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Biology Exam 4 Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

Where do RBC, WBC, and platelets come from?

RBC
bone marrow
WBC
bone marrow, (B cells: T Cells:­thymus gland)
Platelets
bone marrow

Flow of Blood

Left Ventri­cle­->P­ulm­onary Artery­->L­ung­->C­api­lla­rie­s-> Pulmonary Vein->Left Atrium­->Left Ventri­cle­->A­ort­a->­Aorta Diverg­es-­>Blood deliver to upper or lower party-­>blood returns to the right atrium (upper­:su­perior vena cava/l­owe­r:i­nferior vena cava)-­>right Ventricle

3 Kinds of Vessels

Arteries
Arteroles
Veins
-Venules
Capill­aries
Capillary Beds

Veins: bring blood to the heart

Pulmonary Vein
from lungs to heart
Superior Vena Cava
from upper body to heart
Inferior Vena Cave
from lower body to heart

Arteries carry blood away from the heart

Pulmonary Artery
away from the heart to the lungs
Aorta
away from heart to body

Heart Beat

Diastole
entire heart is relaxed
Systole
Atria contract, ventricles contract
Heart Rate
number of beats per minute
Pumping
a series of contra­ction and relaxation of the heart muscle
Cardiac Muscles
contract and relax without stimul­ation from the nervous system (SA node/pace maker)
Cardiac Output
volume of blood pumped by a ventricle per minute

Heart Attack

damage or death of the cardiac muscle due to blockage of a coronary artery
 

Primary vs. Secondary Immune Response

Primary
occurs upon first exposure to an antigen, slower than the secondary immune response, produces effector cells and memory cells that may confer lifelong immunity
Secondary
memory cells are activated by a second exposure to the same antigen, initiates a faster and stronger response

Urea vs Ammonia

Urea
(is from the breakdown of proteins) produced in the vertebrate liver by combining ammonia and carbon dioxide, less toxic, easier to store, highly soluble in water
Ammonia
poisonous, to toxic to be store in the body, soluble in water, easily disposed of by aquatic animals, results from breakdown of amino acids from protein

Fuctional unit of the Kidney

The nephron

Trace Urine Through the Urinary System

Glomerular capsule, PCT, descending limb of loop of Henle, ascending limb of loop of Henle, DCT, collecting tubule, papillary duct of renal papillae, minor calyx, major calyx, renal pelvis, ureter, bladder, urethra

Flow of Filtrate through the Nephron

glomerular capsule, Proximal Convoluted tubule (PCT), Loop of Henle, Distal Convoluted tubule (DCT), Collecting duct

Processes of the Nephron

Filtration
blood pressure forces water and many small molecules through a capillary wall into the start of the capsular space
Reabso­rtion
refines the filtrate, reclaims valuable solutes (glucose, salt and amino acids) from filtrate, returns these to the blood, most reabso­rption occurs in the PCT
Secretion
substances in the blood are transp­orted into the filtrate.
Excretion
the final product, urine, is excreted via the ureters, urinary bladder and urethra

APC

a foreign antigen (a nonself molecule) and one of the body's own self proteins, to a helper T Cel
 

2 Divisions of the Nervous System

central nervous system (CNS)
which consists of the brain and the spinal cord
peripheral nervous system (PNS)
consists of nerves and small concen­tra­tions of gray matter called ganglia.

Myelin

enclose axons, form cellular insula­tion, speed up signal transm­ition, is a lipopr­otein, is white matter

Neurot­ran­smi­tters

Acetyc­holine
in the brain and in the synapses between motor neurons and muscle cells
Biogenic amines
important transm­itters in the CNS and include serotonin and dopamine, which affect sleep, mood and attention
Neurop­eptides
consist of relatively short chains of amino acids important in the CNS and include endorp­hins, decreasing our perception of pain
Nitric Oxide
is a dissolved gas and triggers erections during sexual arousal in men

Axons vs Dendrites

Axons
passes messages from the cell body to other neurons, muscles or glands
Dendrites
receive messages from other cells

Parts of the brain

hypoth­almus
(Cereb­ellum) controls pituitary and ANS, therefore controls homeos­tasis
thalmus
(Cereb­ellum) relay center for most senses deal with both emotions and most senses
medulla oblongata
(Brain­stem) controls breathing, heart rate, & swollowing
pons
(Brain­stem) bridge between forebrain and cerebe­llum, controls breathing, many important nerves originate here
midbrain
(Brain­stem) coordi­nates visual and auditory reflexes

Brain Lobes

Frontal Lobe
(motor) helps plan movements & involved with person­ality, control of emotions and expression of emotional behavior
Temporal Lobe
Associ­ation center for hearing and smell
Occiptal Lobe
Associ­ation centers for vision
Parietal Lobe
Associ­ation area for touch
 

Axial vs Apendi­cular Skeleton

Axial
skull, vertebrae, ribs
Apendi­cular
shoulder and pelvic girdles, arms and legs

Anatomy of a Long Bone

Fat-st­oring central cavity (Medullary Cavity)
contains yellow marrow (fat)
Spongy bone
located at the ends of bones, contains red bone marrow, the site of blood cell production (WBC's, RBC's and platelets)

Joints

sutures
allow no movements (ex. skull and pelvis)
ball-a­nd-­socket
allow for the greatest range of motion (ex. shoulder and hip)
hinge joint
uniaxle, allow for movement in one plane (ex. elbow and interp­hal­angeal)
piviot
(ex. radioulnar & atlant­oaxial)

Thick vs Thin Filament

Thick
made of myosin
Thin
made of actin(­mos­tly), troponin, tropom­yosin binding sites on actin (at rest)

Calcium

What does it do?
initiates muscle contaction by moving regulatory proteins away from the actin binding sites
Where is calcium stored?
endopl­asmic reticulum

Anaerobic Metabolism vs Aerobic matabolism

Anaerobic Metabolism
The amount of energy generated by anaerobic metabolism is less than one-tenth of what is produced by aerobic metabo­lism.
Aerobic matabolism
provides most of the ATP used to power muscle movement during exercise

Motor Unit

consists of a neuron, the set of muscle fibers it controls

Fast vs Slow Fibers

Fast Fibers
high propor­tioned in fingers and eyes (white fibers)
Slow Fibers
high proportion in postural muscles (red fibers)