those rows and rows of nuclei you don't see any cilia on top and it doesn't look squamous cuboidal or  columnar so this is our transitional epithelium so this would be the ciliated pseudostratified columnar epithelium   because we've got those cilia on  the top which is a dead giveaway um   and these cells are kind of tall and skinny  with some shorter cells on the bottom now this is a bit of an advanced  example but let's see if you can get it   just for funsies i'm actually interested in two  different things here ignore what's at the pointer   pay no attention so there's this  here what do you think that would be and then there's also this here and there's  other example here what are we looking at so this first thing you're seeing one little layer  of squashed pancake cells that's simple squamous and this even though you can't pick the individual  cells apart very easily you see those circular   little nuclei and they're kind of like in a  cheerio formation which you see a lot with simple cuboidal so i feel like for most beginners most  professors just ask you simple squamous   on like a lung slide which is what i showed  you before that has lots of empty space   however it doesn't hurt to know what it  looks like in other organs this is a kidney   Alright, I hope it was helpful if you did not  understand why you were wrong about anything   just leave a comment and i'll try to explain  as best as i can um i hope this was helpful i   hope you feel great about how much you  know have a wonderful day and have fun learning