The Nervous System
Brain and spinal cord are part of the Central Nervous System (CNS)
Peripheral Nerves are part of the Peripheral Nervous System (PNS)
Somatic
Autonomic-Sympathetic (fight or flight) and Parasympathetic (rest and digest)
be able to label and list the function of the following: cerebrum, cerebellum, brain stem, medulla oblongata, cerebral cortex, corpus callosum, frontal lobes
Corpus callosum: left and right hemisphere communication
Cerebellum: balance and coordination of movement
Frontal Lobe: cognitive thinking skills, voluntary movement
Occipital lobe: visual processing area
Cerebral cortex: occipital, temporal, frontal, and parietal lobes
Cerebrum: Muscle function and temperature regulation
Parietal lobe: sensory perception of the 5 senses
Temporal lobe: auditory stimuli, memory, emotion
*Brain stem: animal brain and primitive (Midbrain, Pons, Medulla)
Midbrain: reflexes and fight or flight response
Pons: regulates sleep and breathing
Medulla oblongata: controls heart rate, breathing, and blood pressure
*Brain lobes- know where they are Frontal, Parietal, Temporal, Occipital
*CSF- fluid protecting brain stored in ventricles
list function of neuron and its parts (dendrites, cell body, axon, nucleus). Label parts of neurons on a diagram.
Dendrites: receive signals
Cell body: central part containing nucleus
Axon: conducts electrical impulses away from cell body
Nucleus: contains genetic material
define synapse, neurotransmitter, afferent, efferent, vesicles, receptor, and label on diagram
Synapse: neurons are connected by synapses
Neurotransmitter: chemical messages across synapse
Afferent: Sensory- from body to spinal cord or brain (Quick reflexes and less time)
Efferent: Motor- from brain or spinal cord to the muscle (More time to think)
Vesicles: store and release neurotransmitters
Receptor: structure at the end of a sensory neuron that receives information from internal/external environment
list steps in order of nerve impulse and synaptic transmission
Dendrite receptors receive neurotransmitters
Signal travels down neuron
To axon
Signal crosses synapse
Neurotransmitters broken down by reuptake
List the major neurotransmitters of the brain and what they do
Dopamine: pleasure and reward center of brain
Serotonin: overall mood and well-being, sleep and memory (depression=low serotonin)
Epinephrine: Adrenaline, fight or flight response, raises heart rate, shuts down systems
Acetylcholine: muscle contraction, affected by tobacco
Melatonin: sleep cycles (pineal gland)
Depressants: blocked neurotransmitters
Stimulants: more dopamine produced
Contrast the various nervous systems (sympathetic, parasympathetic, somatic, etc..)
Autonomic = internal organs and glands
Sympathetic: fight or flight
Parasympathetic: rest and digest
Somatic = muscular system
Sensory: Afferent
Motor: Efferent
Differentiate between the different parts of the limbic system
Thalamus: processes sensory information
Hypothalamus: homeostasis
Amygdala: fears and emotion
Differentiate between the different parts of the brain stem
Brain stem: animal brain and very primitive
Pons: sleep and breathing
Midbrain: reflexes and fight or flight response
Medulla: controls heart rate, breathing, and blood pressure
Multiple Sclerosis: symptoms, causes, diagnosis, treatment, experimental therapies
Symptoms: difficulty walking, fatigue, numbness/tingling, muscle spasms, weakness, vision problems
Causes: Immune system attacks the CNS -Mylien sheath
*Diagnosis:
Damage in 2 separate areas of CNS
Problems at least 2 different times
Rule out everything else
*Treatment- Rehab: PT, OT, Speech/visions, Cognitive therapy. No known cure but strategies.
