Urothelium 

Transitional epithelium of the urinary bladder. Note the rounded surface of the apical cells -- a distinguishing characteristic of this type of epithelium.

The urothelium is the tissue layer that lines much of the urinary tract, including the renal pelvis, the ureters, the bladder, and parts of the urethra.

Contents

Functions

Urothelium is the most specialized epithelium and plays important and conflicting roles: the urothelium must act as a permeability barrier -- protecting underlying tissues against noxious urine components — while also stretching to accommodate urine pressures.

Structure

Urothelium is a tissue layer of approximately 3-5 cell layers, accompanied by a thick layer of protective glycoprotein plaques at its luminal (apical) surface, and is classified as transitional epithelium. Epithelia are tissue layers that line interior and exterior body surfaces:

Multi-layered epithelia are typically structured with specialized, mature cells at the surface, whereas less mature "basal" cells occupy the base of the epithelium. The mature surface cells are continually sloughed off and are replaced by a supply of newly maturing cells. The basal cell layer contains tissue-specific stem cells that are capable of cell division for the lifetime of the animal and thereby generate the pool of maturing cells that maintains tissue homeostasis. Because of this continual epithelial renewal process, chemotherapeutic drugs that interfere with cell division can cause complications of deteriorating epithelia (e.g., oral sores).

Pathology

Epithelia are sites of specific diseases.

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