EFB-385 CVA Lecture Review (Comprehensive)
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- EVOLUTIONARY EMBRYOLOGY
- Timing of development
- HETEROCHRONY
- A change in developmental timing such that features occur earlier or later than in an ancestor
-
Name the 4 parts of the ecomorphological clock. -
- What are the 2 types of paedomorphosis?
-
- 1. Progenesis (maturing earlier than ancestor)
- 2. Neoteny (retaining larval shape)
- What organism is an example of neoteny?
- Axolotl
- RECAPITULATION
- Sequential appearance of ancestral features during ontogeny
- Who proposed "ontogeny recapitulates phylogeny" and used artistic license in the production of evidence? In what year?
- Ernst Haeckel, 1866
- What is one reason embryos look similar?
- Trying not to modify basic components due to energetic costs and likelihood of failure in experimentation
- The integument is the largest ____ and exists side-by-side with the ____ system.
- largest, nervous
- EPIDERMIS
- Layer of the integument closest to the environment
- What are the 6 layers of the integument (distal to medial)?
-
Stratum....
- 1. Corneum
- 2. Lucidum
- 3. Granulosum
- 4. Spinosum
- 5. Basale
- 6. Dermis
(Cat Labs Give Students Bad Dreams) -
- blank
-
Name the pink structure. - Unguis
-
Name the 6 structures that support a fingernail.
-
- What is the function of the stratum corneum?
- Sheds water
- What does the stratum granulosum consist of?
- Keratohyalin granules
- DERMIS
- Deepest layer of the integument containing collagenous tissue (leather)
- COLLAGEN
- Basic structural fiber of the animal kingdom
- What are 4 glands arising from the dermis?
-
- 1. Apocrine gland
- 2. Melanophore
- 3. Sebaceous gland
- 4. Eccrine gland
- CHROMATOPHORES
- Neural crest derivatives in fishes and invertebrates that contain pigment and reflect light
- ENAMEL
- Hardest material in the vertebrate body
-
Label the 4 structures associated with the deeper cutaneous layers.
-
- Caroline M. Pond studied the mechanics of what?
- Fat deposition
- Who classified the structural derivatives of the integument? In what year?
- Melvin Moss, 1972
- What are the 3 Structural Derivatives of the Integument?
-
- 1. Epidermal (exclusively epidermal cells)
- 2. Epidermal-Dermal (structural contributer)
- 3. Mesodermal (exclusively mesodermal cells)
- Hair, nails, and beaks result from what structural derivative of the integument?
- Epidermal
- Fish scales and teeth result from what structural derivative?
- Epidermal-dermal
- The operculum and clavicle result from what structural derivative?
- Mesodermal
- Who described the processes by which structural derivatives of the integument create unique features like feathers and hair?
- Richard Krejsa
- What are the 3 processes by which structural derivatives of the integument create unique features like scales or hair?
-
- 1. Epithelial-mesenchymal interactions (EMI)
- 2. Delamination (DEL)
- 3. Functional Epithelial Extinction (FEE)
- Feathers and hair result from two variants of what structural derivative process?
- Epithelial mesenchymal interactions (EMI)
- Guppy skin results from what structural derivative process?
- Delamination (DEL)
-
Name this process, its components, and its results.
-
-
Name this process, its components, and an example result.
-
- What causes integumental patterns?
- Embryonic basement lamellae
- What are 4 hard tissue derivatives?
-
- 1. Enamel
- 2. Ganoin
- 3. Dentine
- 4. Bone
- What is the primary component of enamel?
- Hydroxyapatite (mineral)
- What percent of enamel material is organic?
- 3%
- Can enamel be altered once it is laid down?
- No.
- Enamel arises from the ______.
- ectoderm
- Ganoin is a ____ enamel that is ____.
- laminar, layered
- What kind of enamel is dentine?
- Soft
- What percent of dentine material is organic?
- 30%
- Is it possible to alter dentine after it is laid down?
- Yes
- Before bones were placed in skeletons, where were they placed?
- Armor
- How many bone layers did ancient dermal armor have?
- 4
- Who proposed that an active lifestyle facilitates the formation of hydroxyapatite? In what year?
- Rubin and Bennett, 1987
-
Name the components of bone armor on a Paleozoic Agnathan.
-
- In the musculoskeletal system, bone serves as ______ tissue.
- connective
- What are the 2 types of bone development?
-
- 1. Intramembranous (membrane bone)
- 2. Cartilage replacement (endochondral bone
- What 2 specialized cell types do mesenchymes become within an intramembranous bone?
-
- 1. Fibrocytes
- 2. Osteoblasts
-
Name the 6 components of this generic intramembranous bone.
-
- CARTILAGE
- Sulphated polysaccharide gel organized into a network of collagenous fibers
- What are 2 characteristics of hyaline cartilage fibers?
-
- 1. Sparse numbers
- 2. Thin
-
Name the 5 components of hyaline cartilage.
-
- FASCIA
- Connective tissue that envelops muscle; product of mesenchyme
- What do mesenchyme cells do before they differentiate?
- Aggregate in sheets
- HAVERSION SYSTEM
- Osteon; fundamental functional unit of compact bone; consists of several lamellae (layers of compact bone tissue) around a central canal, the Haversion canal
- OSTEOCLAST
- Resorb bone; multinucleate with many vesicles and vacuoles; result from stromal cells in the presence of osteoblasts
- ICONOCLAST
- "Breaking an icon"; related to the word osteoclast
-
Name the 5 components of a diarthrosis. Which one is filled with synovial fluid?
-
The joint cavity is filled with synovial fluid. - The backbone is generated from _______, a subdivision of the _______.
- sclerotome, mesoderm
-
Name the 7 components of a generic vertebra.
-
- What 2 groups of organisms have rachitomous vertebrae?
- Crossopterygians, (some) labyrinthodonts
- What group of animals have stereospondylus vertebrae?
- Temnospondyls (large aquatic amphibians)
- CONDYLE
- Rounded articular area (ex. occipital condyle)
- How many condyles does a fish skull have?
- 1
- How many condyles does an amphibian skull have?
- 2
- Between what 2 vertebrae is the framework enabling a "no" (side-to-side) head motion?
- Atlas, axis
- GILL ARCH THEORY
- The vertebrate limb is derived from branchial arches
- Who proposed the gill arch theory?
- Carl Gegenbaur
- FIN-FOLD THEORY
- Vertebrate paired limbs are derived from ventrolateral skin folds in basal fishes
- P1 COMPLEX
- Shoulder girdle
-
Name 5 features of the P1 complex in bony fishes.
-
Cleithrum = dermal Scapula = endochondral
-
Name the 6 features of the P1 complex in monotremes.
-
Clavicle = dermal Scapula = endochondral
-
What are these structures? What group of organisms is each one from? What does the difference between the structures tell you about vertebrate evolution? -
P1 complex (shoulder girdle)
Left: bony fish
Right: monotreme
Moving forward in vertebrate evolution, there is less dermally-derived bone and more endochondrally-derived bone. - BASAL HYPOTHESIS
- Proximal limb elements are derived from basal pterygiophores
- BRACHIUM
- Humerus
- ANTEBRACHIUM
- Radius and ulna
- MANUS
- Carpals/Metacarpals/Phalanges
- STYLO-
- Upper hand
- ZEUGO-
- Lower hand
- AUTO-
- Hand
- RADIALE
- Carpal on the side of the hand closest to the radius
- ULNARE
- Carpal on the side of the hand closest to the ulna
- What are the 8 carpals?
-
- 1. Scaphoid
- 2. Lunate
- 3. Tripisciform
- 4. Pisciform
- 5. Trapezium
- 6. Trapezoid
- 7. Capitulate
- 8. Hammer
Students Like The Prof To Teach Complex Hypotheses - What 3 changes occurred during the evolution of the P2 complex (pelvic girdle)?
-
- 1. Simple plate --- 3 bones
- 2. No contact --- Broad contact
- 3. Minor element --- Major element
- P2 COMPLEX
- Pelvic girdle
- In reptiles the ilium rotates _____.