Limit entry of T cells into CNS
Interfere with T cell activation
Limiting immune system activity (Inflammatory response)
Note: Rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, and Crohn's disease
Immune System- 20 questions
Infectious is something easily caught
Pathogen, something can cause harm in body
list different types of infectious agents (pathogens) and give examples of each
Viruses= create colds and influenza Bacteria= living and can reproduce Fungus= real bad
Colds are rhinoviruses
explain how each type of pathogen causes disease and examples of diseases caused by each (ie. virus vs. bacteria)
Virus: non-living and contain genetic material, they hijack cells to reproduce. Can’t be killed with antibiotics (Rhinovirus and influenza virus) need host and only survive by immune system
Bacteria: living, have a metabolism, DNA, and can reproduce on their own. Can be killed with antibiotics because they target specific processes like production of the cell wall. (E. coli and streptococcus)
define pathogen, immune system, infectious disease
Pathogen: viruses, bacteria, fungus
Immune System: A complex network of cells, tissues, organs, and the substances they make that helps the body fight infections and other diseases. (Recognizes, then mounts defense)
Infectious Disease: disorders that are caused by organisms, usually microscopic, such as bacteria, viruses, fungi, or parasites that are passed, directly or indirectly, from one person to another.
list some immune system components (blood, red bone marrow, lymphatic system, and specific organs).
describe the external innate defenses (barriers) that defend you against disease, where they are found, how they work, whether they are innate or adaptive immune responses
Innate: Non-specific, born with it
Skin Mucus membranes, inflammatory response, and white blood cells (Most on exterior)
Adaptive/Acquired: You must learn the pathogen first
Begins after birth, B and T cells, accumulate by being alive (why vaccines work)
list the components of the internal innate immune system
Innate: First line of defense
External: skin, mucus, cilia
Internal: Fever, Inflammation, WBC’s=Phagocytes-Neutrophils, macrophages, NK cells, Dendritic cells
Non-specific defenses are designed to prevent infections by viruses and bacteria, including…
Intact skin: acidic and oily -kills things
Mucus and cilia
Phagocytes (WBC’s) -Inside=certain white blood cells -Neutrophils and macrophages
explain how fever, mucus, cilia defend the body
Fever: Warmer temps are bad for pathogens, a defense mechanism that can destroy many microbes, helps fight viral infections by increasing interferon production. (Can be dangerous)
Mucus: contains lysosomes, enzymes that destroy cell walls (split things apart using water + enzymes)
Cilia: in the respiratory tract, move mucus out of the lungs to keep bacteria and viruses out
Explain how the internal innate immune system works: specifically phagocytes
Role of WBC’s: all are phagocytes that engulf and destroy pathogen
Neutrophils: most basic defender, fight all
Macrophages: blood ⇾ tissue
Natural killer cells: early cancer cells
Dendritic cells: antigen presenting cells.
Phagocytes are attracted by an inflammatory response of damages cells
describe adaptive immunity (memory or not, response time, broad or specific)
Acquired/Adaptive immune system: specific defenses are those that give us immunity to certain diseases. The immune system forms a chemical “memory” of invading microbe. If the microbe is encountered again, the body reacts so quickly, few or no symptoms are felt.
Describe differences between cell mediated and humoral response
Humoral Response: Pathogens, lymphatic system
B cells=Antibodies
Clump
Block receptor sites
Signal phagocytes
helper T cells in charge, fights extracellular pathogens
Cell mediated: All T cells. Helper T cells activate and direct other T cells and phagocytic cells
Helper T -direct immune response, Memory -remember past illness, Regulatory -tells cells to stop and shut down (part of autoimmune disease), Cytotoxic -they kill bad things with enzymes
Memory cells, regulatory cells, travels through blood, infected cells and cancer
Contrast antigen, antibody, antibiotic
Antibiotic: various chemicals produced by certain soil microbes that are toxic to mayn bacteria. Some we use as medicines.
Antibody: a protein produced by the human immune system to tag and destroy invasive microbes. (B-cells) -Don’t directly kill pathogen
Antigen: any protein that our immune system uses to recognize “self” vs. “not self” (Name tag) all cells have unique antigens
Antigens are lock and antibody is key
describe how B cells and T cells fight pathogens
Antigen recognition: cells of the immune system are trained to recognize self vs. not self proteins. If not self protein is encountered by a macrophage, it will bring the protein to a helper T cell for identification. If it is not self, then T cell will launch an immune response.
