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Levels of Structural Organization Cells are the smallest unit of organization that can live independently. Cells are organized into tissues. Tissues are.

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Presentation on theme: "Levels of Structural Organization Cells are the smallest unit of organization that can live independently. Cells are organized into tissues. Tissues are."— Presentation transcript:

1 Levels of Structural Organization Cells are the smallest unit of organization that can live independently. Cells are organized into tissues. Tissues are organized into organs. Organs are organized into systems.

2 Tissue—group of cells with a common structure and function 4 main types: 1) epithelial—outside of body, linings of organs and cavities. Free surface is exposed to air or fluid; other side is attached to the basement membrane, a dense mat of extracellular matrix.

3 Types of epithelial cells simple—single layer stratified—multiple layers cuboidal—cube shape columnar—sideways stacked bricks squamous—flat

4 2. Connective tissue—binds and supports other tissues—3 types of fibers a.collagenous fibers—nonelastic fiber (skin does not come off on pulling)

5 b. elastic fibers—made of elastin (guess what—they’re elastic! Skin pulls back; blood vessels) c. reticular fibers—thin, branched, made of collagen, join connective tissue to adjacent tissues (around muscle fibers)

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7 Types of connective tissues—all have an extensive extracellular matrix a) Loose connective tissue binds epithelial cells to other tissues, holds organs in place; ex. fibroblasts (secrete proteins), macrophages (engulf bacteria and dead cells) b) Adipose tissue stores fat, insulates body c) Fibrous connective tissue is made of dense collagenous fibers; ex. tendons (attach muscles to bones), ligaments (join bones together) d) Cartilage is used for flexible support e) Bone is a mineralized connective tissue—osteoblasts deposit collagen, Ca ++, Mg +, PO 4 - that harden f) Blood has a matrix of plasma

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9 3. Nervous tissue—senses stimuli and transmits signals—functional unit is the neuron (nerve cell) 4. Muscle tissue—made of long muscle fiber cells that can contract Skeletal—voluntary movements Cardiac—heart muscle Smooth—involuntary movements

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11 Tissues are arranged into organs— many organs live in cavities filled with fluid: --lungs and heart are in thoracic cavity --stomach is in abdominal cavity diaphragm (muscle) separates these 2 cavities Systems consist of several organs

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13 Your systems are connected!!

14 Bioenergetics—how we make energy from what we eat—is it efficient? Amount of energy an animal uses/unit time = metabolic rate Energy is measured in calories or kilocalories

15 Use of chemical energy generates heat. Minimum metabolic rates maintain life maximum rates occur during peak activity BMR= basal metabolic rate—for an endotherm (that’s us!) at rest, empty stomach, no stress SMR= standard metabolic rate—for ectotherms—have to know temperature

16 Homeostasis—”steady state”—animals want to keep a constant condition in internal environments (ex. humans—temp, blood pH, blood sugar) Cells of vertebrates live in interstitial fluid

17 Parts of a homeostatic control system: Receptor—detects a change in internal environment Control Center—processes information and directs and appropriate response Effector—effects the changes mandated by the control center

18 Negative feedback is a common control mechanism


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