module 2 - 6.4 organisation and specialisation of specialised cells & 6.5 stem cells Flashcards

1
Q

what happens to cells in multicellular organisms for them to become specialised cells?

A

differentiation

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2
Q

what are the levels of organisation in multicellular organisms?

A
  1. specialised cells
  2. tissues
  3. organs
  4. organ systems
  5. organism
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3
Q

what are tissues?

A

collection of 1 or more types of specialised cells, tissue is adapted to perform particular function

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4
Q

what are organs?

A

a collection of tissues that are adapted to perform a particular function

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5
Q

what are organ systems?

A

a collection of organs that are adapted to perform a major function

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6
Q

what is the process of making specialised/ differentiated cells called?

A

differentiation

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7
Q

what do all animal, plant and fungal cells begin as?

A

undifferentiated cells - potential to differentiate into any specialised cells

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8
Q

what are undifferentiated cells called?

A

stem cells

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9
Q

what are body cells?

A

all cells in the body except gametes

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10
Q

what do all specialised cells have in common?

A

they have the same genome as the stem cells

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11
Q

why do all specialised cells have the same genome as the stem cells?

A

because they’re produced by mitosis, so some genes are switched on and some off

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12
Q

what can stem cells go through?

A

cell division

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13
Q

why may stem cells go through cell division many times?

A

to give rise to whole lineages of specialised cells

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14
Q

what are stem cells the source of?

A

new cells for growth, repair and changes to the body plan

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15
Q

how controlled is stem cell division?

A

strictly (come dancing)

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16
Q

what is potency?

A

ability of a stem cell to differentiate into specialised cells

17
Q

what is a totipotent stem cell?

A

a stem cell that can differentiate into any specialised cell

18
Q

what is a pluripotent stem cell?

A

stem cell that differentiates into all tissue types (not into extra-embryonic tissues)

19
Q

what is a multipotent stem cell?

A

a stem cell that can only differentiate into the range of specialised cells found in a tissue

20
Q

what type of cell is a zygote?

A

totipotent stem cell

21
Q

what is a blastocyst?

A

a sack of human cells that forms in early pregnancy

22
Q

when the human embryo is a blastocyst, what are the cells and why?

A

cells are pluripotent because they can form 3 germ layers

23
Q

what are the 3 germ layers?

A
  • endoderm
  • mesoderm
  • ectoderm
24
Q

what is the endoderm layer used for?

A
  • interior stomach lining
  • gastrointestinal tract
  • lungs
25
Q

what is the mesoderm layer used for?

A
  • muscle
  • bone
  • blood
  • urogenital
26
Q

what is the ectoderm layer used for?

A
  • epidermal tissues
  • nervous system
27
Q

where are plant stem cells found?

A

meristems or meristematic tissue

28
Q

where are the meristems/ meristematic tissue?

A
  • shoot and root tips where growth by cell division occurs
  • also found in vascular bundles between xylem and phloem tissue
29
Q

what is the area called between the xylem and phloem tissue where meristems can be found?

A

VASCULAR CAMBIUM

30
Q

where do animal stem cells come from?

A
  • embryonic stem cells
  • tissue or adult stem cells (located in specific areas after birth)