"connective tissue": adipose, cartilage, blood, various dense & loose connective tissues
Connective Tissue.
The three types are collagenous fibers, elastic fibers, and reticular fibers. Some examples of collagenous fibers are; tendons, skin, bone, teeth, hyaline cartilage, vitreous humor, the lens of the eye, cartilage, hair, and placenta. Some examples of elastic fibers are found in arteries, veins, and elastic cartilage. Some examples of reticular fibers are found in the meshwork of bone marrow, the liver, and lymphatic system.
Activators
They support, they bind, and they strengthen muscle as a whole.
Receptor molecules, or called receptor proteins.
Small molecules that bind with self-proteins to produce antigenic substances are called happens. The unique area that a lymphocyte recognizes and binds to an antigenic determinant.
The protein that carries iron through the circulation of the tissues is called transferrin. Transferrin has also been found to bind to other metals and is used in biochemical research.
Connective tissues
Currency straps are used to bind dollar (and other denomination) bills in stacks.
Complementary
Cells connect with other cells to make up tissues. Tissues connect and function with other tissues to make up organs. Cells interact with other cells and something called an Extracellular Matrix (ECM). You can think of the ECM is a type of sticky glue that the cells bind to. Cells also bind directly to other cells by way of desmosomes, hemidesmosomes, gap junctions, and tight junctions. Tissues are arranged in many ways depending on the types of cells they contain.
The molecule that can bind to a receptor protein is called a ligand.