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LECT 1 &2

Physiology

QuestionAnswer
What are the two views of life? Mechanistic and vitalist
What does mechanistic mean? It can be explained by physical and chemical processes
What does vitalist mean? There is a vital force explaining the phenamona
How do cells communicate with each other? Via chemical messengers that go to receptors on the target cell
What, then, tells the cell what to do? Chemical events occuring as a result of the binding onto the receptor.
What are the three steps of cell recognition? 1) reception, 2) transduction 3) Response
Where is the receptor located? budding from the cytoplasm
Where does signal transduction occur? In cytoplasm
What is homeostasis? Stable conditions of internal environment
What is an example of homeostasis? Maintaining internal temperature
What the two systems that help in homeostasis? Negative and positive feedback
What is negative feedback? A change in regulated variable causes a response to move the variable in the OPPOSITE direction
What does the stimulus lead to? A decreased reaction
What is positive feedback? Disturbance causes a chain of events to increase the perturbation
What does this stiumulus lead to? An increase in reaction product
Which, negative or positive feedback, favors stability? negative feedback
What is an example of positive feedback? Blood clotting
What is an example of reflex? Remove hand when something hot is touched
What are the components of a homeostatic system? Reflexes, homeostatic responses, intercellular chemical messegers, eicosanoids
What is a reflex? Unlearned biolgical control linking stmulus with response and mediated by a reflx arc
What is an example of a reflex? Removing hand when something hot is touched
What is an acquired reflex? Give an example? An act learned by repetition; an example would be what race car drivers do, gymnists...etc.
What are the components of a reflex arc? Stimulus applied, receptor detects stimulus, afferent pathway (to brain), integration center receives signal, goes down efferently via a different pathway to get a certain response
What is the different pathway referred to in the reflex ac? For example, it can go to skeletal muscles to make a movement or it can go to cardiac muscles to increase heardbeat
Note figures 1.3 & 1.5-1.6 Note figures 1.3 & 1.5-1.6
What two important features of a homeostatic response must be noted? 1) Initiated bya stimuli 2) There si a local vs. global response
Give an example of a local vs. global response A small cut vs. shivering when it is cold out.
Note tables 1-2 and 1-3 HOMEOSTASIS AND HOMEOSTATIC REFLEX
CHEMICAL MESSENGERS CHEMICAL MESSENGERS
What are the four types of intercellular chemical messengers? Neurotrasnmitters, hormones, paracrine agents, and autocrine agents
NOTE FIGURE 1-7 NOTE FIGURE 1-7
EICOSANOIDS EICOSANOIDS
How are eicosanoids formed? 1. From polyunsaturated fat of arachidonic acid
Give an example of an eiconsanoid. Prostaglandins
What are the effects of eicosanoids? A variety of effects, including blood clotting, smooth muscle contraction, neurotransmitter release, and reproductive function
NOTE FIGURE 5-12 messenger of eiconsanoids description
What are some processes related to homeostasis? Acclimatization, adaptation, biological rhythms, aging, and apoptosis,
ACCLIMATIZATION ACCLIMATIZATION
What is acclimatization? Give an example Improvement due to environment with no change in genetic endowment, like when people in texas who aren't in air conditioned places all the time typically sweat more and sooner on a hot day than people living in minnesota; texans are acclimatized to heat
BIOLOGICAL RHYTHMS BIO RHYTHMS
SEE figure 1-8 see fig. 1-8
How often does the circardian rhythms cycle? One in a day
What is said to be the pacemaker for the circardian rhythm? The hypothalamus
Can rhythms change? Why Yes, it is called entrainment, often the result of environmental cues
What is a phase shift? Resetting of biological clocks as in jet lag when changing time zones
How do heart attacks and asthma relate to biological rhythms? They tend to occur at specific times of day, like heart attacks occur in the morning, asthma at night
AGING AGING
What are the effects of aging? Loss of ability to maintain homeostasis, there are a decreased number of cells in body because less cells divide and more cells die
Is aging a disease? No
What are possible causes of aging? Senescence, cumulative damage to macromolecules
APOPTOSIS APOPTOSIS
What is apoptosis? Programmed cell death
When is apoptosis most important? In embryonic development
Why is it important? It destroys damaged cells in body
How is apoptosis trigerred? Severe insult to a cell`
How does apoptosis work? Cell membrane remains intact so that its contents are not dispersed
LECTURE 2 CHEMICAL COMPOSITION OF THE BODY
What are atoms? Units of matter that form all chemical substances
What are the three components of an atom and where are they located? Protons (nucleus), Neutrons (nucleus), and Electrons (in electron cloud)
What is the net charge of an atom?What is the net charge of an atom? There is no net charge (0)
Which of the three components of an atom are usually equal? protons and electrons
How many elements are need for normal physiological function? 24
What makes up most of the elements in the human body? Hydrogen (63), Oxygen (26), carbon (9), and nitrogen (1)
SEE TABLE 2-1 SEE TABLE 2-1; VERY IMPORTANT
What are molecules? Two or more atoms bonded together
What are the two types of bonds? Covalent and ionic
What are covalent bonds? Equal sharing bonds, due to mingling of electron clouds