Role of Antibodies: What B-cells make but don’t directly kill pathogens
Signal macrophages to come and destroy
Clump pathogens together
Block receptor sites on pathogen
explain how the response of B and T cells is different the second time you are exposed to the exact same virus or bacterium
B cells: in general produce antibodies, Memory cells and plasma cells (kill)
T cells: Helper T’s stimulate B cell division, Killer T’s seek and destroy any antigen in the system
List the various types of T cells and their role
Helper T’s stimulate B cell division, key cell to signal an immune response
Killer T’s seek and destroy any antigen in the system and tagged microbes by antibodies
Cytokines: chemical messages and some Cytotoxic T cells can recognize and destroy cancer cells (NK cells- Natural killer)
describe how antibiotics, antivirals, and vaccines work
Antibiotics work: help destroy bacteria only (kill bacteria)
Weaken cell wall
Slowing bacteria reproduction
Vaccines work: created from killed bacteria or viruses (killed or weakened) -immune system recognizes the mounts defense (work because of humoral immunity system)
Antivirals work: aren’t many out there
explain whether or not antibiotics and antivirals can eliminate a pathogen when you have a disease
No they help our immune system by weakening the bacteria
explain which immune system cells are involved in causing an allergic response and why a first exposure to an allergen differs from the second exposure
Evolution-20 Questions
Different gene versions is allele
Density in a population is allele frequency
Variation in traits different hair color and such
Horizontal gene transfer- antibiotic resistance happens quickly
List Darwin's observations and inferences about evolution
Observations of Nature
Genetic Variation: within a species, no two individuals are exactly alike. Some of this variation is heritable.
Limited Resources: Every habitat contains limited supplies of the resources required for survival.
Overproduction of Offspring: More individuals are born than survive to reproduce
Inferences from Observations
Struggle for existence: individuals compete for the limited resources that enable them to survive. (Competition)
Unequal Reproductive success (natural selection): the inherited characteristics of some individuals make them more likely to obtain resources, survive, and reproduce.
Struggle, heredity, variation in traits
Descent with modification: over many generations, a population’s characteristics, can change by natural selection, even giving rise to new species. (Vertical evolution with mutations)
3 reasons for natural selection: Variation in traits, heredity, and difficulty surviving
define and give examples of evolution, species, population, gene, mutation, allele, allele frequency
Evolution: genetic change over time gene distribution changing
Species: Micro -slowly changing one gene vs. Macro -one species to a new species
Population: evolution occurs here because allele frequencies change from one generation to the next over time (Scandinavian vs. Asian)
Gene: code for different traits (Genes on chromosomes)
Mutation: change in DNA sequence causing evolution to occur -creates genetic diversity
Allele: version of a gene
Allele Frequency: vary between populations (isolated populations are high -Black hair in Asia)
define and give examples of variation in traits, heredity (heritable traits), struggle, unequal reproductive success
Variation in traits: within a species, no two individuals are exactly alike (attached/detached earlobes)
Heredity:
Struggle: struggle for existence and competition to survive
Unequal reproductive success: natural selection and the best genes survive and reproduce
explain the process of natural selection
Natural selection requires genetic variation- since more individuals are born than resources available, there is a struggle to survive. Some individuals in a population are better at surviving and reproducing
define and give examples of microevolution, natural selection, macroevolution, speciation, descent with modification, theory of common descent
Microevolution: change in allele frequency in a population of species overtime
Macroevolution: a new species evolves overtime
Natural selection: 3 reasons for natural selection
Variation in traits
Heredity
Difficulty surviving
Speciation: formation of a new and distinct species through evolution (Gradual or punctuated)
Descent with modification:
Theory of common descent:
list types of evidence for evolution, define them, give an example of each (fossils, molecular data, comparative anatomy, embryological development)
Evidence of Evolution
Fossils -older is lower (Law of Superposition)
*Anatomical Comparisons -Homologous and Analogous
Molecular Data -Cytochrome C
Embryology
describe the evidence for evolution expected for organisms that are closely related to one another
define and give examples of homologous and analogous structures
Homologous- common ancestor similar body parts but different species
Analogous- survive similar situation and look similar but separate (cactus)
Convergent- species got slowly more similar
Divergent- species dived by geography and slowly get further apart with different environments