- forward
- GAIT
- How legs move relative to the body and other legs
- ZEUGOPODIUM
- Lower hind leg
- CALCONEUM
- Heel bone
- ASTRAGALUS
- Bone foot rolls on
- TIBIALE
- Tarsal on the side of the foot closest to the tibia
- FIBULARE
- Tarsal on the side of the foot closest to the fibula
- CENTRALIA
- Tarsal around the center of the foot
- What part of the skeleton is the most diagnostic? What are its 4 diagnostic components?
-
Skull
- 1. Braincase
- 2. Facial bones
- 3. Upper jaw
- 4. Gill arches
- What are 2 animals that exhibit noble mobility?
-
- 1. Snake: swinging maxilla
- 2. Rabbit: cranial kinesis
- What are the 3 bones of the head?
-
- 1. Chondrocranium (endo-, neuro-, braincase)
- 2. Dermatocranium (dermal covering)
- 3. Splanchnocranium (gill arches + derivatives)
- The dermatocranium covers the braincase, but what else can it cover?
- Lower jaw
- What are the 4 regions of the chondrocranium (rostral to caudal)?
-
- 1. Ethmoid
- 2. Optic
- 3. Otic
- 4. Occipital
-
Name the 6 elements of the developing braincase in the chick embryo (left). Name the 6 regions of the braincase that develop (right).
-
- What are 3 derivations of the visceral arches?
-
- 1. Hyoid apparatus
- 2. Laryngeal skeleton
- 3. Jaw and ear ossicles
- Tracing evolution forward from MLRs to mammals, what integration of functions has the skull evolved toward?
- Being able to chew, listen and breathe simultaneously
- The excavation of the dermatocranium in mammal evolution is associated with what?
- Origins of large jaw muscles
- What are the 4 musculoskeletal components in a kick-off motion of the human leg?
-
- 1. Vastus lateralis
- 2. Rectus femoralis
- 3. Sartorius
- 4. Patella
- QUADRATUS
-
Four muscles involved in the extension of the leg and movement of the femur:
- 1. Vastus lateralis
- 2. Rectus femoralis
- 3. Sartorius
- 4. Patella
- SUPRACORACOIDEUS (bird)
-
Raises wing
Sternum-humerus - SUPRASPINATUS
-
Abducts arm at shoulder joint
Supraspinous fossa-Greater tubercle
Inn. C5/C6 - INFRASPINATUS
-
Adducts arm, rotates glenohumeral joint
Infraspinous fossa-Greater tubercle
C5/C6 - The puboischiofemoraus internus of reptiles becomes the _____ complex of mammals.
- ilipsoas
- ILIOPSOAS
-
Hip flexor
Combination: psoas major, psoas minor, iliacus
Vertebrae-lesser trochanter - The _____ of reptiles becomes the gluteal muscles of mammals.
- iliofemoralis
- What are the 3 groups of muscles in the Kardon hind/ventral section of reptile limbs?
-
- 1. Puboischiofemoralis externus (rotates femur), adductor femoris (adducts femur)
- 2. Flexor tibialis (flexes tibia)
- 3. Gastrocnemius (adducts foot)
- What are the 3 groups of muscles in the Kardon hind/ventral section of mammal limbs?
-
- 1. Obturator externus/quadratus femorus (rotates femur), adductor longus/adductor magnus (adducts femur)
- 2. Gracilis/semimembranosus/semitendinosus/biceps femoris (flexes tibia)
- 3. Gastrocnemius (adducts foot
- ZONE OF COMPLEXITY AND DANGER
- Palate/throat
- BUCCAL CAVITY
- Region from the lips to the start of the Eustachian tube
- STOMODEUM
- Embryonic depression between the brain and the pericardium; becomes the mouth
- LIPS
- Outer margin of epidermis and connective tissue around the mouth
- What is a feature of lips unique to fishes, birds/turtles, and humans respectively?
-
- Fishes: barbels
- Birds/Turtles: keratin
- Humans: no stratum corneum
- What are the 5 functions of buccal secretions?
-
- 1. Maintain oral membranes
- 2. Lubricate food
- 3. Neutralize prey toxins
- 4. Initiate chemical digestion
- 5. Create venom for toxification and digestion
- What 4 cranial nerves innervate the tongue?
- V, VII, IX and XII
- What are the 5 functions of the tongue?
-
- 1. Taste
- 2. Speech
- 3. Manipulation
- 4. Capture
- 5. Regulation of Temperature
- Fish buccal secretions are ____, while tetrapod buccal secretions can be mucous or ____. Bird buccal secretions can produce ___-_____ ___.
- mucous, serous, nest-building glue
- What are 3 characteristics of the tetrapod tongue?
-
- 1. Derived from arches 1, 2, 3
- 2. Sac-like and muscular
- What are the 3 glands responsible for buccal secretions?
-
- 1. Parotid (above mouth)
- 2. Sublingual (below mouth)
- 3. Mandibular (jaw)
- What cranial nerve innervates teeth?
- V
-
What are the 3 levels of a mature tooth? What are the 3 compositional layers?
-
- What are the 2 classes of tooth shape in vertebrates?
-
- 1. Homodont
- 2. Heterodont
- What are "the 4 Cs" of mammal molars?
-
- 1. Crucial to lifestyle
- 2. Complex
- 3. Costle to repair
- 4. Cusps occlude
- OCCLUSION
- Cusps (esp. in molars) fitting together with indents on opposing teeth when the mouth is closed
-
Label the 6 components of the crossopterygian middle ear. Which component arises from the dermatocranium? What overlays the middle ear?
-
Angular arises from the dermatocranium. The middle ear is covered by the operculum.
- What are the 2 processes that occur in the middle ear during the transition from crossopterygians to labyrinthodonts?
-
- 1. Autostyli develops
- 2. Hyomandibula becomes columella (still occupying spiracular pouch/middle ear)
- What do the columella, quadrate, and articular develop into during the transition from labyrinthodonts to mammals?
- Stapes, incus, and malleus respectively
-
Name the 7 components of the mammalian middle ear.
-
- FENESTRA OVALIS
- "Oval window"; membrane-covered opening connecting the middle ear to the inner ear
- LOAD
- Force applied
- STRESS
- Force/Area
- STRAIN
- Change in shape
- MODULUS
- Stress/Strain
- COMPRESSION
- Force moving into a bone, or compressing it
- TENSION
- Force pulling out on a bone
- Compact Bone - Compressive Strength
- 1330-2100 kg/cm^2
- Compact Bone - Tensile Strength
- 620-1050 kg/cm^2
- Compact Bone - Shear Strength
- 500-1176 kg/cm^2
- RESISTANCE
-
R = constant X width X height^2
Greater on-edge - TORQUE
- T = force X lever arm; twisting force about a pivot
- In what 3 ways can F(out) be increased?
-
- 1. Increase F(in)
- 2. Increase lever arm length
- 3. Shorten output arm length
- TENDON
- Living tissue that connects muscle to bone; fiber matrix laid down by fibryocytes
- APONEUROSIS
- Flat sheet of connective tissue (tendons)
- SESAMOID BONE
- Bone inserted in tendons, ex. patella
-
TRUE/FALSE:
Tendons contain proprioceptors. - TRUE
- Tendon - Strength
- 900 kg/cm^2
- LIGAMENT
- Collagenous, often elastic fibers that bind or tie muscle and bone
- What are 2 examples of how animal bodies utilize ligaments?
-
- 1. Retracted cat claws
- 2. Lifted horse head (no muscles used)
- What are 3 methods biologists use to determine muscle function?
-
- 1. Electromyography
- 2. Electrical stimulation
- 3. Anatomical examination
- What are 7 types of muscles?
-
- 1. Flexors
- 2. Adductors
- 3. Levators
- 4. Protractors
- 5. Sphincters
- 6. Supinators
- 7. Antagonists
- KINESIOLOGY
- Study of muscles/muscular movement
- ISOTONIC CONTRACTION
- Contraction without a change in tone (muscle shortens)
- ISOMETRIC CONTRACTION
- Contraction without a change in length
- What are the 5 scales of muscle (largest to smallest)?
