It is one of the four types of tissue in traditional classifications (the others being epithelial, muscle, and nervous tissue).
Collagen is the main protein of connective tissue in animals and the most abundant protein in mammals, making up about 25% of the total protein content.2
Characterized largely by the traits of non-living tissue.
Blood, cartilage, and bone are usually considered connective tissue, but because they differ so substantially from the other tissues in this class, the phrase "connective tissue proper" is commonly used to exclude those three. There is also variation in the classification of embryonic connective tissues; on this page they will be treated as a third and separate category.
Classification
Connective tissue can be classified into three categories: proper, embryonic, and specialized.3
Connective tissue proper
Connective tissue proper
Connective tissue proper includes the following five types: loose connective, dense connective, elastic, reticular, and adipose.3 They are called "proper" because they are the types usually meant when using the phrase "connective tissue".
The category "specialized connective tissue" consists of bone, cartilage, and blood.3 Although these items are connective tissue, they are often considered separately.
The following two can be classified as "supportive connective tissue":5
Bone (osseous tissue) makes up virtually the entire skeleton in adult vertebrates.
Cartilage makes up virtually the entire skeleton in chondrichthyes. In most other vertebrates, it is found primarily in joints, where it provides cushioning. The extracellular matrix of cartilage is composed primarily of collagen.
Alternate systems
The old classification system for connective tissue is proper versus specialized. There has been a new classifications system proposed, however, and it is as follows:
Ehlers-Danlos syndrome - deficient type III collagen- a genetic disease causing progressive deterioration of collagens, with different EDS types affecting different sites in the body, such as joints, heart valves, organ walls, arterial walls, etc.
Loeys-Dietz syndrome - a genetic disease related to Marfan syndrome, with an emphasis on vascular deterioration.
Pseudoxanthoma elasticum - an autosomal recessive hereditary disease, caused by calcification and fragmentation of elastic fibres, affecting the skin, the eyes and the cardiovascular system.
Systemic lupus erythematosus - a chronic, multisystem, inflammatory disorder of probable autoimmune etiology, occurring predominantly in young women.
Osteogenesis imperfecta (brittle bone disease) - caused by insufficient production of good quality collagen to produce healthy, strong bones.
Spontaneous pneumothorax - collapsed lung, believed to be related to subtle abnormalities in connective tissue.
Sarcoma - a neoplastic process originating within connective tissue.
Staining of connective tissue
For microscopic viewing, the majority of the connective tissue staining techniques color tissue fibers in contrasting shades. Collagen may be differentially stained by any of the following techniques:
^ abc Strum, Judy M.; Gartner, Leslie P.; Hiatt, James L. (2007). Cell biology and histology. Hagerstwon, MD: Lippincott Williams & Wilkins. pp. 83. ISBN 0-7817-8577-4.