Chapters 1-3 Flashcards
What maintains boundaries 2 things
- skin, 2. mucosa
Movement are what three things
- muscle, 2. bone 3. joints
responsiveness has what two parts listed
- nervous system 2. endocrine
Digestion involves what track
GI track
metabolism involves tissues such as
liver
excretion involves what two things
- urinary 2. GI
reproduction involve what
the genitalia
What are the 5 layers of tissue
- epithelium 2. basal lamina 3. connective tissue 4. facia 5. Muscle
The epithelial layer and basement membrane/lamina have what function
- epithelial lines
- basement is the double sided sticky tape
what is connective tissue’s function
packing/support
The connective tissue has two types what are they
- fibroblasts 2. collagen fibers
what is facia and muscle’s purpose
- thicker layer of double sided sticky tape 2. muscle
what is an example of a tube layer
blood vessel or esophagus
a layer would be an example of what two types of lining
- outer lining and inner lining
the outer and inner lining are separated by what
connective tissue
cavity formation is defined by
membranes
what two are part of the dosal body cavities
- cranial
- vertebral
homeostasis
maintaining a consistent range
within homeostasis theres a consistent range where there’s a _________ and a __________
- receptor control, effector
- negative -ve & positive +Ve feedback
what are the three section dividers of the body
- sagittal section divides the body into right and left halves
- frontal section divides body into anterior and posterior
- transverse section divides body into superior and inferior (cross section)
Cells have what what types of proteins
plasma membrane
what are 6 types of membrane bound proteins
- receptors
- transmembrane proteins
- Channels/transporters
- adhesion molecules
- enzymes
- Cell: cell recognition
Cytoskeleton 3 things
- microfilaments
- intermediate filaments
- microtubles
what do microfilaments and intermediate filaments do ?
- support microvilli
- cell strength
membrane transport involves what three types
- diffusion
- passive
- active
what do microtubles do
tublin fxn is to move organells, chromosomes
what are the three types of membrane transport and their fxns
- diffusion - concentration/electrical gradient
- passive - channels/pores
- active - transporters (ATP needed)