-
- 1. Muscle
- 2. Fascicle (bundle of muscle fibers)
- 3. Fiber (long multinucleate cells)
- 4. Myofibrils (~1um)
- 5. Myofilaments
- SARCOPLASMIC RETICULUM (SR)
- Thin tubules within a muscle cell that open outside the cell
- What are the 4 steps of the sliding filament model of muscle contraction?
-
- 1. Ca++ released from SR
- 2. Ca++ binds to troponin
- 3. Tropomyosin changes orientation, exposing actin active sites
- 4. Myosin heads attach and swivel
- What are the 5 characteristics of red muscle?
-
- 1. Aerobic
- 2. Slow, sustained contraction
- 3. Densely vascularized
- 4. High myoglobin and fat content
- 5. Many mitochondria
- What are 2 examples of red muscle?
-
- 1. Turkey thigh
- 2. Trout lateral band
- What are the 3 characteristics of white muscle?
-
- 1. Anaerobic
- 2. Rapid, brief contraction
- 3. Sparsely vascularized
- What is an example of white muscle in the minnow?
- Myomotal muscle
- SARCOMERE
- Contraction segment of a myofibril
- What happens to a sarcomere in the sliding filament model?
- H gets smaller, I-band surrounds the Z-line, and A rests between I-bands
- PROPRIOCEPTORS
- Sensors that monitor and coordinate muscle fibers
- Where are proprioceptors gathered in birds and mammals?
- Muscle spindle, Golgi tendon organs
- What does the alpha motor neuron do in muscles?
- Stimulates extrafusal muscle fibers
- What does the gamma motor neuron do in muscles?
- Stimulates intrafusal fibers
- What are the 2 epimere components associated with muscle?
-
- 1. Dermatome (smooth)
- 2. Myotome (striated)
- What are the 6 striated muscle groups?
-
- 1. Epaxial
- 2. Hypaxial
- 3. Hypobranchial
- 4. Eye muscles
- 5. Branchiomeric
- 6. Appendicular
- What changed and what persisted in striated muscles during the transition from crossopterygians to labyrinthodonts?
- Striated muscles became less massive, but remained segmented (incl. up to reptiles)
- HYPAXIAL
- Striated muscle that supports viscera and moves ribs
- In fishes the hypaxial muscle is ____ in size, while in tetrapods it is _____ ___ _____.
- massive, divided into sheets
- What nerve innervates the epaxial muscles?
- Spinal
- What nerve innervates the hypaxial muscles?
- Spinal
- What 3 nerves innervate the branchiomeric muscles?
- IV, X, VII
- What 3 nerves innervate the eye muscles?
- III, IV, VI
- BRANCHIOMERIC
- Striated muscle that operates gill arches, esp. the hyoid and mandibular arches
- What is the branchiomeric muscle in the shark?
- Cucillaris
- What are the 3 branchiomeric muscles in humans?
- Trapezius, sternomastoid, cleidomastoid
- DORSAL HYOID CONSTRICTOR
- Striated muscle that moves the operculum in bony fishes
- What 2 muscles in tetrapods arise from the dorsal hyoid constrictor?
- Depressor mandibular, sphinctor colli
- In mammals the hyoid constrictor becomes the _____, while the hyoid levator becomes the ____.
- platysma, stapedius
- In mammals the _____ _____ ______ becomes the digastric muscle and the stylohyoid.
- ventral hyoid constrictor
-
Name 1 key facial muscle involved in making each expression.
-
- What are the 3 embryonic tongue cartilages (from tongue-tip to root)?
-
- 1. Lateral lingual
- 2. Tuberculum impar
- 3. Copula
-
Visualize the occlusion of these teeth.
-
- BUNODONT
- "Rounded peak" tooth; primates, pigs
- LOPHODONT
- "Ridged cusp" tooth; rhinoceros
- SELENODONT
- "Crescent cusp" tooth; cow
- HYPSODONT
- "High crown" tooth; horse
- CARNISSIAL
- Large flesh-shearing tooth in mammals
- FANGS
- Recurved teeth
- POLYPHYDONT
- Animal that continually replaces teeth, ex. shark
- DIPHYODONT
- Animal with two successive sets of teeth, a "deciduous" set and a "permanent" set, ex. humans
- In general, mammal teeth arise in the pattern ____/____ (upper/lower), but in cats the teeth can arise in the pattern ____/____.
- 3143/3143, 3131/3121
- What is another name for the cuspids in humans?
- Canines
- What is another name for the bicuspids in humans?
- Premolars
- What are the 3 roles/derivatives of pharynx pouches?
-
- 1. Pouch 1 (spiracular): middle ear canal, Eustachian tube
- 2. Pouches 1-2: thyroid gland
- 3. Pouhces 2-5: thymus, tonsils, parathyroid
- What are the gill derivatives of the endoderm, mesoderm, and ectoderm?
-
- Endoderm: inner surface
- Mesoderm: skeleton septum, vessels, muscles
- Ectoderm: outer surface, lamellae
- How many breaths do humans take in one year?
- (4 to 10) X 10^6 breaths/year
- PULMONARY ARTERIOLE
- Artery carrying deoxygenated blood to the lungs
- PULMONARY VENULE
- Vein carrying oxygenated blood from the lungs
- What is the type of respiration used by amphibians? By amniotes?
-
- Amphibians: force-pump
- Amniotes: suction-pump
- TRUE/FALSE: Snakes only have one lung, which runs along the right side of their body.
- TRUE
- What cartilage lifts the ribs when we take a breath (inspire)?
- External intercostals
- What 2 muscles involved in inspiring can you see when you do a pull-up exercise?
- Sternocleidomastoid, scalenus
- What cartilage depresses the ribs when we release a breath (expire)?
- Internal intercostals
- What muscle depresses the ribcage during expiration?
- Rectus abdominus
- What happens to the diaphragm during expiration?
- Diaphragm relaxes
- Who wrote about mammalian diaphragm origins as an evolution toward longer bursts of sustained activity? In what year?
- John Ruben, 1987
- What is the lung capacity of a bird compared to an equal-size mammal?
- 1/10
- How many wingbeats per second does the average bird take?
- 12-20 wingbeats/sec
- In frogs the vocal cords are stretched between and protected by 2 ________ __________.
- arytenoid cartilages
- What evolved first: swim bladders or lungs?
- Lungs
- VENTILATION
- Breathing
- What is retained in mammalian lungs after exhalation?
- Tidal air
- INSPIRE
- Ribs rocked forward (cat) or up (human) with inhalation
- What nerve innervates the diaphragm?
- Phrenic nerve
- GLOTTIS
- Opening to the lungs
- What are the 2 types of muscle in the larynx?
- Extrinsic and intrinsic
- STERNOHYOID
-
Pulls larynx posteriorly
Clavicle-Sternum
Inn. Ansa cervicalis - THYROHYOID
-
Draws larynx anteriorly
Thyroid cartilage-Hyoid bone
C1 - LATERAL CRICEARYTNEOID
- Holds vocal cords together
- LATERAL CRICOARYTENOID
-
Holds vocal cords together
Cricoid cartilage-Arytenoid cartilage
C10 - POSTERIOR CRICOARYTENOID
-
Pulls vocal cords apart
Cricoid cartilage-Arytenoid cartilage
C10 - CRICOTHYROID
-
Tenses vocal cords
Cricoid cartilage-Thyroid cartilage
Inn. superior laryngeal - THYROARYTENOID
-
Relaxes vocal cords
Thyroid cartilage-Arytenoid cartilage
Inn. recurrent laryngeal - What nerve are the superior laryngeal and recurrent laryngeal nerves branches of?
- C10, vagus
- Name the 2 extrinsic muscles and 4 intrinsic muscles of the larynx.
-
Extrinsic:
- 1. Sternohyoid (pulls larynx posteriorly)
- 2. Thyrohyoid (draws larynx anteriorly)
- 1. Lateral cricoarytenoid (holds vocal cords together)
- 2. Posterior cricoarytenoid (pulls vocal cords apart)
- 3. Cricothyroid (tenses vocal cords)
- 4. Thryoarytenoid (relaxes vocal cords)
-
TRUE/FALSE:
Birds have a larynx. - FALSE
- SYRINX
- Bird equivalent to the larynx, but placed much lower in the body
- What are the 4 processes of digestion?
