Biology 2401 - Anatomy and Physiology I Exam 1 notes - Introduction, Cell and Tissue Structure



Similar documents
Two main classes: Epithelial Connective (synovial) Epithelial. Cutaneous Mucous Serous

Human Anatomy & Physiology I with Dr. Hubley. Practice Exam 1

The Tissue Level of Organization

The Integumentary System Dr. Ali Ebneshahidi

CHAPTER 6: INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM. 1. Explain why the skin is called the cutaneous membrane.

Introduction to Anatomy and Physiology: Tissues and Integumentary System. Biology 105 Lecture 7 Chapter 4

Animal Tissues. I. Epithelial Tissue

Section B: Epithelial Tissue 1. Where are epithelial tissues found within the body? 2. What are the functions of the epithelial tissues?

Tissues (Histology) Ch. 3 Human Anatomy lecture

Histology. Epithelial Tissue

Human Anatomy & Physiology I with Dr. Hubley. Practice Exam #2

Biology 105 Human Biology PRACTICE MIDTERM EXAM 1. Essentials of Anatomy and Physiology, 5e (Martini/Nath) Chapter 4 The Tissue Level of Organization

Chapter 5 The Integumentary System Lecture Outline

Chapter 5: The Integumentary System. What are the structures and functions of the integumentary system?

SAMPLE LECTURE EXAM 1 -- HUMAN ANATOMY

Functions INTEGUMENTARY SYSTEM. Protective Functions. Functions in Sensation. Functions in Excretion. Functions in Temperature Regulation

CHAPTER 5: TISSUES. 2. Name the four primary adult tissue types, and give a brief description of each.

Tissue Types. 1. Epithelial Tissue (or epithelium) is the lining, covering, and glandular tissue of the body

Lesson Aim To explain the human body at a microscopic level, including the structure and function of cells, tissues and membranes.

Lab Exercise 4. Epithelial Tissues. Connective Tissue Proper. What you need to be able to do on the exam after completing this lab exercise:

Vertebrate Body Organization

Skeletal, Muscular, and Integumentary Systems

Ground substance is the component of connective tissue between the cells and the fibers

Biology 13A Lab #3: Cells and Tissues

THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF THE SKIN

Date: Student Name: Teacher Name: Jared George. Score: 1) A cell with 1% solute concentration is placed in a beaker with a 5% solute concentration.

Integumentary System Digestive System. Outline. Integumentary System 11/4/2008. Week 11 BA & BP November 4, 2008 Nadia Arora, ND

RAD 223. Radiography physiology. Lecture Notes. First lecture: Cell and Tissue

The Integumentary System

Laboratory 3 Histology

Chetek-Weyerhaeuser High School

Thick and Thin Evaluating layers of the skin

Homeostasis and Transport Module A Anchor 4

Chapter 40: Basic Principles of Animal Form and Function

Integumentary System (Chapter 5) Lecture Materials for Amy Warenda Czura, Ph.D. Suffolk County Community College Eastern Campus

Animal Systems: The Musculoskeletal System

Exploring Creation with Advanced Biology ~ Schedule for Apologia ~ Exploring Creation with Biology ~ Module 1 (Week 1) Date:

BIO 137: CHAPTER 1 OBJECTIVES

North Bergen School District Benchmarks

Name Class Date Laboratory Investigation 24A Chapter 24A: Human Skin

THE HUMAN BODY SYSTEMS

The Integumentary System Chapter 6. Skin Functions Skin Layers Skin Color Hair Nails Cutaneous Glands Burns

Lecture Exam One Material: Anatomy and Physiology 121 Introduction to Human Body, the Tissue Level of Organization and the Integumentary System

Cells & Cell Organelles

The Integumentary System

Compartmentalization of the Cell. Objectives. Recommended Reading. Professor Alfred Cuschieri. Department of Anatomy University of Malta

Integumentary System CHAPTER. Overview CHAPTER SUMMARY

ORGAN SYSTEMS OF THE BODY

Integumentary System Answer Key

CHAPTER 9 BODY ORGANIZATION

Biology 141 Anatomy and Physiology I

Location: air sacs of lungs; nephrons of kidney; lining of circulatory system, lymphatic vessels, & ventral body cavity

Chapter 8. Movement across the Cell Membrane. AP Biology

Paramedic Program Anatomy and Physiology Study Guide

Biology 101 Chapter 4 Cells as the Basic Unit of Life. The Cell Theory Major Contributors: Galileo = first observations made with a microscope

7. Skeletal System: Bone Structure and Function

Chapter 3. Cellular Structure and Function Worksheets. 39

Smooth Muscle. Learning Objectives.

