Bones, Developmental Genetics, and Hox Genes Flashcards

1
Q

trabecular

A

spongy and porus material at proximal and distal ends of long bones

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2
Q

cortical

A

hard solid osseous tissue in cortex of bone

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3
Q

periosteum

A

layer of connective tissue, filtered by blood vessels and nutrient arteries

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4
Q

sharpey’s fibers

A

connect periosteum tissue to penerate bones all around

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5
Q

endosteum

A

inner surface of bony wall between bone and bone marrow

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6
Q

nutrient artery and foreman

A

artery enters through foreman to connect/provide nutrient for bone

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7
Q

osteon

A

cylindrical vascular tunnels that make up cortical bone

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8
Q

haversian canal

A

blood vessels and nerve fibers that for a narrow series of tubes

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9
Q

Volkman’s canals

A

transmit blood vessels from periosterum into bone to communicate with haversian canals

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10
Q

sonic hedgehog

A

produces SHH protein which aids in instructing morphology

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11
Q

zone of polarizing activity (ZPA)

A

where sonic hedgehog is produced

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12
Q

rhombomeres

A

compartments in hine of brain that express different patterns of HOX genes

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13
Q

lacunae

A

small spindle spaces that contain ostecyte left behind by osteoblasts in process of remodeling

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14
Q

physis

A

principle of growth and change in nature

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15
Q

homeosis

A

transformation of one structure of the body into the homologous structure of another body segment

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16
Q

stylopod

A

humerus and femur bones

17
Q

zeugopod

A

ulna, radius, fibula, and tibula bones

18
Q

autopod

A

wrist, fingers, ankles, and toes bones

19
Q

apical ectodermal ridge

A

signaler for the positional info produced in the progress zone

20
Q

chondroblast

A

cell that play an important role in forming cartilage, located in perichondrium

21
Q

distinguish primary and secondary osteons

A

while osteons are where cortical bone remodeling occurs, primary osteons generates during appositional bone growth and secondary osteons generate during internal bone remodeling (AKA Haversian systems)

22
Q

role of calcitonin and parathyroid hormone in calcium metabolism

A

calcium homeostasis occurs constantly to regulate levels of calcium in bones;
calcitonin makes calcium salt deposit in bone to increase blood calcium levels while parathyroid hormon degrades bonematrix w/ help of osteoclasts to decrease blood calcium levels

23
Q

distguish the “taxonomy of objects” from their “mechanisms of origin”

A
24
Q

distinguish trabecular and cortical bone mechanical properties and structure

A

trabaecular bone is honeycomb-like network with a large remodeling area and high turnover rate in interior part of bone (relatively porous, spongy)
cortical bone is dense and low-porosity with less active tissue, makes up 80% of skeleton

25
Q

briefly desribe how trabeculae form- what maintains them?

A

removal of mineralized bone by osteoclasts followed by formation of bone matrix through osteoblasts that become mineralized

26
Q

what is the signficance of cortical versus trabecular bone in the human femoral neck?

A

spongy bone in the femoral neck in humans allows for pressure to occur and helps us determine bipedalism when looking at the ofssil record, cortical bone gives the bone strength

27
Q

what is the “tennis player problem” in the “wolffian developmental paradigm”?

A

Tennis players have stronger humerus on serving hand which makes many believe that Wolff’s law reigns true and that bone structure is maintain when there is a repeated mechnical stress on said bone, in reality Wolff’s law is not so accurate because bone structure is determined both mechnically and genomically

28
Q

distinguish transcription factors from signaling molecules

A

transcription factors: proteins that bind to regulatory regions of genes and influence their transcription
signaling molecules: transmit info between cells

29
Q

briefly describe the history of the HOX complexes in mammals

A

two duplication events in early veretebrate evolution resulted in 4 clusters seen in mammals and birds

30
Q

what is signficance of HOXc6 in vertebrate columns

A

position of hoxc6 determines position of limb neck/forelimb is

31
Q

BMPs and FGFs roles

A

BMPs: bone morphogenetic proteins; help in formatting and maintaining various organs including bone, cartilage, muscle, kidney, and blood vessels

FGFs: fibroblast growth factors; signal through FGF receptors to regulate cellular proliferation, survival, migration, and differentiation

32
Q

growth zone

A

1st zone of bone growth, cartilage cells undergo mitosis

33
Q

calcification zone

A

3rd zone of bone growth, matrix becomes calcified, cartilage cells die, and matrix begins to deteriorate

34
Q

hypertrophic zone

A

2nd zone of bone growth, older cartilage cells enlarge

35
Q

ossification zone

A

4th zone of bone growth, new bon formation occurs