-
- 1. Transportation
- 2. Physical treatment
- 3. Chemical treatment
- 4. Absorption
- PERISTALSIS
- Rhythmic muscle movement that transports food toward the stomach
- Digested large molecules are absorbed by the ____ _______.
- small intestine
- Digested sugars and amino acids are transported through what tissue pathway?
- Capillaries to veins to the liver
- Describe the processing of fatty acids and glycerols during digestion.
- FAs+Gs cross gut lining and are reconstructed into fat with H2O. The fat enters the lymphatic system, then veins carry it to the liver.
-
Name the 6 visible elements of the gut.
-
-
Name the 4 elements of the gut visible in a cross-section.
-
- ESOPHAGUS
-
"Carry-eat"; tube connecting the buccal cavity to the stomach, distensible, lined with stratified epithelium, associated with smooth and striated muscle
Fishes: short
Amphibians/Reptiles: cilia transport
Mammals: peristalsis transport - What is a unique characteristic of the esophagus in: fishes, amphibians/reptiles, and mammals?
-
- Fishes: short
- Amphibians/Reptiles: transports with cilia
- Mammals: transports with peristalsis
- PIGEON MILK
- Birds: cells sloughed off esophagus used to nourish young
- What is a unique function of the esophagus in birds? What bone supports the esophagus in birds?
- Temporary storage; furcula (wishbone)
- What 2 specialized cells exist in the fundic region of the stomach?
-
- 1. Parietal (creates HCl)
- 2. Chief (creates pepsin, lipase)
- Name the 3 regions of the stomach (anterior-to-posterior).
-
- 1. Cardiac
- 2. Fundic
- 3. Pyloric
- What are the 2 specializations of the stomach in birds?
- Proventriculus, gizzard
-
Name the 4 elements of the ruminant stomach.
-
- What 2 groups of animals have gizzards, besides birds?
- Dinosaurs, crocodilians
- Where does most nutrient absorption take place?
- Small intestine
- What are the 4 functions of digestive enzymes in the small intestine?
-
- 1. Prepare sugars
- 2. Split starches, fats
- 3. Activate trypsin
- 4. Convert proteins to amino acids
- What 3 tissues are stimulated by small intestine hormones?
- Pancreas, gall bladder, other intestinal glands
- Name the 3 regions of the intestines (anterior-to-posterior).
-
- 1. Duodenum ("twelve fingers")
- 2. Jejunum ("empty")
- 3. Ileum
- LOBULE
- Segment of the liver
- What are the 3 general functions of the liver?
- Digestion, metabolism, storage
- BILE
- Decomposition product of proteins and hemoglobin
- What do bile salts help with?
- Bile salts help pancreatic enzymes in splitting/absorbing fats
- What are fats and proteins converted into by the liver?
- Carboyhydrates
- Who discovered insulin? In what year?
- Bunting and Best, 1921.
- Name 2 functions of insulin.
-
- 1. Increases plasma membrane permeability in muscles and adipose tissue.
- 2. Activates enzymes that convert glucose into glycogen and fat.
- GLUCAGON
- Pancreas product that activates enzymes which convert glycogen to glucose, acting on liver cells when glucose stock is low
- What are 2 endocrine products of the dorsal pancreatic lobe?
- Insulin, glucagon
- What are the products of the ventral pancreatic lobe?
- Exocrine "pancreatic juice," 12 enzymes
- Each lobule of the liver has a _____ vein.
- central
- ENDOCRINE
- Gland without a duct (hormone enters bloodstream directly)
- EXOCRINE
- Gland with duct
- The dorsal pancreas sits near the spleen, while the ventral pancreas sits near the _______.
- duodenum
- Who first observed the circulation of blood? In what year?
- William Harvey, 1628
- Who observed blood circulation in frog lungs? In what year?
- Marcello Malpighi, 1661
- What direction does stimulation of the heart proceed in (which way does the blood flow)?
- Anteriorly
- What are the 4 components of the heart? What surrounds them?
-
- 1. Sinus venosus
- 2. Atrium
- 3. Ventricle
- 4. Conus arteriosus
These components are surrounded by a muscular, non-compliant pericardium. - PERICARDIUM
- Non-compliant muscular sac that surrounds the heart
- RIMSDERCENS
-
- Reproductive
- Integumentary
- Muscular
- Skeletal
- Digestive
- Excretory
- Respiratory
- Circulatory
- Endocrine
- Nervous
- Sensory
- A pacemaker rests in the _________ node, sends signals to the _________ node, which in turn stimulates contraction of the ________.
- sinoatrial, atrioventricular, ventricle
- In the mammalian heart, what delivers deoxygenated blood to the right atrium?
- Cranial and caudal vena cavae
- The _____ nerve stimulates the heart, while the _____ nerve slows it down.
- cardiac, vagus
- Who proposed the heart as an endocrine gland? In what year?
- Cantin and Genest, 1986
-
Name the 5 waves of an electrocardiogram. What 4 events does an electrocardiogram depict?
-
- What group of animals have "single-barreled" hearts with 4 cylinders?
- Fishes
-
Name 12 important structures that arise in the development of an embryonic chick heart over hours 25-30 (top-to-bottom: 3 in stage one, two, 4 in stage three, 2 in stage four).
-
-
Name 7 key structures that arise in the development of the embryonic chick heart from hours 30-56.
-
-
Name the 5 structures/layers present in these drawings of blood vessels. What type of vessel is each drawing depicting?
-
-
Label the 17 notable features observed during the development of the pericardial and pleural cavities in a mammalian embryo.
-
- Mammals have a massive partition in the heart called the ____ _____.
- media stinum
- BULBUS CORDIS
- Lies ventral to the primordial ventricle in a developing heart, first appearing after the heat makes its S-shaped form; comprises part of the mature ventricle
- CONUS ARTERIOSUS
- Conical pouch in the upper left angle of the right ventricle of the developing heart; gives rise to the pulmonary artery
- TRUNCUS ARTERIOSUS
- Tube that lies cranial to the bulbus cordis in the developing heart; gives rise to the pulmonary trunk and the ascending aorta
- What body cavity contains the heart?
- Pleuropericardial?
- What body cavity contains the stomach?
- Peritoneal
- What separates the pleuropericardial and the peritoneal cavities?
- Transverse septum
- What are the 2 components of the mammal pericardium?
- Parietal pericardium, parietal pleura
- Is blood a tissue?
- Yes
- BLOOD
- Tissue consisting of cells in a fluid matrix
- What are the 3 types of blood cells?
- Red blood cells, white blood cells and platelets/thrombocytes
- PLASMA
- Blood fluid without cells
- SERUM
- Blood fluid without clotting proteins
- What are 2 embryonic blood-forming tissues?
- Yolk sac, chorion
- What are 5 tissues that form blood at some point during development (besides the yolk sac and chorion)?
-
- 1. Liver
- 2. Intestine
- 3. Kidney
- 4. Spleen
- 5. Thymus
- What 3 structures/networks form blood in adults?
- Red bone marrow, spleen and lymphatic system
- Where does blood form in a vertebra?
- Centrum
- Where does blood form in a rib?
- Center of the bone
- Where does blood form in a femur?
- Ends of the bone
- ERYTHROCYTE
- Red blood cell
- What are the 2 types of white blood cells?
-
- 1. Granulocyte (bacteriophagus)
- 2. Monocyte (phagocytic)
- Embryonic blood vessels form near ____ __ ______ _____ (such as the ____ ____ and the ____).
- centers of metabolic activity, yolk sac, liver
-
TRUE/FALSE:
Blood vessel networks are simpler in adults than in embryos. - TRUE
- Circulatory patterns in embryos reflect their _____, but ________ ______ _________.
- heritage, accomodate special requirements
- What are 3 key events in human circulatory development that happen at birth?
-
- 1. Placental circulation stops
- 2. First breath: ductus arteriosus closes (becomes ligamentum arteriosum)
- 3. Foramen ovale closes
- Fishes have ____-loop circulation and reptiles have ___-loop circulation.
