Cellular Membranes
Signal Transduction
Neurophysiology
Endocrine
Reproductive
100

An example of this type of transport is water reabsorption via aquaporins.

What is facilitated diffusion?

100

Signal pathways leading to the nucleus to modulate gene transcription produce these types of effects.

What are genomic effects?

100

This is the cause of the absolute refractory period of an action potential, preventing action potentials from traveling in the wrong direction.

What is Na+ channel inactivation?

100

This phenomenon describes a decrease in receptor number due to excess hormone present.

What is down-regulation?

100

Special cells in the testes that secrete testosterone.

What are Leydig cells?

200

Due to its passive permeability, this molecule determines a cell's resting membrane potential.

What is potassium?

200

This type of signal transduction pathway turns a chemical signal into a direct signal.

What are ionotropic receptors (ligand-gated ion channels)?

200
This describes when many pre-synaptic neurons have input to a single post-synaptic neuron.

What is "convergence" of neural input?

200

This condition is caused by hypersecretion of growth hormone as an adult and common signs are growth of hands, feet, facial features and thickening of skin.

What is acromegaly?

200

This hormone stimulates spermatogenesis in males and follicular growth in females.

What is FSH?

300

Neurotoxins and local anesthetics block this structure.

What are voltage-gated Na+ channels?

300

This type of receptor transduces the activity of nitric oxide, increasing cGMP and inducing smooth muscle contraction.

What are soluble guanylyl cyclase receptors (sGC)?

300
Responsible for the enzymatic degradation of neurotransmitter inside the pre-synaptic neuron.

What is MAO?

300

ACTH stimulates the adrenal cortex to release this class of molecule in response to stress.

What are glucocorticoids (mainly cortisol)?

300

This hormone inhibits LH and FSH and prepare the endometrium for implantation.

What is progesterone?

400

Component of the phospholipid membrane providing stability and fluidity.

What is cholesterol?

400

This protein is activated by Gq to generate IP3 to increase intracellular Ca2+.

What is phospholipase C (PLC)?

400

This adrenergic receptor causes smooth muscle relaxation.

What are beta-2 receptors?

400
This structure is capable of sensing a specific change in the blood that triggers the release of ADH (name and location in the body).

What are hypothalamic osmoreceptors?

400

This fetal hormone increases secretion of fetal cortisol and is thought to be the "clock" that establishes timing of birth.

What is corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH)?

500

Digoxin, a drug commonly used to treat heart failure, expresses inhibition on this structure.

What is the Na+/K+ pump?

(increased intracellular Na+ reduces activity of Na+/Ca+ exchanger, increasing intracellular Ca2+, which causes increased contractility)

500

This protein is the G protein of the visual transduction pathway.

What is transducin?

500

The effect of this neurotransmitter on the post-synaptic neuron is influx of Cl-.

What is GABA?

500

A blood analysis of a patient with aldosteronism would show these two things...

What are hypernatremia and hypokalemia?

500

The placenta stimulates the fetus to produce this hormone, which is converted to estrogen to overcome progesterone to allow labor to begin.

What is DHEA?

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