Animal Responses Flashcards

1
Q

name the two main divisions of the nervous system

A

central nervous system-brain and spinal cord
peripheral nervous system-all neurones not in CNS

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2
Q

name the two main divisions of the peripheral nervous system

A

somatic-conscious control
autonomic-not conscious control

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3
Q

name the two main divisions of the autonomic nervous system

A

sympathetic-stimulates effectors
parasympathetic-inhibits effectors
act antagonistically to regulate response of effectors

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4
Q

describe structure of human brain

A

parietal lobe-top of brain
movement and orientation
memory and recognition

occipital lobe-back of the brain
visual cortex-processes signal from eye

temporal lobe-beneath temples
processes auditory signals

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5
Q

what is the function of the cerebellum

A

controls execution of movement
cognition

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6
Q

what is the function of the medulla

A

autonomous functions
breathing, heart rate

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7
Q

what is the function of the cerebrum

A

upper part of the brain
organised into lobes that control voluntary actions

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8
Q

what is the function of hypothalamus

A

thermo and osmoregulation

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9
Q

outline what happens in a simple reflex arc

A
  1. receptor detects stimulus
  2. sensory neuron
  3. relay neurone in CNS coordinates response
  4. motor neuron
  5. response by effector
    provides rapid response to stimuli
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10
Q

describe the knee jerk reflex

A

tapping patellar tendon stimulates stretch mediated receptors
impulse travels from sensory to motor neurone
Quadriceps contract -inhibits antagonistic hamstring contraction

diagnostic-multiple kicks= cerebellar disease
lack of reflex=nervous problem

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11
Q

what is the fight or flight response

A

if brain perceives threat stimulates stress response involving adrenaline triggers physiological response

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12
Q

use the secondary messenger model to explain how adrenaline works

A

adrenaline first messenger-hormone receptor complex forms
conformational change to receptor activates G-protein
activates adenylate cyclase-converts ATP to cAMP
cAMP second messenger-activates protein kinase A pathway
results in glycogenolysis

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13
Q

describe the three types of muscle tissue

A

striated skeletal muscle- multi-nucleated cells
antagonistic muscle pairs allow movement
smooth involuntary muscle-enables walls of blood vessels and intestines to contract
cardiac muscle-branched unnucleated cells
Myogenic contraction-heartbeat

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14
Q

describe the structure of skeletal muscles

A

muscle cells fused together to form bundles of parallel muscle fibres
each bindle surrounded by endomycium- loose connective tissue with many capillaries

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15
Q

describe the microscopic structure of skeletal muscles

A

myofibrils:site of contraction
sarcoplasm:shared nuclei and cytoplasm with lots of mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum
sarcolemma:folds inwards towards sarcoplasm to form transverse tubules

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16
Q

describe the structure of a myofibril

A

z line: boundary between sarcomeres
i band:only actin (appears light under microscope)
a band: overlap of actin and myosin (appears dark under microscope)
h zone: only myosin

17
Q

how is muscle contraction stimulated

A

neuromuscular junction: action potential causes voltage gated calcium channels to open
vesicles move and fuse with presynaptic membrane
exocytosis of acetylcholine diffuses across synaptic cleft
binds to receptors on sodium channel proteins on skeletal muscle cell membrane
influx of sodium=depolarisation

18
Q

explain the role of calcium ions in muscle contraction

A

action potential moves through T tubules in sarcoplasm-causes calcium channels in sarcoplasmic reticulum to open
calcium binds to troponin causing conformational change in tropomyosin
exposes binding sites on actin filaments so actinmyosin bridges form

19
Q

outline the sliding filament model

A

myosin head with ADP forms cross bridge with actin
power stroke: myosin head changes shape and loses ADP pulling actin over myosin
ATP attaches to myosin head causing it to detach from actin
ATPase hydrolyses ATP so myosin head can return to original position
myosin head reattaches to actin further along filament

19
Q

how does sliding filament action cause a myofibril to shorten

A

myosin heads flex in opposite directions-actin filaments pulled towards each other
distance between adjacent sarcomere z lines shortens

20
Q

explain the role of creatine phosphate in muscle contraction

A

phosphorylates ADP directly to ATP when oxygen is limited

21
Q

state the name and location of the 2 nodes involved in heart contraction

A

sinoatrial node:within the wall of the right atrium
atrioventricular node: near lower end of right atrium in the wall that separates two atria

22
Q

name the receptors involved in changing heart rate and state their location

A

baroreceptors detect change in blood pressure
found in carotid body
chemoreceptors detect change in pH found in carotid and aortic body

23
Q

how does the body respond to an increase in blood pressure

A

baroreceptors send impulses to cardioinhibitory centre in medulla
more impulses to SAN down vagus nerve via parasympathetic nervous system
stimulates release of acetyl choline, decreasing blood pressure

24
Q

how does the body respond to a decrease in blood pressure

A

baroreceptors send more impulses to cardioacceleratory centre in medulla more impulses to SAN via sympathetic nervous system
Stimulates release of noradrenaline increasing heart rate and strength of contraction

25
Q

how does the body respond to an increase in CO2 concentration

A

chemoreceptors detect pH decrease and send more impulses to cardioacceleratory centre
more impulses to SAN via sympathetic nervous system
heart rate increases so rate of blood flow to lungs increases

26
Q

describe the structure of a neuromuscular junction.

A

synaptic cleft between a presynaptic and motor neurone and a skeletal muscle cell
acts as end of neural pathway