- single, double
- ATRIOVENTRICULAR PLUG
- Raised cushion in the ventricle of a lungfish heart
- TRABECULAE
- Separate deoxygenated/oxygenated blood in the undivided frog ventricle
- PULMOCUTANEOUS ARTERY
- Retrieves oxygenated blood from the lungs and skin in amphibians
- Stem reptiles and amphibians have the same _____ of vessels leaving the heart.
- pattern
- Tetrapods other than stem reptiles and amphibians have ____ ___ ____ artery leaving the heart.
- more than one
- What are the 3 vessels that leave the heart in reptiles?
-
- 1. Right systemic, large (body, forelimbs, carotids)
- 2. Left systemic, small (body)
- 3. Pulmonary trunk
- FORAMEN OF PANIZZA
- Crocodiles: connects left/right aortic arches to enable the reversal of blood flow when diving
- AORTIC ARCH
- The bend between the ascending and descending portions of the aorta
- PARIETAL ARTERY
- Artery supplying blood to the head
- ILIAC ARTERY
- Artery carrying blood to the pelvis and lower limb
- VENAE CAVAE
- Veins that return deoxygenated from the body to the heart
- LYMPHATIC SYSTEM
- Recirculates fluid from tissues back into the cardiovascular system
- LYMPH HEART
- Striated muscle used by some animals to move lymph
- In the lymphatic system, high pressure in ______ promotes ____ ____, while low pressure in _______ promotes ____ ____.
- arteries, fluid loss, veins, fluid return
- In fishes and birds, lymphatic system vessels terminate near the ____, centrally along the ___ ___ or ___ ___ ___, and posteriorly along the ____ ____ ____.
- heart, post cardinal, post vena cava, pelvic region veins
- In birds and mammals, what 5 structures do not tend to carry lymphatic vessels?
-
- 1. central nervous system
- 2. liver
- 3. cartilage
- 4. teeth
- 5. bone
- In birds and mammals, lymphatic vessels are especially prevalent in the gut because of...
- Capillary pressure, molecular size
- CHYLE
- Fatty lymph formed in small intestine
- LACTEALS
- Lymph vessels along mesentaries containing chyle
- CYSTERNA CHYLI
- Dilated sac at the end of the thoracic duct
- HEMOPOIETIC
- Blood-forming
- What are the 2 types of hemopoietic tissues?
- Myloid, lymphoid
- What are the 4 types of T-cells?
-
- 1. Killer (attach to invaders)
- 2. Helper (boost antibody production)
- 3. Suppressor (reduce killer secretions)
- 4. Memory (recognize/remember invaders)
- What are the 3 layers of blood vessels (outside-to-inside)?
-
- 1. T. externa (adventitia/loose connective tissue)
- 2. T. media (longitudinal muscle, circular muscle)
- 3. T. interna (epithelial cells, fibrous sheets, elastic membrane)
- MAXILLARY RETE MIRABILE
- Network of external skull arteries surrounding the optic canal
- CAROTID RETE MIRABILE
- Network of intercranial arteries arising from the carotid artery
- How many capillaries do humans have? What is their diameter?
- 1.2 million, 0.008 mm in diameter
- What are the 2 types of blood pressure?
-
- 1. Hydrostatic (ventricular contraction, vessel-to-tissue)
- 2. Osmotic (unequal protein concentration, tissue-to-vessel)
- What do surface veins do to conserve and dissipate heat?
- Constrict and dilate, respectively
- What are 2 ways whales use blood flow to control their buoyancy?
-
- 1. Shallow/low density water whale blushes to heat spermaceti oil in melon, increasing buoyancy
- 2. Whale more than 600m deep cools blood by expelling heat from nostril, decreasing buoyancy
- ANASTOMOSES
- Network that connects (shunts) arteries, veins, other vessels
- MIRABILE
- Network of anastomoses (vessel connections)
- What are 4 locations of excretion?
- Gills/lungs, sweat gland, rectal gland (shark), salt gland (sea birds/reptiles)
- What is the purpose of excretion?
- To regulate salt/water concentrations in the body
-
Name 5 key structures in the developing tripartite kidney. What are the 3 regions of the kidney called?
-
- ARCHINEPHROS
- Ancestral vertebrate kidney; retained by vertebrate embryos and larval hagfish
- PRONEPHROS
- First kidney form to develop in vertebrate embryos; paired organ; retained by lamprey and hagfish
- OPISTHONEPHROS
- Adult kidney in amphibians and fishes
- MESONEPHROS
- Temporary kidney of reptiles, birds, mammals; Wolffian duct + mesonephric tubules
- METANEPHROS
- Adult kidney primordium for birds, reptiles and mammals; complex network of secreting and collecting ducts
- NEPHROTOME
- Mesoderm that gives rise to the pronephros
- NEPHRIC RIDGE
- First instance of the kidney; protrudes from the dorsal cavity wall
- Describe the 3 generations of amniotic kidney tubules in reptiles/birds and mammals.
-
- 1. Pronephros
R/B: similar to fishes M: rudimentary tubules-- solid cord grows to cloaca and hollows to form duct - 2. Mesonephros
R/B: well-developed in embryo M: highly variable (pigs = huge, primates+rats = hemochorial/non-functional) - 3. Metanephros
R/B: N/A M: arises from archinephric duct as diverticulum near cloaca
- 1. Pronephros
- PROXIMAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE
- Resorps glucose, amino acids, and salts in kidney
- DISTAL CONVOLUTED TUBULE
- Adjusts pH, secretes NH3, H+, K+ and creatine (kidney)
- The structure of the nephron is common to all _______.
- vertebrates
- What 3 functions are reflected in the structure of the nephron?
- Filtration, resorption, secretion
- What are 2 other names for the archinephric duct?
- Wolffian duct, mesonephric duct
- In aminote females the _____ ___ generally persists to carry urine.
- archinephric duct
- How does the oviduct form in sharks?
- Splitting of archinephric duct
- How does the oviduct form in most teleosts?
- Folding
- MULLERIAN DUCT
- Oviduct
- How does the oviduct form in amniotes?
- Arises from kidney peritoneum
- When is the archinephric duct of an amniote female reduced to tiny remnants?
- As the uretur forms
- D^3
-
Sex organ development terms:
- 1. Determination (destined)
- 2. Development (elaboration + movement of tissues)
- 3. Differentiation (gonads,ducts,from indistinct form to sexual form)
- PITUITARY GLAND
- Produces sexual development hormones
- What are 3 products of the adenhypophysis?
-
- 1. Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH)
- 2. Leutenizing hormone (LH)
- 3. Steroids (sex hormones)
- What 3 structures produce estrogens?
- Ovary, testes, adrenal cortex
- If testosterone is introduced during development, what happens to the Mullerian and Wolffian ducts?
- Mullerian disappears, Wolffian stays
- If testosterone is not introduced during development, what happens to the Mullerian and Wolffian ducts?
- Mullerian stays, Wolffian disappears
- What are 4 reactions to female development that occur in the sex cords?
-
- 1. Primary cords degenerate
- 2. Secondary cords develope
- 3. Meiosis at secondary cords produces eggs
- 4. Follicle cells/connective tissue surround eggs
- What are the 4 forms of the uterus?
-
- 1. Duplex (2 distinct uteri)
- 2. Bipartite (some division, occurs in carnivores)
- 3. Bicornuate (no division, but uterus has "horns," occurs in primates)
- 4. Simplex (complete merger with no horns, occurs in humans)
- What are 3 structures that contribute fluid to semen composition?
-
- 1. Seminal vesicle (60% of total, thick, contains fructose, increases sperm viability)
- 2. Prostate gland (
- E^3
-
Sexual intercourse terms:
- 1. Erection (touch receptors + parasympathetic impulses from sacral region -- dilate + stimulate release of lubricant)
- 2. Emission (sympathetic impulses from lumbar vertebrae 1-2 -- peristalsis of testis ducts, epididymis and vas deferens)
- 3. Ejaculation
- What are 3 functions of the cloaca?
- Defecation, urination, copulation
- What 2 organs are intromittant with the cloaca?
- Claspers (sharks), gonopodium (teleosts)
- What 4 organs are accessories to the cloaca?
