Warm-Up - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Warm-Up

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What is the function of: Cone cells? Rod cells? The perceived pitch of a sound is dependent on ? What is the difference between perception and sensation? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Warm-Up


1
Warm-Up
  • What is the function of
  • Cone cells?
  • Rod cells?
  • The perceived pitch of a sound is dependent on ?
  • What is the difference between perception and
    sensation?

2
Warm-Up
  • What is the function of
  • Cone cells? Color
  • Rod cells? Light
  • The perceived pitch of a sound is dependent on ?
  • wavelength (?)
  • What is the difference between perception and
    sensation?

3
Sensory and Motor Mechanisms
  • Chapter 50
  • Campbell Biology 9th Edition

4
You must know
  • The location and function of several types of
    sensory receptors
  • How skeletal muscles contract
  • Cellular events that lead to muscle contraction

5
Sensory Receptors
  • Mechanoreceptors physical stimuli pressure,
    touch, stretch, motion, sound
  • Thermoreceptors detect heat/cold
  • Chemoreceptors transmit solute conc. info
    taste (gustatory), smell (olfactory)
  • Electromagnetic receptors detect EM energy
    light (photoreceptors), electricity, magnetism
  • Pain receptors respond to excess heat, pressure,
    chemicals

6
Chemoreceptors antennae of male silkworm moth
have hairs sensitive to sex phermones released by
the female
7
  • Reception receptor detects a stimulus
  • Sensation action potentials reach brain via
    sensory neurons
  • Perception information processed in brain

8
Structure of the Human Ear
9
Equilibrium in the inner ear Semicircular canals
(fluid-filled chambers) detect head movements
through hairs of receptor cells
10
Structure of the Vertebrate Eye(also some
invertebrates)
11
Vision
  • Compound eyes several thousand ommatidia (light
    detectors) with its own lens insects
    crustaceans
  • Vertebrates
  • Rods sense light
  • Cones color vision
  • Rhodopsin light-absorbing pigment that triggers
    signal transduction pathway that leads to sight

12
Types of Skeletons
  • Hydrostatic fluid held under pressure in closed
    body compartment
  • Hydra, nematodes, annelids
  • Exoskeletons hard encasements on surface of
    animal
  • Insects, mollusks, crustaceans
  • Endoskeleton hard supporting elements buried
    within soft tissues
  • Human bony skeleton

13
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14
  • Muscles always contract
  • Muscles work in antagonistic pairs to move parts
    of body

15
Skeletal Muscle Structure
  • Attached to bones by tendons
  • Types of muscle
  • smooth (internal organs)
  • cardiac (heart)
  • Skeletal (striated)
  • 1 long fiber single muscle cell
  • Each muscle fiber bundle of myofibrils,
    composed of
  • Actin thin filaments
  • Myosin thick filaments

16
Sarcomere basic contractile unit of the muscle
  • Z lines border
  • I band thin actin filaments
  • A band thick myosin filaments

17
Muscle Contraction
  • Sarcomere relaxed actin myosin overlap
  • Contracting
  • Muscle fiber stimulated by motor neuron
  • Length of sarcomere is reduced
  • Actin slides over myosin
  • Fully contracted actin myosin completely
    overlap
  • Sliding-filament model thick thin filaments
    slide past each other to increase overlap
  • (Note Filaments do NOT shorten!)

18
Muscle fibers only contract when stimulated by a
motor neuron
19
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20
Depolarization of muscle cell releases Ca2 ions
? binds to troponin ? expose myosin sites on
actin
21
Hydrolysis of ATP by myosin ? cross-bridge formed
? thin filament pulled toward center of sarcomere
22
  • Speed of muscle contraction
  • Fast fibers brief, rapid, powerful contractions
  • Slow fibers sustain long contractions (posture)

23
Problems
  • ALS (Lou Gehrigs disease) degeneration of motor
    neurons, muscle fibers atrophy
  • Botulism block release of acetylcholine,
    paralyzes muscles
  • Myasthenia gravis autoimmune disorder, produce
    antibodies to acetylcholine
  • Calcium deficiency muscle spasms and cramps
  • Rigor mortis (after death) no ATP to break
    actin/myosin bonds sustained muscle contraction
    until breakdown (decomposition)
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