Major Tissue Types
Epithelial Shapes & Layers
Cellular Membrane
Chapter 4 & 5 Review
Bonus Round
100

This covers and protects all body surfaces 

Epithelial tissue 

100

This epithelial shape is flat 

Squamous 

100

Large molecules are made from smaller ones; requiring energy 

Anabolism

100

This is in RNA but not in DNA

Uracil 

100

This is energy 

ATP

200

This contracts producing body movement 

Muscle Tissue 

200

This epithelial layer is 2 or more layers 

Stratified

200

Larger molecules are broken down into smaller ones; release energy 

Catabolism 

200

This DNA sequence is converted to amino acids that you read in triplets

Codon

200
This is the process of any chemical reaction that occurs within the body 

Metabolism process 

300

This binds, protects, and serves as framework

Connective Tissue 

300

This epithelial shape is tall rectangular 

Columnar

300

This is an anabolic process that creates carbs, triglycerides, and proteins by linking monomers by REMOVING WATER 

Dehydration

300

This occurs when the bond is broken; energy is released and ATP turns into...

ADP (Phosphorylation) 

300
Presence of Oxygen (O2); Produce most APT 

Aerobic Reaction 

400

This sends electrical impulses regulating body functions 

Nervous Tissue

400

This epithelial layer is falsely layered; appears to be several layers but is actually one. 

Pseudostratified 

400

This is a catabolic process that breaks down carbs, lipids, and proteins by ADDING WATER

Hydrolysis 

400

This is 2 thin layers of tissue. Usually producing a fluid to reduce friction 

Membrane 

400

Absence of Oxygen (O2); Produce little APT 

Anaerobic Reacton

500

Brain and Spinal Cord is a example of this major tissue type 

Nervous Tissue 

500

This is one layer of cube shaped cells, located in the kidney, ovaries, and some glands 

Simple Cuboidal 

500

These tissue types are only found in a membrane

Hint: 2

Connective tissue & Epithelial tissue 

500

Transcribe DNA to RNA 

A T T C C G A

U A A G G C U

500

Do all cells/tissue types repair themselves? Explain

No; tissue repairs at different rates depending on the degree of injury. 

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