-
- 1. Corpus cavernosum
- 2. Glans penis
- 3. Ductus deferens
- 4. Bladder
-
Name the 6 regions of a reptile cloaca.
-
- What is the Latin word for "sewer?"
- cloaca
- YOLK
- Substance composed of proteins, fats and phosphates important to the growth of embryos; synthesized by the liver
- ISOLECITHAL
- Small, holoblastic egg with uniform yolk distribution
- TELOLECITHAL
- Medium-sized holoblastic egg with unequal yolk distribution
- MICROLECITHAL
- Extremely small egg relative to body size (human, mouse, deer, amphioxus)
- How big is a mouse egg?
- 150 micrometers
- MESOLECITHAL
- Medium-size egg heavily concentrated on the end with the "animal pole" (lamprey, lungfish, frogs)
- MACROLECITHAL
- Egg with a large yolk (turtle, dinosaur, chicken)
- What is one presumed reason behind why birds have a vestigial right ovary?
- Flight constraint
- What are some characteristics of amphioxus reproduction?
- Separate sexes, microlecithal eggs released from atrium, external fertilization, development within egg case
-
Visualize the development of an amphioxus (esp. planes of division) from 0.5 hours to 2.5 hours.
-
-
Name the 5 germinal layers and visualize their movement over the development period between 6 hours and 13 hours.
-
- INVOLUTION
- Flowing in/over internal surface (as in germinal layer development)
- EPIBOLY
- Flowing over external surface (as in germinal layer development)
- CONVERGENCE
- Movement toward midline (as in germinal layer development)
- INVAGINATION
- Pushing in (as in germinal layer development)
- In a neurala somites develop from ____ to ____.
- front, rear
- ARCHENTERON
- Primordium of the gut; forms from the gastrocoel
- How does a chick begin developing over the yolk?
- Cytoplasm with a cleavage furrow forms a blastodisc. The blastodisc spreads over the surface of the yolk (epiboly) then rises up, remaining attached at either end via fibrous periblasts.
- ANGLE OF INCIDENCE
- Angle at which a bird wing attaches to the body
- MAGNUS EFFECT
- When an object is thrown over an air flow moving in the opposite direction, its speed is closest near (but not in) the air flow
- As velocity increases, induced drag ____ and parasite drag ____.
- decreases, increases
- 1 knot = ? km/hr
- 1 knot = 1.852 km/hr
- GLIDE POLAR
- Sinking speed required to achieve a particular horizontal speed
- GLIDE POLAR (equation)
- Z = (C[drag]/C[lift]) X horizontal speed
- WING LOADING (equation)
- mass/wing area
- Goose wing load is _x duck wing load.
- 2
- Velocity as Determined by Wing Loading (equation)
- square root (mass/wing area)
- ALLOMETRY
- Study of shape and size
- SURFACE AREA (equation)
- 4*pie*r^2
- VOLUME (equation)
- 4/3*pie*r^2
- Does pterosaur wing loading scale with size?
- No.
- Does bird wing loading scale with size?
- Yes.
- What are the characteristics that contribute to the paleontological definition of a mammal?
- Jaw, ossicles (3), pelvis, growth, homeothermic, hair, live birth
- When did mammals first appear?
- Upper Triassic
- HADROCODIUM WUI
- Early mammal (195mya/Early Jurassic)
- CASTOROCAUDA LUTRASIMILIS
- Early mammal (164mya)
- EOMAIA SCANSORIA
- "Dawn mother who climbs"; early mammal with wrist shape ideal for arboreal life, 10cm (125mya)
- KRYORYCTES CADBURY
- Early mammal, size of large cat, toothless, covered in quills (106mya)
- PTILODUS MONTANUS
- Early mammal, once widespread/relict (54-66mya)
- Name 5 notable early mammals (early-to-late).
-
- 1. Hadrocodium wui (195 mya)
- 2. Castorocauda lutrasimilis (164)
- 3. Eomaia scansoria (125)
- 4. Kryoryctes cadburyi (106)
- 5. Ptilodus montanus (54-66)
- PROTOTHERIA
- Subclass containing order Monotremata (platypus, spiny anteaters)
- MONOTREMATA
- Platypus and spiny anteaters
- ORNITHORHYNCHUS
- Platypus
- TACHYGLOSSUS
- Spiny anteaters
- HOLOTHERIA
- Subclass containing order Marsupialia (kangaroo) and Infraclass Eutheria (humans)
- MARSUPIALIA
- kangaroo
- EUTHERIA
- humans (infraclass)
- Where did placentals originate and migrate to?
- Europe to Africa/North America
- Where did marsupials originate and migrate to?
- North America to South America to Antarctica to Australia, and North America to Europe/North Africa
-
Name the 3 germinal layers visible in a whole mount of a 13-hour chordate.
-
- What did early tetrapods have that suggests they were still tied to an aquatic lifestyle?
- Lateral line
-
Urogenital Homology - Gonad:
INDIFFERENT: secondary cords
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology - Gonad:
INDIFFERENT: secondary cords
FEMALE: ovarian follicles
MALE: degenerates -
Urogenital Homology - Gonad:
INDIFFERENT: primary cords
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology - Gonad:
INDIFFERENT: primary cords
FEMALE: degenerates
MALE: seminiferous/rete tubules -
Urogenital Homology - Gonad:
INDIFFERENT: primordial germ cells
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology - Gonad:
INDIFFERENT: primordial germ cells
FEMALE: ova
MALE: spermatozoa -
Urogenital Homology - Mesonephric Tubules:
INDIFFERENT: anterior group
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology - Mesonephric Tubules:
INDIFFERENT: anterior group
FEMALE: degenerate to rudiments
MALE: vasa efferentia -
Urogenital Homology - Mesonephric Tubules:
INDIFFERENT: posterior group
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology - Mesonephric Tubules:
INDIFFERENT: posterior group
FEMALE: degenerate to rudiments
MALE: degenerate to rudiments -
Urogenital Homology:
INDIFFERENT: Wolffian duct
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology:
INDIFFERENT: Wolffian duct
FEMALE: degenerates
MALE: vas deferens -
Urogenital Homology - Urogenital Sinus:
INDIFFERENT: vesicourethral division
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology - Urogenital Sinus:
INDIFFERENT: vesicourethral division
FEMALE: bladder, urethra
MALE: bladder, upper urethra -
Urogenital Homology - Urogenital Sinus:
INDIFFERENT: definitive division
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology - Urogenital Sinus:
INDIFFERENT: definitive division
FEMALE: vestibule
MALE: lower urethra -
Urogenital Homology:
INDIFFERENT: genital tubercle
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology:
INDIFFERENT: genital tubercle
FEMALE: clitoris
MALE: penis -
Urogenital Homology:
INDIFFERENT: urethral folds
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology:
INDIFFERENT: urethral folds
FEMALE: labia minora
MALE: penis -
Urogenital Homology:
INDIFFERENT: labioscrotal folds
FEMALE:
MALE: -
Urogenital Homology:
INDIFFERENT: labioscrotal folds
FEMALE: labia majora
MALE: scrotum - What is the fate of the primary sex cords in a male?
- Primary sex cords become medial testes
- RETE TESTIS
- Tube that conducts sperm from testes; formed from kidney tubules
- TUNICA ALBUGINEA
- Protective tissue that surrounds testes
- VAGINAL VESTIBULE
- Equivalent to the embryonic urogenital sinus
- FALLOPIAN TUBE
- Oviduct
- ROUND LIGAMENT
- Suspends uterus; homolog to gubernaculum in the male
- GUBERNACULUM
- Suspends testes; homolog to the round ligament in the female
- What 3 urogenital structures are NOT formed from mesodermal tissue?
- Urogenital sinus, bladder and cloaca
- LINGUAL HERNIA
- Tear in the weak lining between the visceral cavity and the scrotum
- SEMINALPLASMIN
- Component of ejaculate containing antibiotics, clotting enzymes and prostaglandins
- VENT
- Caudal cloaca opening (opening to environment)
- Where do ganglia and sensory nerves arise from?
- Neural crest
- Where do motor cells arise from?
