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Nervous system
One of the ways that
different
parts
of
our
body
communicate
with each other
Consists of the
central
nervous
system (
brain
and
spinal cord
) and the
peripheral
nervous
system (
cranial
nerves
and other nerves throughout the body)
How nerves work
1.
Receptor
(sensory organ) detects
stimulus
2.
Sensory
neuron transmits signal to
relay
neuron
3.
Relay
neuron transmits signal to
brain
4.
Brain
sends signal back through
motor
neuron
5.
Effector
(muscle or gland) carries out
response
Neuron
Main body,
axon
(long tail),
dendrites
(hair-like connections to other neurons)
Axon covered in
myelin sheath
to speed up signal transmission
Synapse
Gap between neurons where
neurotransmitters
transmit signals
Stimulants and depressants
Drugs that speed up or slow down
neurotransmitter
transmission
Reflex
Reaction that
bypasses
the
brain
, going directly from
receptor
to
effector
Measuring
reaction time
1.
Grab ruler
when dropped
2.
Repeat
with
different
stimuli (audible, distractions)
3.
Repeat
after
drinking sugary drink
Brain
Different parts control different functions (
cerebral cortex
for motor, cerebrum for movement,
medulla oblongata
for reflexes)
Can be
imaged
using
CT scans
or MRI scans
Nerves
cross over as they enter the brain (
contralateral
control)
Eye
Light hits
cornea
,
pupil
, lens, focused on retina
Rods detect
black
/white, cones detect
colour
Optic
nerve transmits signal to
brain
Accommodation
Lens thickens/
thins
to focus on
distant
/close objects
Glands
in endocrine system
Pituitary
Thyroid
Pancreas
Ovaries
Testes
Adrenal
Pancreas
Produces
insulin
, which regulates
blood sugar
levels
Diabetes
Pancreas can't produce enough
insulin
, leading to
high
blood sugar
Menstrual cycle
1.
FSH
stimulates egg
maturation
2.
LH
triggers egg
release
3. Empty
follicle
produces
progesterone
4.
Lining
sheds during
period
Thermoregulation
Controlling internal body
temperature
of
37°C
Sweating
,
hair
standing on end, blood vessel dilation/constriction
Kidneys
Control
water levels
, remove urea from
blood
Contraception
methods
Physical
Hormonal
(pill, patch)
Fertility
treatments
Artificial insemination, IVF,
hormone therapy
, surrogacy,
egg donation
Plant
hormones
Auxins
(promote/inhibit growth)
Ethene
(ripens fruit)
Gibberellins
(promote flowering, increase fruit size)
Tropisms
Plant growth responses to light (
phototropism
), gravity (
geotropism
), water (hydrotropism)
Reproduction
methods
Asexual
Sexual
Auxin
A chemical that can make cells
elongate
or stop them from elongating, used as a
herbicide
and rooting powder
Ethene
A
chemical
that can be used to
ripen
fruits
Gibberellins
Chemicals
that promote
flowering
and make fruit size bigger
How
auxin works
1. If in the shoot, light destroys it so it collects on the bottom side, making the stem grow upwards (
positive phototropism
)
2. If in the root, it collects on the
bottom
side, inhibiting growth and making the
root
bend downwards
Methods
of reproduction
Asexual
Sexual
Asexual
reproduction
A cell is cloned, no genetic variation between parents and offspring (
mitosis
)
Sexual
reproduction
Gametes
(haploid cells) join to form a diploid cell, genetic variation created through
meiosis
DNA
A
polymer
with 4 bases (A, T, C, G), 3 bases form a triplet coding for an
amino acid
Protein
synthesis
DNA is unzipped,
RNA
copies the code and takes it to the ribosome, ribosome assembles amino acids into a
protein
Genome
All the
DNA
in an organism
DNA
structure
Double helix
Gene
Part of
DNA coding
for a specific
protein
Alleles
Different
forms
of the same
gene
Genotype
The
genes
an organism has
Phenotype
The
observable
characteristics of an organism
Punnett
square
Used to predict offspring genotypes and
phenotypes
from
parental
genotypes
Homozygous
Having
two
identical
alleles
Heterozygous
Having two
different
alleles
Some disorders can be passed down
genetically
, like
cystic fibrosis
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