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Thick elastic fibers from the visceral pleura (outer lining) of the human lung. Elastic fibers are found in the skin, lungs, arteries, veins, connective tissue proper, elastic cartilage, periodontal ligament, fetal tissue and other tissues which must undergo mechanical stretching. [1] In the lung there are thick and thin elastic fibers. [3]
Other kinds of connective tissues include fibrous, elastic, and lymphoid connective tissues. [11] Fibroareolar tissue is a mix of fibrous and areolar tissue. [12] Fibromuscular tissue is made up of fibrous tissue and muscular tissue. New vascularised connective tissue that forms in the process of wound healing is termed granulation tissue. [13]
Fibrillin is a glycoprotein, which is essential for the formation of elastic fibers found in connective tissue. [2] Fibrillin is secreted into the extracellular matrix by fibroblasts and becomes incorporated into the insoluble microfibrils, which appear to provide a scaffold for deposition of elastin. [3]
Elastin is a protein encoded by the ELN gene in humans and several other animals. Elastin is a key component in the extracellular matrix of gnathostomes (jawed vertebrates). [5] It is highly elastic and present in connective tissue of the body to resume its shape after stretching or contracting. [6]
The tunica externa is made from collagen and elastic fibers in a loose connective tissue. [1] [2] This is secreted by fibroblasts. [1]This is normally the thickest tunic in veins and may be thicker than the tunica media in some larger arteries.
The lamina propria is a loose connective tissue, hence it is not as fibrous as the underlying connective tissue of the submucosa. [4] [self-published source?] The connective tissue and architecture of the lamina propria is very compressible and elastic, this can be seen in organs that require expansion such as the bladder. [5]
The reticular dermis is the lower layer of the dermis, found under the papillary dermis, composed of dense irregular connective tissue featuring densely-packed collagen fibers. It is the primary location of dermal elastic fibers. [2] The reticular region is usually much thicker than the overlying papillary dermis.
The middle coat is composed of a thick layer of connective tissue with elastic fibers, intermixed, in some veins, with a transverse layer of muscular tissue. [6] The white fibrous element is in considerable excess, and the elastic fibers are in much smaller proportion in the veins than in the arteries.