Ch. 28 Multicellularity Flashcards

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1
Q

which eukaryotic organisms have complex multicellularity?

A

land plants
animals
fungi

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2
Q

how many major groups are present within the 7 superkingdoms? how many contain single celled organisms? how many are simple multicellular?

A

119 major groups total
83 contain single celled organisms
remaining 36 groups are simple multicellular

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3
Q

characteristics of single celled organisms

A
  • cells eat other microorganisms
  • ingest small organic particles
  • live suspended in water columns
  • are parasites living within other organisms
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4
Q

who are simple multicellulars?

A
  • Fungi
  • Algae
  • Slime molds
  • Sporozoans and Cnidosporas
  • Dinoflagellates
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5
Q

characteristics of simple multicellulars

A
  • Form is filamentous, hollow balls or flat sheets
  • Adhesion molecules for sticking together
  • Most cells retain a full range of functions
  • All cells are still in contact with environment
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6
Q

coenocytic organization

A

• Nuclei divide multiple times but do not partition into
individual cells.
• Results in sometimes very large multinucleated cells

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7
Q

why be multicellular? advantages?

A
• Because there is some selective advantage to
being multicellular…
• So, what are those advantages? Maybe:
– Avoid predators 
– Float better 
– Hold together better than cluster of single cells 
– Withstand disturbance better 
– Withstand desiccation better
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8
Q

who are the complex multicellulars?

A
red algae 
brown algae 
fungi 
animals 
land plants 
*collectively evolved at least 6 different times, fungi evolved 2 times
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9
Q

what features do complex multicellulars have in common?

A
  1. Highly developed mechanisms for adhesion between
    cells
  2. Specialized structures for cell communication
  3. Tissue and organ differentiation
  4. A small subset of cells contribute to reproduction
  5. Cell or tissue loss can be lethal for the organism
  6. Presence of both interior and exterior cells
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10
Q

what is one serious problem for multicellulars?

A

limitations of diffusion

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11
Q

define diffusion

A

Movement of molecules from areas of
high to low concentration acting over small
distances

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12
Q

define bulk transport

A

The means by which molecules move through organisms at rates beyond those possible by diffusion across a concentration gradient (by means of vascular system)

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13
Q

what are 3 requirements for complex multicellular life?

A
  1. Adhesion: Stick together
    2.Communicate with one another
    3.Have a genetic program to guide growth
    and development
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14
Q

how do animal cells perform cell adhesion?

A

cadherins, integrins and transmembrane proteins

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15
Q

how do plant cells perform cell adhesion?

A

pectins

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16
Q

how do choanoflagellates perform cell adhesion?

A

cadherins

17
Q

how do animal cells communicate?

A

gap junctions (intercellular connections made of a ring of protein)

18
Q

how do plant cells communicate?

A

plasmodesmata (tubules that connect the intermembranes of neighboring plant cells)

19
Q

how do animal cells develop?

A

gastrulation (the movement of cells during embryogenesis that transforms a blastula to a gastrula)

20
Q

how do plant cells develop?

A

Meristems - the actively growing cells at the tips of stems and roots

21
Q

define gastrula

A

an embryo at the stage following the blastula, when it is a hollow cup-shaped structure having three layers of cells

22
Q

define blastula

A

an animal embryo at the early stage of development when it is a hollow ball of undifferentiated cells