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  AP BIOLOGY:
Chapter Forty-Three Outline

INTRODUCTION

                All Vertebrates Share the Same Body Plan and Operation

                Humans Are Representative Vertebrates of Special Importance

THE HUMAN ANIMAL

                General Body Architecture       fig 43.1
                        Digestive tube suspended within internal body cavity
                        Coelom divided into two parts
                                Thoracic cavity:  heart and lungs
                                Abdominal cavity:  stomach, intestines and liver
                        Supported by internal skeleton of jointed bones
                                Bony skull surrounds brain
                                Column of hollow vertebrae surrounds dorsal spinal nerve cord

                Levels of Organization in the Body
                        Four levels:  cells 9 tissues 9 organs 9 organ systems
                        Groups of cells with similar structure and functions are called tissues
                                Three fundamental embryonic tissues:  endoderm, mesoderm and ectoderm
                                Four principal adult tissues:  epithelial, connective, muscle, nerve    fig 43.2
                        Organs are a structural and functional unit composed of different tissues       tbl 43.1
                                Example:  the heart
                                Contains cardiac muscle tissue wrapped in connective tissue
                                Embedded with nerves and blood vessels
                                Work together to pump blood through the body
                        Organ system is group of organs that function together to carry out body activities
                                Example:  digestive system
                                Humans contain eleven principal organ systems   tbl 43.2

EPITHELIAL TISSUE FORMS MEMBRANES AND GLANDS

                Epithelium Covers Every Surface of the Body
                        Examples
                                Epidermis derived from embryonic ectoderm, comprises outer layer of skin
                                Inner surface of digestive tract lined with endoderm derived epithelium
                                Inner surface of Body cavities lined with mesoderm derived epithelium
                        Functions of epithelial tissues
                                Provide selectively permeable barrier
                                        Facilitate or impede passage of materials into underlying tissues
                                        Any entering or exiting substance must cross an epithelial layer that covers or lines all body surfaces
                                Protect underlying tissue from dehydration and mechanical damage
                                Provide surface for sensory nerve to act
                                Secrete materials via glands
                        Characteristics of epithelial layers
                                Are only a few cell layers thick
                                Cells contain little cytoplasm and have low metabolic rates
                                Possess few blood vessels, transport materials via diffusion
                                Readily regenerated
                        Two general classes
                                Simple epithelium
                                Stratified epithelium
                                Further subdivided by cell shape
                                        Simple squamous:  flat cells
                                        Simple cuboidal:  equal height and width
                                        Columnar:  height greater than width

                Simple Epithelium               fig 43.3
                        A single cell layer thick
                        Simple squamous cells 
                                Line lungs and major cavities 
                                Have irregular, flattened shape with tapered edges
                                Permit rapid passage of molecules across membrane
                        Simple cuboidal cells line small ducts inside glands
                        Simple columnar cells line respiratory and gastrointestinal tract
                                Interspersed with goblet cells
                                Respiratory tract cells have cilia
                                Surface of intestine is highly infolded to increase surface area

                Stratified Epithelium
                        Several cell layers thick, named according to features of uppermost layers
                        Epidermis is a stratified squamous keratinized epithelium 
                                Has an upper layer of squamous cells
                                Superficial cells are dead and filled with keratin

                Glands
                        Derived from invaginated epithelia,produce various substances
                        Two categories of glands
                                Exocrine glands:  connected to epithelium by a duct
                                        Product channeled to outside or to body cavity
                                        Includes sweat and oil glands (external), accessory digestive glands (internal)
                                Endocrine glands:  connection with epithelium lost, ductless
                                        Secretions called hormones
                                        Hormones enter blood capillaries, don't leave body

CONNECTIVE TISSUE S PERFORM A VARIETY OF FUNCTIONS

                Structural Building Blocks      fig 43.4
                        Derived from mesoderm
                        Divided into two categories
                                Connective tissue proper:  loose and dense
                                Special connective tissue:  cartilage, bone, blood
                        Composed of widely-spaced cells imbedded in an extracellular matrix

