5.1 Neuronal communication & sensory receptors Flashcards
what must all organisms do?
respond to changes in their internal and external environment
how do animals respond to their environment?
neuronal and hormonal
how do plants respond to their environment?
chemical communication including hormones e.g. auxin
what factors do we respond to in our environment?
humidity temperature sound light intensity blood glucose levels internal temperature cell PH water potential
why is coordination needed?
few body systems can work in isolation
all cells have specialised functions so must coordinate the function of different cells and systems efficiently
(Coordination) give an example of body systems needing to work together? (animals)
muscles contract and need O2
O2 transported in RBCs
RBCs made in bone marrow my haematopoietic stem cells
(coordination) give an example of plant cells needing to coordinate? and how they do it?
flowering plants need to coordinate with the seasons to know when to flower, light sensitive chemicals enable this to happen
(Homeostasis) in multicellular animals different organs have different functions….
….so must be coordinated
(Homeostasis) give examples of a system in which organs must work together:
digestive organs must work together to maintain blood glucose levels
what does nervous and hormonal control rely upon?
communication at cellular level through cell signalling
where can cells transfer signals?
locally - between neurones at synapses
over large distances using hormones
what is AUTOCRINE cell signalling?
where the call targets itself
what is PARACRINE cell signalling?
where cell targets nearby cell
what is ENDOCRINE cell signalling?
where the cell targets a distant cell through the bloodstream
What does cell signalling across gap junctions involve?
a cell targeting another cell which it is connected by gap junctions
what is the nervous system responsible for?
detecting changes in the internal and external environment
what is the pathway a nerve impulse follows?
receptor -> sensory neurone -> relay neurone -> motor neurone-> effector
what are some axons covered in?
a myelin sheath (many layers of plasma membrane)
what sort of cells produce the myelin sheath? how do they do it?
schwann cells
by growing around the axon many times adding a double layer of phospholipid bilayer each time