Squamous epithelial cell

Squamous epithelial cell

In anatomy, squamous epithelium (squama- + -ous) is that surface whose outermost (apical) layer consists of thin, flat cells called squamous epithelial cells. The epithelium may be composed of one layer of cells, in which case it is referred to as simple squamous epithelium, or it may possess multiple layers, referred to then as stratified squamous epithelium.

Squamous epithelial cells have a polygonal appearance when viewed from above.[1] Squamous epithelial tissue regenerates readily; it turns over (replaces old cells with new ones) every few weeks. The cells of the basal reserve only divide while replacing cells directly above themselves. The cells that are produced by the basal layer are called parabasal transit amplifying (TA) cells. The TA cells have 'committed' to cellular differentiation, and will not revert to basal reserve cells. The TA cells divide daily for up to 80 cell divisions and then they discontinue differentiation. Each time a TA cell divides, it does so in an asymmetrical fashion, with one daughter cell remaining in the TA layer while the other migrates upward, leaving the cell cycle. This final differentiation results in the formation of spinous cells. Spinous cells make up the thickest layer of epithelial tissues. In the case of cutaneous skin, the spinous cells develop into granulocytes. These then become superficial cells, programmed for death, and are sloughed off as cornified envelopes. (See keratinocytes.)[2]

Etymology and pronunciation

The word squamous (/ˈskwməs/) derives from squama and -ous, the former from the Latin squāmōsus, from squāma, "scale" (referring to fish or snake scales), because of the epithelial tissue's appearance on microscopy, with a polygonal tiling of thin, flat cells.

See also

References

  1. Kühnel, Wolfgang (2003). Color atlas of cytology, histology, and microscopic anatomy. Thieme. p. 102. ISBN 978-3-13-562404-4.
  2. Chow, L. T.; Broker, T. R. (2013). "Human Papillomavirus Infections: Warts or Cancer?". Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology 5 (7): a012997–a012997. doi:10.1101/cshperspect.a012997. ISSN 1943-0264.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Sunday, April 17, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.