Anatomy & Physiology Bio 2401 Lecture. Instructor: Daryl Beatty Day 1 Intro to Lecture 1

Keystone Review Practice Test Module A Cells and Cell Processes. 1. Which characteristic is shared by all prokaryotes and eukaryotes?

Lecture 4 Cell Membranes & Organelles

The Cell Interior and Function

Biological cell membranes

Chapter 4: A Tour of the Cell. 1. Cell Basics. Limits to Cell Size. 1. Cell Basics. 2. Prokaryotic Cells. 3. Eukaryotic Cells

ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY SYLLABUS FOR COMMUNITY COLLEGES. Leslie Dawn Schulz, B.S. Thesis Prepared for the Degree of MASTER OF SCIENCE

Engage: Brainstorming Body Systems. Record the structures and function of each body system in the table below.

THE LANGUAGE OF ANATOMY

Human Anatomy & Physiology: Fall Final Exam Review

7. A selectively permeable membrane only allows certain molecules to pass through.

Cells. Structure, Function and Homeostasis

Ch. 8 - The Cell Membrane

9/3/2013 JOINTS. Joints. Axial Skeleton STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION:

Anatomy and Physiology Warm up questions Fall 2013

Six major functions of membrane proteins: Transport Enzymatic activity

Chapter 9 Nervous System

BIO 2401 MUSCLE TISSUE page 1 MUSCLES AND MUSCLE TISSUE. Striations Present or Absent?

1. outer fibrous layer contains fibroblasts that secrete collagen

Cells, tissues and organs

Quick Hit Activity Using UIL Science Contests For Formative and Summative Assessments of Pre-AP and AP Biology Students

Essentials of Human Anatomy & Physiology. 7 th edition Marieb, Elaine, Chapters Lab Manual, 2 nd edition and coloring book, 7 th edition

7.2 Cell Structure. Lesson Objectives. Lesson Summary. Cell Organization Eukaryotic cells contain a nucleus and many specialized structures.

tissues are made of cells that work together, organs are )

Membrane Structure and Function

The Epidermis. Provides mechanical protection. Helps keep micoorganisms out of the body. Consists of stratified squamous epithelium

Cytology. Living organisms are made up of cells. Either PROKARYOTIC or EUKARYOTIC cells.

Introduction to the Cell: Plant and Animal Cells

Review of the Cell and Its Organelles

Module F SKELETAL SYSTEM & ARTICULATIONS

Approved for use September 2015 August 2016 (VERSION 2 ISSUED 16 OCTOBER 2015) Guidance

Skin Self-Study Module

8/25/2014 JOINTS. The Skeletal System. Axial Skeleton STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION:

Anatomy and Functions of Skin

Questions on The Nervous System and Gas Exchange

FIGURE A. The phosphate end of the molecule is polar (charged) and hydrophilic (attracted to water).

Cell Structure and Function

Fundamentals of Anatomy & Physiology Course Outline, Objectives and Accreditation Information

1. DEFINITION OF PHYSIOLOGY. Study of the functions of the healthy human body. How the body works. Focus on mechanisms of action.

Plasma Membrane hydrophilic polar heads

Transcription:

Biology 2401 - Anatomy and Physiology I Exam 1 notes - Introduction, Cell and Tissue Structure Two major principles in study of animal bodies: (humans, like other living organisms are product of evolutionary / adaptive process): Structure is related to function - what a part does is affected by what it does. anatomy = study of structure, physiology = study of function 1.2 Living bodies maintain homeostasis. Homeostasis = internal conditions of body within narrow limits. Maintained by physiological mechanisms. 1.5 receptor ---------------> control center --------------> effector (muscle, gland, etc.) stimulus (stress, change in conditions) ---------------> response (action of body) feedback = response of body to stimulus. negative feedback = response is opposite to changing condition, reverses change. positive feedback = response is same as changing condition, increases change. long term homeostasis - cells respond to stimulus over a time period (ex. muscle atrophy or hypertrophy) *How can disease be defined in terms of homeostasis? *Which type feedback (negative or positive) is most important in maintaining homeostasis? Levels of organization in living organisms: 1.3 ecosystem At what level is homeostasis maintained? community population What are emergent properties? give some individual organism examples. organ system organ tissue cell cell organelle molecule What is a very important emergent atom property at the cell level? * * 1