What are ionic bonds? Having one atom overtake the charge of the other; unequal sharing
What are ions? Having gained or lost an electron
What are examples of cations? Sodium, potasium, calcium and magnesium
What are exmaples of an anion? Chloride, suphate, phosphate
What is a covalent non-polar bond? Charge distributed equally in bonds
What are covalent polar bonds? Unequally distributed charge, especially when you have N, O, S
What is an ionized group? Result of a covalent polar bond
What can molecules be divided into? Which three categories? Polar, nonpolar, and amphipathic
Which interaction would be most polar? Most ionic
Which would be most non-polar? Most covalent
Which would be amphipathic? Both
What are hydrogen bonds? When hydrogen interacts with nitrongen or oxygen
Our body is mostly composed of polar or non-polar substances? Explain. Our body is mostly non-polar substances because otherwise, it would all dissolve into the water. We have to have stuff that isn't dissolved, like our lungs, blood..etc.
What is a micelle? Clumps, the result of mixing polar and non-polar stuff
What is the structure of amphipathic molecules? Like the phospholipid bilayer, they have polar heads they expose to water and hydrophobic, non-polar covalent tails they hide from the water
As the concentration of H+ gets larger, what happens to the solution? The PH gets smaller, becoming acidic
What are organic molecules? Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids
CARBOHYDRATES CARBOHYDRATES
What are carbohydrages? Sugars and starch
What is the composition of carbs? Carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (water)
What is their function? Provide energy for when we need it NOW
What percentage of our body weight is carbs? Only one percent
What is an example of monosaccharide? (Polar or non-polar) Glucose, which is polar
LIPIDS LIPIDS
What are lipids? Oils and fats
What elements are lipids made of? Hydrogen, and carbon, linked by covalent bond
What percent of our body are they? 40%
Can they dissolve in water? NO!!! Immescible
What are the four subclasses of lipids? Fatty acids, tricylglycerides, phospholipids, and sterioids
What are Fatty acids? Long chains of carbon atoms
What are saturated fatty acids? NO double bonds, animal fat
What are unsaturated fatty acids? vegetable fat, double bonded
What are the majority of lipids in our body? Triacyglycerides
How how phospholipids do we have in our body? Not very much
what class of polarity do phospholipids fall under? Amphipathic
STEROIDS STERIOIDS
What do steroids look like? Four interconnected rings of carbon atoms
What are examples of steroids? Cholestrol, estrogen, progestrone, htestrostrone
PROTEINS PROTEINS
What is the main function of proteins? They tell the body what to do; get their energy from fats
What are proteins composed of? A chain of amino acids
What are amino acids made of? Contain a carboxyl group and amino group and side chain
Must side chains match the polarity of the rest of the amino acid? No. It can be polar, non-polar, or ionized
What percentage of our body are proteins? 50%
Are proteins big? Yes, they're macromolecules
Explain the relationship between proteins and amino acids wrt ALL LIVING ORGANISMS They all have the same number of amino acids
How are the amino acids in proteins linked together? By peptide bonds
What structurally about proteins is essential to normal function? Their folding
What will dictate protein folding? (blank)
NUCLEIC ACIDS Nucleic acids
What are nucleic acids responsible for? Storage expression and trasnmission of genetic info
What is DNA? Tells us what proteins to make
RNA is what? Helps us MAKE the proteins; it decodes DNA's info into a sequence of amino acids to form a polypeptide chain
What makes up DNA and RNA? Nucleotides
What are the three components of a nucleic acid? Phosphate group, sugar (ring), and a base
What is the base? A ring of carbon and nitrogen atoms than can accept hydrogen ions
How are nucleic acids formed? Phosphate group of one nucleotide is linked to sugar of adjacent nucleotide to form a chain
What does DNA contain that RNA doesn't? The five-carbon sugar deoxyribose
How many nucleotides make up DNA? Four different ones
Why are there four? B/c there are four different bases that are linked to deoxyribose
What are the four bases in DNA? Purine, pyrimidine
What are the purine bases? Double rings of nitroggen and carbon atoms: A and G
Pyrimidine bases? Single ring of nitrogen and carbon atoms: C ,T
What is the double helix? Two chains of nucleotides held together by hydrogen bonds between purine and pyrimidine bases
Why can the DNA binding actually keep the molecules held tightly in the shape of the double helix? There are MANY hydrogen bonds, which make the connection tight
What is the pairing of the bases in DNA? A with T and C with G
how does RNA differ from DNA? What is the new pairing? Single chain of nucleotides, sugar is ribose, thymine of DNA changes with Uracil, where A binds with U (not T)
What is feedforward regulation? Anticipates changes in homeostasis in order to accept change to maintain global good homeostasis
What is the general name of the CHEMICAL component needed to break down bonds/stuff? What about when we make new stuff? Hydrolysis; dehydration reactions
What are the chemicals of proteins? Carbon, hydrogen Oxygen, nitrogen
What are the chemicals of nucleic acids? Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen
Are carbs soluble in water? Why or why not? Yes, because of the hydroxyl groups present in them
Created by: talkglitter2486
 

 



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