- Spinal cord
- PERIPHERAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
- Spinal and cranial nerves
- AUTONOMIC NERVOUS SYSTEM
- Visceral motor components of the peripheral nervous system
- CENTRAL NERVOUS SYSTEM
- Brain and spinal cord
- Inside the central nervous system, a bundle of axons is called a ____ and a group of nerve cell bodies is called a ____.
- tract, nucleus
- SPONGIOBLAST
- Gives rise to neuroglia and ependymal cells
- NEUROBLAST
- Gives rise to neurons
- In what 3 ways are neurons classified?
-
- 1. # of processes
- 2. Pattern of dendrites
- 3. Function
-
Name 14 developments that occur during the embryonic growth of a male. -
-
Name 12 developments that occur during the embryonic growth of a female.
-
-
Visualize the differentiation of the indifferent mammal cloaca into the male sexual form. What structures are involved?
-
-
Visualize the differentiation of the indifferent mammal cloaca into the female sexual form. What structures are involved?
-
- Where do ganglia arise from?
- Neural crest
- Where do sensory nerves arise from?
- Neural crest
- Outside the CNS, what is a bundle of axons called?
- Nerve
- Outside the CNS, what is a group of nerve cell bodies called?
- Ganglion
- Inside the CNS, what is a bundle of axons called?
- Tract
- Inside the CNS, what is a group of nerve cell bodies called?
- Nucleus
- WHITE MATTER
- Tract; bundle of axons in the CNS
- GRAY MATTER
- Nucleus; group of nerve cell bodies in the CNS
- SPONGIOBLASTS
- Primordial nerve cells that give rise to neuroglia and ependymal cells
- NEUROBLASTS
- Primordial nerve cells that give rise to neurons
- What are the 3 characteristics by which neurons are classified?
-
- 1. Number of processes
- 2. Pattern of dendrites
- 3. Function
- Name the 5 primary senses, and 4 other senses that occur in animals.
-
PRIMARY: sight, sound, hearing, touch, taste
SECONDARY: infrared, lateral line, electric, magnetic - Parasympathetic impulses tend to ______ muscle action.
- slow down
- Sympathetic impulses tend to ______ muscle action.
- accelerate
- What are 3 shapes (based on process number) that nerve cells can take? What is 1 dendritic pattern used for classification? What are 2 function types for nerve cells?
-
SHAPES: bipolar, unipolar, multipolar
PATTERN: idiodendritic
FUNCTION: sensory, motor - Sensory nerves are ______, while motor nerves are ________.
- afferent, efferent
-
TRUE/FALSE:
Some neurons can have projections that extend 1+ meters. - True
- SYNAPSE
- Neurotransmitter released from synaptic vesicles
- Synapses were theorized by ____ in ____, and confirmed to exist in ____.
- Sherrington, 1890, 1954
- NEUROGLIA
- Support/Nourish/Insulate nerve cells
- What are the 5 types of neuroglia?
-
- 1. Ependymal
- 2. Astrocyte
- 3. Microglial
- 4. Oligodendroglia
- 5. Schwann cells
- EPNDYMAL
- Neuroglial cell in spinal lumen, uses cilia to propel cerebral spinal fluid; arises from neural tube
- ASTROCYTE
- Regulates ion balance and nutrition; arises from neural tube
- MICROGLIAL
- Neuroglial brain macrophages, phagocytic; arises from mesoderm
- OLIGODENDROGLIA
- Myelinate neuroglial cells within CNS that form a fatty protective shield; arises from neural tube
- SCHWANN CELLS
- Myelinate neuroglia outside CNS, surround axons and form nodes of Ranvier; arises from neural tube and neural crest
- NODES OF RANVIER
- Accelerate ATP conduction
- SS
- Somatic Sensory
- VS
- Visceral Sensory
- VM
- Visceral Motor
- SM
- Somatic Motor
- From the cranial to caudal ends of the spinal cord, what is the general organization of nerves?
-
- 1. Somatic sensory
- 2. Visceral sensory
- 3. Visceral motor
- 4. Somatic motor
- SPINAL NERVE
- Ancestral nerve (modern lampreys also carry it) with separate dorsal and ventral roots
- In spinal nerves, the dorsal root carries ___, ___ and __ nerves, while the ventral root carries ___ __ _____. The dorsal and ventral roots arise _____ ____ ____.
-
Dorsal: SS, VS, VM
Ventral: SM to myotomes
alternately along CNS (dorsal trails ventral) - What are two characteristics that differentiate a modern spinal nerve from an ancestral one?
-
- 1. Dorsal and ventral roots join together
- 2. Sympathetic chain of ganglia parallel spinal cord
- What does the dorsal root carry in fishes/amphibians? In amniotes?
-
Fishes/Amphibians: SS, VS, VM
Amniotes: SS, VS - What does the ventral root carry in fishes/amphibians? In amniotes?
-
Fishes/Amphibians: VM, SM
Amniotes: VM, SM - BRACHIAL PLEXUS
- Nerves C5-T1; innervates upper limb
- LUMBOSACRAL PLEXUS
- Innervates lower limb
- Visceral motor fibers are part of the _____ nervous system.
- autonomic
- Thoracolumbar nerves generate _____ impulses.
- sympathetic
- Craniosacral nerves generate ____ impulses.
- parasympathetic
- ENTERIC AUTONOMIC SYSTEM
- Other spinal/cranial nerves modify its effects
- What are the 11th and 12th cranial nerves? What special characteristic do they have?
- Spinal accessory, hypoglossal; only occur in amniotes
- What are the 3 groups of cranial nerves?
- Ventral root, head sensory, dorsal root
- What cranial nerves compose the ventral root?
-
- oculomotor (3)
- trochlear (4)
- abducens (6)
- hypoglossal (12) [amniotes only]
- What cranial nerves compose the head sensory nerves?
-
- olfactory (1)
- optic (2)
- acoustic (8)
- What cranial nerves compose the dorsal root?
-
- trigeminal (5)
- facial (7)
- glossopharyngeal (9)
- vagus (10)
- spinal accessory (11) [amniotes only]
- What is the special sensory (SS) nerve in the head sensory nerve group?
- Nervus terminalis
- TERMINAL NERVE
- Nervus terminalis
- NERVUS TERMINALIS
-
Terminal nerve; arises from olfactory/neurogenic placode; provides olfaction and vision impulses; does not occur in birds
- 1878 shark
- 1894 lungfish
- 1913 rabbit/human
- Who first described the cranial nerves? In what year?
- Galen, 129-210 CE
- CRIBIFORM PLATE
- Extension of the ethmoid bone that supports the olfactory bulb, perforated to allow passage of olfactory nerves
- VOMERONASAL NERVE
- Embryonic nerve that disappears from the human fetus before birth, passes through the cribiform plate
- JACOBSEN ORGAN
- Vomeronasal organ discovered in 1813, auxiliary olfactory organ in many animals; arises from the nasal placode
- OPTIC NERVE
- CN2, sensory tract of the brain; arises from the prosencephalon
- INDUCTION
- Interaction of 2 tissues (as in the optic vesicle and optic placode)
- What is the result of induction of the optic vesicle and optic placode?
- Differentiation of the lens and a 2x layered optic cup
- ACOUSTIC NERVE
- CN8, auditory, octaval nerve
- What are the 2 components of the acoustic nerve? What structures are associated with them?
- Vestibular and cochlear nerves, with ganglia derived from neurogenic placodes
- TRIGEMINAL NERVE
- CN5, innervates the jaw region with 3 branches
- What 3 muscles are innervated by the visceral motor component of the trigeminal nerve?
- Masster, temporalis and pterygoids
- FACIAL NERVE
- CN7, loops around shark spiracle and is associated with the hyoid arch, has geniculate (bent) ganglion and SS, VS and VM components
- What are the 3 nerve types associated with the facial nerve?
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- 1. SS (pinna)
- 2. VS (taste buds)
- 3. VM (facial/digastric/stapedius/salivary/lacrimal)
- GLOSSOPHARYNGEAL NERVE
- CN9, forks around 1st gill slit, has petrosal (rock-like) ganglion and VS and VM components
- What 2 nerve types are associated with the glossopharyngeal nerve?
