Transcript ppt
Human Body
Organization
1. Chemical
2. Cellular
3. Tissue
4. Organ
5. Organ System
6. Organismic
Chemical Bonds
•A union between the electron structures of atoms
•Atoms can have several orbiting shells that hold their electrons
•the innermost shell holds a maximum of 2 electrons
•the outer (or valence) shells can hold up to 8 electrons
•If the outer shell is complete then the atom is not reactive
•If the outer shell is not complete then the atom is reactive
•It tries to fill its outer shell with the electrons from other atoms
•This is the basis of Chemical Reactions and Chemical Bonds
•There are three type of Chemical Bonds in the Human Body
•Ionic
•Covalent
•Hydrogen
Macromolecules
•Are Giant Molecules of Life
•All Use Carbon Atoms
•Carbon has only 4 outer shell electrons
•can make 4 covalent bonds
•excellent for building molecules
•hydrocarbons
•carbon and hydrogen combinations
•functional groups
•attachments to carbon backbone
•increase diversity
•monomers
•small molecules that form polymers
•polymers
•large molecules made up of monomers
Lipid
Bilayer
Phospholipids
make up the outer
layer of all cells
Fluid Mosaic Model
Fluid:
all components
move around freely
Mosaic:
many different types
of proteins on the
surface make a
mosaic pattern
Membrane Proteins
Cell Proteins serve many different purposes
Diffusion
Facilitative Diffusion
Active Transport
Endocytosis
Exocytosis
Pinocytosis
Animal Cell
DNA
(deoxyribonucleic acid)
Bases/Base Pairs
Nucleotides
1.
2.
3. Nitrogenous Base
Base Pairs:
A–T
C–G
DNA
Organization
•Chromatin organized:
•DNA
•Histones
One Duplicated Chromosome
Human
Chromosomes
A Pair of Duplicated
Chromosomes
Autosomes
Sex
Chromosomes
46 individual chromosomes / 23 pairs of chromosomes
•they are the same - code for same type of trait
•they are different - code for different version of trait
Understanding the Numbers
•1 chromosome is 1 large DNA molecule
•a gene is a specific sequence of nucleotides
ATTCCGTAGCTGATCGTAAAGGG
•1000-5000 genes per chromosome
•30,000-100,000 genes per human genome
DNA Functions
•Pass on Genetic Material
•Replication
•Mitosis
•Meiosis
•Protein Synthesis
•Transcription
•Translation
Replication
•Making an exact copy of DNA
•Occurs just prior to cell division
•Double helix unwinds
•DNA polymerase adds bases
•Two exact copies are made
Protein
Synthesis
•Transcription
•DNA to mRNA
•Translation
•mRNA to Protein
From
Gene to
Protein
DNA
RNA
Protein
Genetic
Code
Codons
three base code
Code for specific
amino acids
Point Mutation
Spontaneous Mutation
Environmental Insult
•Mutagenesis
•Carcinogenesis
Mutation is corrected
Point Mutation
Mutation is
not corrected
Mutation is
corrected
Two-Hit
Hypothesis
Born with 2 genes
or alleles for any
given disease:
•one from mom
•one from dad
If one is bad, this
increases your
chance of getting
the disease
Animal Tissues
•Epithelial Tissue
•Connective Tissue
•Muscular Tissue
•Nervous Tissue
Epithelial Tissue
•Function
•filtration
•lubrication
•secretion
•Classification
•simple
•stratified
•squamous
•cuboidal
•columnar
Simple
Epithelial
Tissue
•Squamous
•Cuboidal
•Columnar
Stratified Squamous Epithelium
Connective Tissue
•Function
•binds together tissues and organs
•supports tissues and organs
•strengthens other tissues and organs
•protects other tissues and organs
•insulates other tissues and organs
•Composed of
•cells
•matrix
•ground substance
•fibers (collagen, elastic, reticular)
Connective
Tissue
•Loose
Connective Tissue
•Dense, Irregular
Connective Tissue
•Dense, Regular
Connective Tissue
Connective
Tissue
•Cartilage
•Bone
•Adipose Tissue
Muscle Tissue
•Function
•provides organismic or organ movement
•organismic posture
•thermogenic
•Classification
•skeletal
•smooth
•cardiac
Muscle Tissue
•Skeletal
Muscle Tissue
•Smooth
Muscle Tissue
•Cardiac
Muscle Tissue
Nervous Tissue
•Function
•converts environmental and internal stimuli into
nerve impulses
•stimulates or inhibits cells or glands
•Classification
•neurons
•neuroglia (glia)
Neuron
Organ Systems