Cells Ch. 3 Cell theory - all living organisms made of cells - cells are the basic unit of life (how does this relate to emergent properties?) - cells come from living cells (no spontaneous generation under conditions on earth today) Cells small ( 5 um - 10 nm). Why? What feature determines that active cells can not be very large? Surface area / volume ratio decreases as the cell becomes larger (less surface area compared to its volume). Cells have common structures, become different by exaggeration of some part. Common cell structures and their function: 3.2, Table 3.1 cell membrane - regulates what enters and leaves the cell cytoplasm (cytosol) - liquid medium in cell, many molecules dissolved and move in cytoplasm nucleus - houses and protects chromosomes endoplasmic reticulum - internal membrane that partitions cytoplasm Golgi apparatus - membrane layers that packages secretions lysosomes - membrane sacs that contain digestive enzymes ribosomes - assemble proteins cytoskeleton - filaments and tubules that provide support and produce movement mitochondria - provide most of energy for cell by burning fuel Movement across cell membrane: 3.3, Table 3.2 permeability = ability of materials to pass through passive movement - no cell energy required; results from concentration gradient diffusion - osmosis - facilitated diffusion - filtration active movement - cell must expend energy to make this happen ion protein pumps - vesicular transport - endocytosis (pinocytosis, phagocytosis, receptor-mediated endocytosis) - exocytosis *What does selectively permeable mean? What is a concentration gradient?

Tissues Ch. 5 tissue = group of specialized cells and cell products that perform specialized function intracellular = inside cell intercellular (interstitial) = outside of cell, between cells extracellular = outside cell, anywhere in body cell connections attach cells - gap junctions, tight junctions, anchoring junctions four major, or primary, tissue types: epithelial, connective, muscle and neural. 5.1 I. Epithelial tissues: surface covering tissue, many places in the body; glandular 5.2 protection from abrasion, drying, chemicals, bacteria producing specialized secretions controlling absorption and excretion of certain materials sensory cells located in some epithelial tissues lack blood vessels (avascular), and many lack nerves (noninnervated) cells close together with little intercellular space cells can divide to produce new cells (stem cells) many have specialized cell extensions (cilia, microvilli) attached to deeper layers by basement membrane Classification based on shape of surface cells (squamous, cuboidal, columnar) and the number of layers of cells (simple or stratified) Types of epithelial tissues in the body: (know these types, their features and where they are located) simple squamous - simple cuboidal - simple columnar - pseudostratified columnar- stratified squamous (keratinized and unkeratinized) - transitional - *Glands are formed from epithelial cells. Distinguish between endocrine and exocrine glands. 3

Membranes = surface covering of cavities, usually secrete fluid 5.4 mucous membrane - line cavities that open to the exterior of body; secrete mucus to prevent drying, protect surface serous membrane - line cavities that are sealed and cover organ within the cavity; secrete watery slick lubricant to prevent friction, have visceral and parietal layers synovial membrane - line joint capsules, secrete slick fluid to prevent friction II. Connective tissues: deeper tissues of body that: 5.3 support and protect body and attach body structures (bone, cartilage, fibrous) transport material throughout body (blood) store energy (adipose) defend body from foreign invaders (white blood cells) cells in tissue not tightly connected, much intercellular space intercellular space filled with ground substance (fluid) and protein fibers = matrix ground substance composed of fluid, gel, crystalline protein fibers are collagen, elastic, reticular typical cells are fibroblast ( fiber makers ) well vascularized and innervated (has blood vessels and nerves) cells can reproduce Types of connective tissues: (know the important features and the location of these) connective tissues proper (may contain fibroblast, adipocytes and mast cells) loose connective tissue - watery ground substance; few scattered randomly arranged fibers; anchors with flexibility dense connective tissue (fibrous tissue) - intercellular space mostly filled with little watery ground substance and many collagen fibers irregular dense con. - fibers arranged in several directions; dermis of skin regular dense con. - fibers arranged in one direction, parallel; tendons and ligaments reticular connective tissue - three dimensional framework of reticular fibers that forms skeleton or stroma of many organs adipose tissue - often in loose connective with more adipocytes; insulates and cushions, stores energy in the form of fat 4

supporting connective tissues (denser tissues with gel or crystalline ground substance and varying types and amount of fibers) cartilage - ground substance firm gel; specialized type fibrocyte called chondrocytes; avascular and noninnervated (therefore they heal more slowly than other connective tissues). hyaline cartilage - glassy ; few collagen fibers; covers bones in joints, rings in trachea, connects ribs elastic cartilage - contains elastic fibers, flexible and retains shape; external ear, nose fibrocartilage - many collagen fibers; very tough, good support; intervertebral disks in spine, between bones of pelvis, pads in some joints bone - calcium salts (crystalline) with collagen fibers; specialized fibrocytes called osteocytes; rigid support fluid connective tissues (watery ground substance, less fiber structure) blood - contains red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets in a very fluid matrix called plasma; transports materials throughout body III. Muscle tissue: (more on these in muscular system) 5.5 very specialized to produce movement, maintain posture; muscle cells contain large number of contractile proteins; can not reproduce three types of muscle - skeletal, cardiac and smooth IV. Neural tissue: (more on these in nervous system) 5.6 very specialized to communicate, detect stimuli; composed of neurons (communicating cells that can not reproduce) and neuroglia (supporting cells) 5