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- 1. VS (taste buds/pharynx lining)
- 2. VM (throat/larynx/salivary)
- VAGUS NERVE
- CN10, branchial nerves that unite beyond CN9 (glossopharyngeal), has SS, VS, and VS/VM components
- What 4 nerve types are associated with the vagus nerve?
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- 1. SS - jugular ganglion (skin)
- 2. VS - Nodose ganglion (taste buds/soft palate)
- 3. VS/VM (pharynx/larynx/heart/lungs/gut)
- SPINAL ACCESSORY NERVE
- CN11, visceral motor fibers of CN10 (vagus), innervates trapezius, sternomastoid and cleidomastoid
- What 3 muscles are innervated by the spinal accessory nerve?
- Trapezius, sternomastoid and cleidomastoid
- HYPOGLOSSAL NERVE
- CN12, ventral nerve group that innervates the tongue (SM)
- What SM nerve innervates the tongue? What VS nerves innervate the tongue?
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SM: 12
VS: 5, 7 and 9 - Spinal reflexes provide _____/____ responses (_____ neurons in gray matter are important).
- somatic/visceral, association
- What is an example of a spinal reflex?
- Tapping the knee causes it to jerk
- ASCENDING
- Signals moving toward brain
- DESCENDING
- Signals moving away from brain
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What are the 4 components of the trigeminal nerve?
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How is the grey matter of this thoracic vertebra (cross-section) organized? What are the 5 visible nerve components outside the grey matter?
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- LATERAL FUNICULUS
- "Little column," most lateral bundle of the dorsal nerve root
- What 2 blood vessels supply the brain?
- Internal cartoid artery and vertebral artery
- How many synapses do humans have?
- 700 trillion (7 x 10^4)
- The human brain occupies __% of our body mass, and consumes __% of our O2 intake.
- 2%, 20%
- CIRCLE OF WILLIS
- Circle of arteries that supply blood to the brain
- What man changed personalities after having a railroad spike driven through his head?
- Phineas P. Gage
- When were skull fractures first written about?
- 17th century BCE
- Who received the Nobel prize for inventing a method of staining nerve cells? In what year?
- Camillo Golgi and Santiago Cajal, 1906
- 2,3,5
- Pattern of brain development (2 segments, then 3, then 5)
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Name the segments that arise in the 2,3,5 pattern of brain development. What vesicle arises?
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- BRAINSTEM
- Mesencephalon, metencephalon, and myelencephalon (no cerebellum or colliculi)
- VENTRICULAR SYSTEM
- Set of structures containing the cerebrospinal fluid in the brain, continuous with the central canal of the spinal cord
- What are the 4 ventricles of the ventricular system?
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- 1. Left lateral (telencephalon)
- 2. Right lateral (telencephalon)
- 3. Third (diencephalon)
- 4. Fourth (medulla oblongata)
- What are the 4 foramina connecting the ventricular system?
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- 1. Foramen of Monroe (lateral-third)
- 2. Aquaduct of Sylvius (third-fourth)
- 3. Median aperture (fourth-subarachnoid)
- 4. Lateral aperture (fourth-cistern of cerebral vein)
- What is characteristic of CNS-surrounding meninges in fishes?
- Single membrane
- What is characteristic of CNS-surrounding meninges in amphibians/reptiles/birds?
- Dura mater (tough mother) and secondary meninx
- What is characteristic of CNS-surrounding meninges in mammals?
- "Pad" pia, arachnoid and dura mater
- CEREBROSPINAL FLUID
- Fluid produced by choroid plexuses, has nutritional and blood/brain barrier functions
- In general what 4 structures does cerebrospinal fluid flow through?
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- 1. Choroid plexuses
- 2. Pore in 4th ventricle
- 3. Subarachnoid spaces
- 4. Arteries
- MYLENCEPHALON
- B1; most posterior segment of the brain containing most of the medulla oblongata and the anterior of the 1st spinal nerve
- What cranial nerves emerge from the mylencephalon (B1)?
- CN6 and onward
- What lies on the roof of the mylencephalon (B1)?
- Choroid plexus
- What is special about the catfish mylencephalon (B1)?
- Conspicuous facial/vagal lobes
- What is special about the rayfin/urodele myencephalon (B1)?
- Giant cells of Mauthner (escape response)
- MEDULLA OBLONGATA
- "Switchboard" for signals to/from head, pharynx and viscera, contains nuclei associated with hearing, respiratory rhythm, salivary glands and taste
- METENCEPHALON
- B2; anterior portion of the medulla oblongata and dorsal cerebellum
- What lies ventral to the medulla oblongata? What cranial nerve emerges there?
- Pons, trigeminal (CN5)
- The circuits of the _____ pass through the metencephalon.
- cerebellum
- CEREBELLUM
- Integrates balance, proprioceptive input, positional equilibrium and motor memory
- What do mammals have that allows them to control distal appendage muscles?
- Cerebellar hemispheres
- MESENCEPHALON
- B3; roof above the cerebral aqueduct, optic lobes and the 4 eminences of the corpora quadrigemina
- TECTUM
- Roof above the cerebral aqueduct that receives sensory data from olfactory organs (via diencephalon) and acousticolateral organs (via cerebellum), sends signals to appropriate motor columns
- What two components of the brain send olfactory and acousticolateral data to the tectum?
- Diencephalon and cerebellum, respectively
- CORPORA QUADRIGEMINA
- Four eminences in the mammal mesencephalon
- CEREBRAL PEDUNCLES
- Ventral structures of the corpora quadrigemina that relay signals between the cerebrum, cerebellum and medulla oblongata
- What 2 structures are located in the dorsal corpora quadrigemina?
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- 1. Superior colliculi (vision reflex, ex. look at distant light)
- 2. Inferior colliculi (hearing reflex, ex. duck when twig cracks)
- DIENCEPHALON
- B4; major relay center containing the parietal/pineal bodies, optic paraphysis and thalamus "couch"
- THALAMUS
- Contributor to the limbic system and papes circuit
- The reticular formation projects into the cerebrum through the _____.
- thalamus
- TELENCEPHALON
- B5; most anterior segment of the brain, olfactory center
- CORPUS CALLOSUM
- Structure that coordinates the two hemispheres of the brain, larger in females
- NEOPALLIUM
- Outer layer of the cerebral hemispheres
- PALLIUM
- "Cloak"; evolutionary precedent of the cerebrum
- ARCHIPALLIUM
- Oldest region of the evolutionary precedent to the cerebrum
- PALEOPALLIUM
- Region within the telencephalon first appearing in amphibians, corresponds with human olfactory cortices
- CORPUS STRIATUM
- Pair of nucleate masses which form the basal ganglia in the telencephalon
- Vertebrates have always had a ____ pallium and ____ subpallium.
- dorsal, ventral
- SUBPALLIUM
- Basal nuclei, corpus striatum
- HIPPOCAMPUS
- Medial pallium, archipallium
- SOMATOSENSORY IMPULSE
- Cutaneous impulse (tacticle, thermal, pain)
- SPINOTHALMIC TRACT
- Sensory pathway in the spinal cord that transmits somatosensory impulses to the thalamus
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Name the 4 components of the telencephalon visible in cross-section.
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Visualize the flow of cerebrospinal fluid through the brain.
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Identify 4 cerebral meninges. What 3 layers lie above the meninges?
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Name the 7 structures that arise and change in amniote cerebellar evolution.
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- TENTORUM
- Extension of the dura mater that separates the cerebellum from the occipital lobes
- DENDRITE
- Branched neuron projection that conducts electrochemical stimuli
- AXON
- Nerve cell projection that conducts electrochemical stimuli away from the nerve cell body
- MYELIN
- Electricity-insulating material that forms a sheath around nerve cell axons
- FORAMEN OVALE
- Fetal opening between the atria of the heart that allows blood to bypass nonfunctional lungs, becomes fossa ovalis after first breath
- DUCTUS VENOSUS
- Embryonic circulatory structure that allows blood to bypass the liver, becomes ligamentum venosum at birth
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View heart circulation:
http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/human_heart.html - Good job, you are amazing!