                Loose Connective Tissues        fig 43.5
                        Cells scattered within amorphous, protein ground substance
                                Strengthened by collagen, elastin and/or reticulin      fig 43.5
                                Fibroblasts secrete collagen and fibrous proteins       fig 43.6
                        Contains other living cells
                                Mast cells produce histamine and heparin
                                Phagocytic macrophages defend against invading organisms        fig 43.7
                                Aided by cells that leave blood capillaries and enter loose connective cells
                        May contain adipose cells
                                Each cell stores a droplet of fat
                                Number of fat cells in an adult is usually fixed, can change in size

                Dense Connective Tissue
                        Contains tightly packed collagen fibers
                        May be regular or irregular
                                In regular tissue collagen fibers are lined up in parallel
                                        Tendons bind bone to bone
                                        Ligaments bind muscle to bone
                                In irregular tissue fibers have different orientations
                                        Tough coverings of organs like capsules of kidneys and adrenal glands
                                        Perimysium covers muscles, perineurium covers nerves, periosteum covers bones

                Cartilage
                        Has special ground substance made from characteristic glycoprotein
                        Collagen fibers laid down along lines of stress
                        Produces firm, flexible tissue that is tough and doesn't stretch
                        Cushions bone joints, makes up skeleton of agnathans, cartilaginous fishes
                        Chondrocytes remain alive even with no blood vessels

                Bone
                        Cartilage hardened by calcification, cells die, replaced by living bone
                        Osteoblasts are bone cells that remain alive even though matrix is hardened with calcium phosphate
                        Hardest tissue in body may be organized into a delicate lacework        fig 43.8

                Blood                                   fig 43.8
                        Contains abundant matrix material:  fluid plasma
                        Cells include erythrocytes (red cells) and leukocytes (white cells)     fig 43.9
                        Thrombocytes or platelets are fragments of a type of bone marrow cell
                        Erythrocytes are the most common blood cells
                                Lose nucleus,  mitochondria and ER during maturation
                                Metabolically are relatively inactive
                                Has iron-containing hemoglobin protein, carries oxygen
                        Several types of leukocytes
                                Neutrophils, eosinophils, basophils have special affinity to biological stains
                                Neutrophils are most abundant, phagocytic
                                Mononuclear phagocyte system:  
                                        During infections monocytes enter loose connective tissue and become macrophages
                                        Monocytes, macrophages, organ-specific phagocytes
                                Lymphocytes are second most abundant leukocytes, part of immune system  fig 43.7
                        Blood plasma contains nutrients and metabolic wastes
                                Also contains sodium, calcium, other inorganic salts
                                Includes proteins like fibrinogen and albumin
                                Contains lymphocyte-produced antibodies

MUSCLE TISSUE PROVIDES FOR MOVEMENT

                Muscle Cells Are Motors of the Vertebrate Body
                        Possess large numbers of actin and myosin filaments, specialized for contraction
                        Three types of vertebrate muscle:  smooth, skeletal and cardiac fig 43.10
                        Skeletal and cardiac are also striated muscles

                Smooth Muscle
                        Earliest form to evolve, found throughout animal kingdom
                        Cells are long and spindle-shaped, each with one nucleus
                        Cells organized into sheets to form smooth muscle tissue
                        Two types of contraction occur
                                All muscles contract as a unit when stimulated by nerve or hormone:  i.e. muscles lining blood vessels
                                Individual cells contract spontaneously causing slow, steady contraction of the tissue:  i.e. muscles in the walls of the gut
                        Contraction is involuntary and cannot be consciously controlled

                Skeletal Muscle
                        Attached to bones by tendons, contract and cause bones to move
                        Numerous muscle cells called muscle fibers  act in concert
                        Stronger contractions result when more fibers within muscle contract
                                Contraction due to substructures called myofibrils      fig 43.11
                                Contain highly ordered arrays of actin and myosin filaments
                        Fibers produced during development by the fusion of several cells       fig 43.11
                                A single fiber runs the length of an individual vertebrate muscle
                                Each fiber contains all of the original nuclei of the fused cells