Skin and the Integumentary System Ch 6 Skin (cutaneous membrane) is principle organ, plus accessory organs (hairs, glands, nails) form integumentary system Functions: protection from abrasion, drying, radiation, infection regulation of body temperature (*Describe two ways) houses some sensory organs energy storage excretion synthesis of some important biomolecules Skin composed of two layers and underlying layer that attaches to deeper body: 6.2 1. epidermis - top layer that is exposed at surface - formed of stratified squamous epithelium - important cell types are keratinocytes (keratin producing cells) and melanocytes (melanin producing cells) - distinct layers develop as cells divide and are pushed to the surface; as cells push to the surface they produce keratin, die and flatten. This forms dead tough protective layer at surface - layers are called strata: stratum basale (bottom actively dividing layer produces new cells), stratum spinosum, stratum granulosum (producing keratin), stratum lucidum (only in thick skin where callus is formed), stratum corneum (dead flat cells filled with keratin) - melanocytes in stratum basale produce melanin, a pigment the absorbs ultraviolet radiation - pressure at surface and damage to cells stimulate growth of keratinocytes - UV radiation stimulates melanocyte production of melanin * Describe the growth pattern of the epidermis and explain why this pattern is important in maintaining homeostasis. * Describe two ways that the epidermis protects the body. * What specific type tissue forms the epidermis? 2. dermis - composed mostly of irregular dense connective tissue - provides mechanical strength of skin to prevent puncture and tearing - composed of fibroblasts which produce much collagen and some elastic fibers - good blood supply and nerves - ridges of dermis (dermal papillae) form irregular surface with epidermis; this increases surface for nutrient and waste exchange, sensory structures * What specific tissue forms the dermis? * What are dermal papillae and how do they help maintain the epidermis? * What type fibers predominate in the dermis and how does the arrangement of these fibers give strength to the dermis? 6

3. subcutaneous - composed of lose connective tissue with some adipose tissue - anchors skin to deeper layers but allows some movement - some collagen with much fluid-filled space; larger blood vessels and nerves run through spaces - adipose cells also located in spaces; insulate to retain body heat, store energy, form and cushion body surface * Describe two ways that the integumentary system maintains body temperature. 6.3 Accessory structures (organs) in skin have various functions, all form from embryonic stratum basale that is located in dermis or subcutaneous 1. nails - specialized keratinocytes that produce dense keratin - strengthen and protect tips of fingers and toes - nail plate grows from groove over nail bed 2. hairs - from specialized keratinocytes at base of hair follicle (hair root) - melanocytes produce melanin in varying amounts, color hair - shape of follicle determines shape of hair (straight, wavy, curly) - structures associated with hair follicles: arrector pili muscle - a small smooth muscle that pulls hair up to fluff fur, causes goose bump sebaceous gland - produces oil to lubricate and protect skin apocrine sweat gland (in certain areas) - to produce body scent root hair plexus - hair movement stimulates for very sensitive 3. glands - all skin glands are exocrine glands. What does this mean? - sebaceous glands - produce oily substance (sebum) into hair follicle to lubricate, waterproof skin and kill bacteria - eccrine sweat glands (sudoriferous glands) - empty onto skin surface; produce thin watery fluid to cool body - apocrine sweat glands - produce viscous fluid that vaporizes to produce body scent; into hair follicles of axillary, pubic and areola; active at puberty - mammary glands - produce milk in females to nourish young - ceruminous glands - produce earwax in external ear canal to clean debris from canal * What is the origin, in the embryo, of the cells that develop into the accessory organs? * List five types of glands in the skin and give their primary function. * List four structures associated with hair follicles and give the function of each. 7

Homeostasis: Stimulus ------------------------------------------- > Response (change in condition) (action of body) Receptor ----------> Control center ----------> Effector ex. thermoreceptor ------> center in ------------> sweat gland hypothalamus This is a feedback loop HIGH--------------------------------------------------------------- acceptable range of condition LOW --------------------------------------------------------------- Time -------> negative feedback - positive feedback -