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Icse Tissues

Cell Structure — Icse Tissues

Icse Tissues

Tissue Level Organisation

What is a Tissue?

A tissue is a group of cells that are similar in structure and work together to perform a specific function. Moving from individual cells to tissues is a key step in the organisation of multicellular organisms.

Levels of organisation: Cell → Tissue → Organ → Organ system → Organism

Plant Tissues

1. Meristematic Tissue (dividing tissue)

  • Cells are small, thin-walled, with large nuclei — actively dividing
  • Found at growing tips: apical meristem (shoot/root tips), lateral meristem (cambium — increases girth)
  • Function: growth of plant in length and width

2. Permanent Tissue (stopped dividing)

Simple Permanent Tissue (one cell type)

TissueDescriptionFunction
ParenchymaThin-walled, loosely packed, oval/round cellsStorage, photosynthesis (chlorenchyma), buoyancy (aerenchyma)
CollenchymaThick at corners, no intercellular spacesFlexible mechanical support (leaf stalks, stems)
SclerenchymaDead cells with very thick, lignified wallsRigid mechanical support (coconut husk, jute)

Complex Permanent Tissue (more than one cell type)

TissueComponentsFunction
XylemTracheids, vessels, xylem parenchyma, xylem fibresConduction of water and minerals upward
PhloemSieve tubes, companion cells, phloem parenchymaConduction of food (sucrose) up and down

Animal Tissues

1. Epithelial Tissue

  • Covers body surfaces, lines organs and cavities
  • Tightly packed cells, little intercellular matrix
  • Types: squamous (flat), cuboidal (cube-shaped), columnar (column-shaped), ciliated, glandular
  • Function: protection, absorption, secretion, sensation

2. Connective Tissue

  • Cells scattered in a large intercellular matrix
  • Types:
    • Areolar: packs organs together, fights infection
    • Adipose: fat storage, insulation
    • Blood: transport of O₂, nutrients, waste, immunity
    • Bone: rigid support, mineral storage
    • Cartilage: flexible support (ear, nose, joints)
    • Tendon/Ligament: connect muscle-bone / bone-bone

3. Muscular Tissue

TypeStructureControlLocation
Striated (skeletal)Cylindrical, multinucleate, stripedVoluntaryArms, legs
Smooth (unstriated)Spindle-shaped, uninucleate, no stripesInvoluntaryGut, blood vessels
CardiacCylindrical, branched, intercalated discsInvoluntaryHeart wall only

4. Nervous Tissue

  • Made of neurons (nerve cells)
  • Each neuron: cell body (cyton) + dendrites (receive signals) + axon (sends signals)
  • Neuroglia: supporting cells surrounding neurons
  • Function: receive, process, and transmit electrical signals

ICSE Key Distinctions

  • Meristematic vs Permanent: dividing vs non-dividing
  • Xylem is dead (tracheids, vessels) but phloem has living cells (sieve tubes + companion cells)
  • Sclerenchyma: dead cells → strongest mechanical support; examples: jute fibres, coconut husk
  • Cardiac muscle is involuntary but striated — unique combination
  • Blood is a liquid connective tissue (matrix = plasma)

Quick Check

  1. Name the tissue that forms the inner lining of the cheek.
  2. Which plant tissue conducts food down from leaves?
  3. Jute fibres are made of which tissue?
  4. Why is blood classified as connective tissue?
  5. Stretch: Why can't mature RBCs divide, and what tissue do they belong to?

Key Takeaways (TL;DR)

  • What is a Tissue?
  • Plant Tissues
  • Animal Tissues
  • ICSE Key Distinctions

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