Animal tissues, organs, and organ systems Flashcards

1
Q

What is a cell?

A

Basic structural and functional unit of a living organism

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2
Q

What is a tissue?

A

Group of cells with similar structures, working together to perform a shared function

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3
Q

What is an organ?

A

Structure made up of a group of tissues, working together to perform specific functions

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4
Q

What is an organ system?

A

Group of organs with related functions, working together to perform body functions

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5
Q

What are the different molecules?

A

Carbohydrates, proteins, lipids

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6
Q

Why cant the molecules pass through the absorbing surface of the gut wall?

A

Too large

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7
Q

What is amylase?

A

An enzyme that can break down starch into simple sugars

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8
Q

What is bile?

A

A substance produced in the liver. It emulsifies fats to prepare them for digestion

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9
Q

What is carbohydrase?

A

Enzyme that breaks down carbohydrates

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10
Q

What is the definition of denatured?

A

To change the shape of an enzyme’s active site

Enzyme no longer works

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11
Q

What is digestion?

A

The breakdown of large insoluble food molecules to smaller soluble ones

They are then able to be absorbed into the blood

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12
Q

What does emulsify mean?

A

To mix water with fats and oils to produce a cloudy mixture called an emulsion

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13
Q

What is an enzyme?

A

A protein which catalyses or speeds up a chemical reaction

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14
Q

What is the function of the gaul bladder?

A

Stores bile before releasing it into the duodenum

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15
Q

What is glucose?

A

A simple sugar used by cells for respiration

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16
Q

What is the function of the liver?

A

processing substances absorbed by the digestive system and a role in the storage of the body’s carbohydrate

Produces bile

17
Q

What is the pancreas?

A

produces digestive enzymes

18
Q

What organs make up the digestive system?

A

Mouth (physical breakdown + chewing) (salivary glands)
Oesophagus
stomach (contracts muscular walls + produces pepsin + HCL)
Small intestine (food absorbed into bloodstream)
Pancreas (produces lots of enzymes)
Large intestine (absorbs excess water)
Liver (produces bile)
Gaul bladder (stores bile)

19
Q

Function of the mouth?

A

Begins the digestion of carbohydrates

20
Q

What is the function of the stomach?

A

Begins the digestion of protein; small molecules such as alcohol absorbed

21
Q

What is the function of the small intestine? (Duodenum)

A

Continues the digestion of carbohydrate and protein; begins the digestion of lipids

22
Q

What is the function of the small intestine?

Ileum

A

Completes the digestion of carbohydrates and proteins into single sugars and amino acids;

absorption of single sugars, amino acids and fatty acids and glycerol

23
Q

What is the function of the large intestine?

A

Absorption of water; egestion of undigested food

24
Q

What is the function of digestive enzymes?

A

used to break down food in the gut into small, soluble molecules that can be absorbed through the gut wall

25
Q

How is the small intestine adapted?

A

intestine wall is folded, and contains villi

26
Q

What is the product of carbohydrates?

A

Simple sugars

27
Q

What is the product of starch?

A

Glucose

28
Q

What does the liver excrete?

A

Bile

29
Q

Where is bile stored?

A

Gaull bladder

30
Q

What is surface area to volume ratio?

A

surface area, defines how quickly they can absorb substances

size of their volume defines how much of these substances they need

31
Q

How is exchange surfaces in the leaf adapted?

A

Flattered structure

32
Q

How is exchange surfaces in the small intestine adapted?

A

Villi - network of blood capillaries in each villus in the small intestine

33
Q

How is the villi adapted?

A

Finger-like projections in the small intestine that provide a large surface area for the absorption of food

Very good blood supply

Single layer of surface cells

34
Q

How is exchange surfaces in the lungs adapted?

A

the network of blood capillaries that surrounds each alveolus in the lungs

35
Q

What is the lock and key model theory?

A

Substrate had to fit perfectly

36
Q

How are villi adapted?

A
  • Micro villi which increases surface area
  • So more molecules can be absorbed into the bloosstream
  • Thin walls