                Cardiac Muscle
                        Vertebrate hearts made of specially arranged striated muscle fibers
                                Composed of interconnected cells, each with its own nucleus
                                Interconnections appear as lines called intercalated disks      fig 43.10
                                Lines are really regions where cells are linked by gap junctions
                        Interconnections allow heart to contract as single unit
                                Functioning unit called myocardium
                                Certain muscle cells generate spontaneous electrical impulse
                                Impulses spread across gap junction from cell to cell
                                All cells in myocardium ultimately contract
                                Contraction represents one heartbeat

NERVE TISSUE CONDUCTS SIGNALS RAPIDLY

                Composition of Nerve Tissue     fig 43.12,13
                        Neurons:  specialized for transmission of nerve impulses
                        Cell body contains the nucleus
                        Dendrites 
                                Thin, highly branched protrusions from the cell body 
                                Receive stimulation
                        Axon
                                Long tubular extension of  the cell body
                                Transmit nerve impulse away from the cell body
                                Axon can be long, resulting in long nerve cell
                                May be covered with insulating layer called myelin sheath
                                        Derived from Schwann cells
                                        Periodic interruptions called Nodes of Ranvier

                Nerves Are Bundles of Axon Fibers
                        Central nervous system (CNS):  link brain and spinal cord
                        Peripheral nervous system (PNS):  nerves and ganglia
                        Sensory neurons:  conduct impulses from sensory organs to CNS
                        Motor neurons:  conduct impulses from CNS to muscles or glands
                        Interneurons/association neurons:  neither sensory or motor neurons
                                Comprise majority of neurons in CNS
                                Responsible for information processing

                Supporting Cells of the Nervous System
                        Neuroglia are supporting cells
                        Provide more than just physical support
                        Essential for prop[er functioning of nervous system
                        Example:  Schwann cells in PNS that make myelin

HOMEOSTASIS

                Cell Specialization Requires Limited Extracellular Conditions
                        Homeostasis definition:  dynamic consistency of the internal environment
                        Conditions are not constant but fluctuate within narrow limits

                Regulating Levels of Glucose in Blood
                        Large amount of glucose in body after meal
                                Glucose absorbed by liver cells
                                Converted to glycogen for storage
                        When blood glucose levels fall below normal
                                Liver converts glycogen to glucose
                                Releases glucose into blood
                        Little change in blood plasma glucose level over time

                Regulating Body Temperature
                        Neurons detect temperature increase over 37% C (98.6% F)
                                Input to hypothalamus
                                Triggers mechanisms to dissipate heat
                                Induces sweating, dilation of blood vessels in skin and other things
                        Decrease in body temperature
                                Induces shivering and constriction of skin blood vessels
                                Raises body temperature, corrects challenge to homeostasis

                Homeostasis Is Maintained by Negative Feedback Loops
                        Feedback loop monitors body conditions and corrects deviations
                        Negative feedback:  reverse changes to condition, reduces disturbance   fig 43.14
                                Keep value of controlled variable close to preferred set point value
                                Sensors monitor control variable, send data to integrator
                                Integrator compares value to set point
                                Deviations from set point, perturbations, cause integrator to send error signal to an effector to bring about change
                        Example:  driving a car fig 43.14b
                                Variable = position of car in lane
                                Sensors = eyes of driver
                                Integrator = driver's brain
                                Setpoint = center of lane
                                Perturbations = bumps or curves in road
                                Error signals = deviations from setpoint
                                Deviations result from perturbations, car off center
                                Opposed by system of effectors, car kept in center of lane
                        Setpoint in physiological systems may change
                                Body temperature lower during sleep
                                Temperature higher during fever
                        Controls involve complex interactions between organ systems

                Positive Feedback Loops Are Unstable
                        In positive feedback the disturbance is accentuated
                        Perturbations cause effector to drive controlled variable even farther from set point
                        Analogous to spark that ignites an explosion
                        Example:  blood clotting
                                One factor activates another
                                Produces cascade that leads to formation of a clot
                        Example:  contractions of uterus during childbirth      fig 43.15
                                Stretching of uterus by fetus stimulates contraction
                                Stimulates further stretching, more contraction
                                Final result:  fetus expelled from uterus
                        Positive feedback systems are part of larger mechanism that maintains homeostasis



 

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