DNA -chromosome: large continuous piece of DNA‚ containing many genes -gene: many sets of instructions on a chromosome‚ make functional products -nucleolus: region of DNA that codes ribosomes -nuclear pore: holes in a nuclear membrane Endoplasmic Reticulum Internal transportation -transports materials throughout the cell with its branching tubes and pockets -brain: assists with production‚ release of hormone -muscles: involved with muscle contraction Golgi Apparatus Exports transportation
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VTCT Sport & Active LeisureL3 Certificate in Sports Massage Therapy (QCF) | Assignment 1 – Functional Anatomy & Physiology Unit UV30378 | Lou Davidson – March 2012 | 1a – Explain the structures of a human cellMost human cells contain small structures known as organelles (“little organs”)‚ each of which performs a highly specialised task‚ such as manufacturing protein
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Lesson 1 Assignment Questions Describe the scientific system by which plants are classified‚ in a report of up to 500 words. In this report‚ Cover: *the significance of the binomial system *why common names of plants should not be used to correctly identify plants. The scientific system to classify and naming plants are controlled and coordinated by botanist throughout the world. The system of classification in plants is to classify them in groups with similar characteristics. Then
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Name________________ Block 4 ______ Pushing the Limits – Strength! For each section: List ONE question that could be answered by the film about each of the different sections and state the answer. Bones Q - How Many bones is your skeleton made up of ? _______________________________________________________________________ A - The Skeleton is made up of 206 bones _______________________________________________________________________ Muscles – Superhuman strength Q- How does
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Yr 12 Biology Summary Notes Rangitoto College 2006 STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION IN CELLS Achievement Standard 90464 – Biology 2.8 – Describe cell structure and function TYPES OF CELLS • PROKARYOTIC CELLS = more primitive‚ unicellular‚ have no organised nucleus‚ no membrane-bound organelles‚ genetic material is 1 circular DNA molecule‚ can have tiny extra rings of DNA called plasmids‚ all have cell walls e.g. bacteria and blue-green algae • EUCARYOTIC CELLS = unicellular
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Drawings vary‚ check to make sure the relative sizes are correct. High Power should show only a couple of cells that take up most of the viewing field. The micoscope is designed to view the slide at different spots‚ so not all drawings will look like this one. Images were snipped from the virtual microscope’s flash animation. Scanning (4) | Low (10) | High (40) | 3. Go to google and type "cheek cells" into the search box. Click on "images" to see all the images google has found on the web showing
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certain vibrations are sound? I put that there is a certain part of our brain that processes it. The other answers didn’t look as good. I may be wrong though. How many nucleotides in a codon? 3 What do our cells have the prokaryotes do not? Endoplasmic Reticulum was the answer on mine‚ but it is any membrane-bound organelle Know the diagram with the horizontal cells‚ amacrine cells‚ ganglion cells‚ and bipolar cells. Know the functions of all of these. It is about three questions in true and false
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Dengue Fever Kimberly A. Bitanga Microbiology Professor J. Gray Dengue Fever Abstract Dengue fever is a debilitating tropical disease caused by one of five types of the dengue virus.(1) It is transmitted by mosquitos throughout the tropics and subtropics of not only Southeast Asia‚ but has now spread to Central and South America‚ and countries in the Pacific Ocean and America as well. Usually‚ most people who are infected with the virus are asymptomatic‚ with mild symptoms‚ whereas others develop
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The Shiga toxin comprises a family of related protein toxins produced by bacteria Shigella dysenteriae. The bacteria S. dysenteriae was discovered by Japanese bacteriologist Kiyoshi Shiga in 1898. Shiga studied 36 patients at the Institute for Infectious Diseases (Tokyo‚ Japan) and isolated a bacterium from the intestinal tissue of dysentery patient. Bacterial isolates were cultured and fed to dogs; that resulted in dysenteric disease (Shiga‚ 1898). Shigella belongs to enterobacteriaceae bacterial
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Final Exam Review Packet Name: _Susan Clark Chapter 1: 1. | An investigator who conducts an experiment to determine how temperature changes affect the rate at which the heart beats is most likely a(an) A. | anatomist. | B. | physiologist. | C. | chemist. | D. | biochemist. | E. | physicist. | | 2. | The branch of science that deals with the structure of human body parts is called anatomy. | 3. | The branch of science that deals with the functions of human
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