Epithelial & Connective Tissues
Muscle Tissue & Integument
Mitosis/Organelles
Region/Direction Terms
Supportive Connective Tissue
Surprise
100

Name of the tissue that lines your nasal cavity and respiratory tract

Pseudostratified ciliated columnar epithelium

100

I am involuntary (but can be partially voluntarily controlled) I'm striated, mononucleated, and I have intercalated discs, I am...

Cardiac Muscle Tissue

100

Chromatin is made of this

(100 pt BONUS: Located here)

DNA attached to Histone Proteins

(BONUS: Nucleus)

100

Opposite of deep

Superficial

100

What Osteoblasts and Chondroblasts mature into

Osteocytes and Chondrocytes

100

The matrix of blood

Plasma

200

This fiber is made up of 3 strands of reticular fibers

(100 pt BONUS: Elastic fibers are made from this protein)

1 Collagen Fiber

(1 reticular fiber = 1 unit of collagen)

(BONUS: Elastin protein)

200

Found in sphincters and arrector pili among other things

Smooth Muscle Tissue

200

Responsible for making ribosomes

Nucleolus

200

A synonym for anterior plane

Ventral plane

200

The very center of an osteon is called the...

Central/Haversian Canal

200

Name the difference between tendons and ligaments

Tendons: Connect muscle to bone

Ligaments: Connect bone to bone

300

What a tissue that has columnar cells near the lumen/surface and squamous cells farther from the lumen/surface would be called (3 words)

Stratified columnar epithelium

300

The type of epithelium found in the stratum corneum (4 words)

Stratified keratinized squamous epithelium

300

Name the 4 phases of mitosis and what generally happens during each phase

1. Prophase

- Centrioles move to the poles, nuclear envelope disappears

2. Metaphase

- Chromosomes line up on the metaphase plate, spindle fibers attach to centromeres on the chromosomes

3. Anaphase

- Spindle fibers pull apart chromosomes into sister chromatids on opposite poles

4. Telophase

- Nuclear envelope reforms around sister chromatids on each side

300

A cut along this plane could split someone right down the middle from head to toe

Midsagittal plane

Sagittal plane

300

The different rings of an osteon, look similar to tree rings

Lamellae

300

The 3 modes of secretion

Merocrine: How apocrine sweat (sudoriferous) glands secrete

Apocrine: How mammary glands secrete

Holocrine: How sebaceous (sebum) glands secrete

400

Name 2 places you can find DRCT

- Aponeuroses (flat tendons)

- Tendons

- Ligaments


400

DICT stands for _____ , it can be found in the _____ layer of the integument, and it can be found in your body in this place: ______

- Dense Irregular Connective Tissue

- Deep dermis/reticular layer

- Outer bone layer (periosteum)

- Outer cartilage layer

- Organ Capsules

400

Opposite of prophase, nuclear envelope reappears around chromatids, spindle disappears

Telophase

400

One of these is your shin, the other is your calf

Crural: Shin

Sural: Calf

400

Name the 3 types of cartilage and 1 example of where you can find each type

Hyaline: (Main type) Ribs, Base of Nose, Trachea, Larynx

Elastic: Ears, epiglottis, tip of nose

Fibrous: Intervertebral Discs, Menisci, pads


400

This type of muscle is involuntary, nonstriated, mononucleated, and found in the digestive tract.

(100 pt BONUS: What are the other 2 types of muscle)

Smooth Muscle

BONUS:

Cardiac: Involuntary*, striated, mononucleated, and found in the heart

Skeletal: Voluntary, striated, multinucleated, found in movable body parts

500

There are 3 types of connective tissue: Proper, Fluid, and Supporting. Give 2 examples of each type.

Proper: 

- LACT (Loose Areolar Connective Tissue)

- DRCT (Dense Regular Connective Tissue)

- DICT (Dense Irregular Connective Tissue)

Fluid: Blood & Lymph

Supporting: Cartilage and Bone

500

Name all 7 layers of the integument that we studied from superficial to deep and the types of cells you could find there

(100 pt BONUS: The layer deep to the dermis that is NOT considered part of the integumentary system)

Epidermis:

- Stratum Corneum: Keratinocytes

- Stratum Lucidum: Keratinocytes

- Stratum Granulosum: Keratinocytes

- Stratum Spinosum: Keratinocytes, Langerhans

- Stratum Basale/Germinativum: Keratinocytes, Merkel Cells, Melanocytes

Dermis:

- Superficial/Papillary Layer

- Deep/Reticular Layer

(BONUS: Hypodermis/subcutaneous layer/Camper's fascia)

500

Give a function for each of the following: Mitochondria, Nucleus, Nucleolus, Ribosome, RER & SER, Golgi Apparatus, Cilia, Flagella, Centriole, Cytoskeleton, Lysosome/Peroxisome

Mitochondria: ATP, Mitochondrial/Maternal DNA

Nucleus: DNA Storage in the form of chromatin

Nucleolus: Ribosome production

Ribosome: Protein production

RER: Protein production (because of the ribosomes)

SER: Lipid & Steroid production

Golgi Apparatus: Takes in proteins/enzymes from ER, storage and packaging center (Amazon warehouse)

Cilia: Little fingers/hairs that sweep things across the cell surface

Flagellum: Long tails that move/propel the cell

Centriole: Contains microtubules, helps pull apart chromosomes during mitosis

Cytoskeleton: Filaments and microtubules that provide structure for the cell

Lysosome/Peroxisome: Digests unwanted stuff in the cell/removes peroxides

500

One of these means "against the body wall" and the other means "against the organ"

Visceral Layer: Against the organ

Parietal Layer: Against the body wall

500

Describe the major difference between intramembranous and endochondral ossification

Intramembranous - Straight bone formation

Endochondral - Hyalin cartilage to bone formation

500

Give 3 examples of passive transport and 2 examples of active transport

Passive (No ATP required):

- Diffusion

- Osmosis

- Facilitated Diffusion

Active (Requires ATP):

- Exocytosis

- Endocytosis

- Phagocytosis (Cell eating, subclass of endocytosis)

- Pinocytosis (Cell drinking, subclass of endocytosis)