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a+p exam 4 notes summary / study guide

==================================


i'm fucking drunkenedified rn ngl let's see where this shit goes


i figure i might as well put this shit on gemini b/c there is presently no content on gemini other than gemini focused content and konpeito.media so half-assed bio content from halfway through a semester that only tells the parts of the story i feel like i want to review and was created while fucking wasted is somehow still beneficial to gemini imhqtbho


but like predominantly this is here for me so go fuck yourself


leftovers from previous unit


400 um for diffusion

40 um is a cell


glu --nmda-> ca[2+] --cam, nNOS-> no --gs-> cGMP --> pkg --> ion channels and stuff

i literally have no idea what any of this means and i probably won't study it and i'm hoping it's not really on the exam; he didn't seem too keen on it iirc. tbf i haven't been to the review session yet so we'll see what the other ta guy thinks?


the review session


no funcs

- dilates sm musc

- immune response

- long term potentiation


V I S I O N


rudiments


anatomical type stuff


light goes as follows:

- cornea

- anterior chamber

- pupil

- lens

- focused by zonule fibers / ciliary muscle

- vitreous humor

- retina

- center (fovea) has highest acuity

- optic disc is blind spot b/c that's where optic nerve innervates so no detectors beneath


a random thing


melanopsin does circadian clock and melatonin acts there to induce sleep


idk if i need to know this



resolution


as frequency of light v, resolution v


"more waves --> more info"


convergent systems amplify (a la rods [pure photon detectors; no color])

separate paths resolve (a la cones [see color])


so in a convergent system you can perceive a signal with less stimulus, but you have a lower resolution in interpreting that signal


whereas in a parallel system you need more stimulus to produce the signal because it is unamplified but you get greater detail in that image


this is because convergent systems are summative and parallel systems (i literally made up the term parallel; he didn't give a name for these, but they're the not convergent ones but they aren't strictly speaking convergent b/c they start split???) are what they are. the issue with convergent systems is that this summation comes from adding the total stimulus at n different receptors and as a consequence you lose the acuity you would gain from looking at each of those independently



dark current et al


rhodopsin is the visual pigment of rods; cone-opsin of cones (the latter may have been tongue in cheek but i don't know for certain)


in absence of light (in the dark) photoreceptors have what is called a dark current, which comes from a depolarizing inward current that can be disabled by light.


basically, if you hit the rhodopsin/retinal complex with light, it isomerizes cis-retinal to trans-retinal, activates α subunit and dissociates it from the β/γ complex ("just like they always do"), which activates phosphodiesterase, breaking down cGMP, which was holding the na/ca channel that created the 40 mv dark current open


however, a counterbalancing outward k channel which was holding the cell at that 40 mv resting membrane potential is still open, thus hyperpolarizing across the membrane, moving the potential from -40 to -65 mv???


more to come soon; i need to go get another fifth of jack but like idk what will happen when i go back to my room so maybe this will be it for the night but like it better not


ok hello im back but my roommate being a shit and won't stop talking dude i'm trying to study you fuck

that's absolutely why i got a bottle of fucking jack

remember how ca comes in the na channel too? as ca content gets too high (too high dark current), it inhibits guanylate cyclase, the enzyme that converts gtp to cgmp, thereby inhibiting ability to conduct through the cgmp-gated channel that brough the ca in to begin with


this also inhibits the cgmp's binding to the channel


meanwhile rhodopsin kinase inhibits pde and ca inhibits rhodopsin kinase, so ca activates pde


pde converts cgmp to gmp (hurting dark channel)


so ca hurts dark current in 3 ways:


- activates pde, breaking cgmp into gmp

- inhibits gc, preventing gtp conversion into cgmp

- prevents cgmp from binding to dark current channel even when it exists


the overall pathway:

ca --cgmp-> in -| cgmp ---> gmp
             \       ^ pde
              +-| gc | ---
              |     gtp |
              |         |
              \--| rhodopsin
                     kinase

however if you push too high, you'll bleach out from the light (think getting flashbanged, right?) and this is because you have to convert that trans-retinal back into cis-retinal


- na/ca channel only open in presence of cgmp

- depol happens

- cgmp can be impacted by ca primarily or by retinal stuff


how is recovery from bleaching conducted?


for rods:

- abc moves trans retinal into rpe; converted by rpe65 to cis retinal which goes back to rod

for cones:

- cis ret in cones is converted by light to trans form, then brought to muller cell then converted to cis ret, then back to cone

- (or it can go by rpe like in rods)


___because they can also use muller cells, cones recover more quickly than rods___


color shit


there are three cone pigments:

- s

- short

- blue

- m

- medium

- green

- l

- long

- red


mix them to get other stuff (as per rgb type rules, basically, like yellow is produced by mixing red and green rods, if ya feel me)



ganglion cell types and stuff


- p ganglion cells

- project to parvocellular neurons in lat geniculate

- 70% of ganglia

- visual acuity


- m ganglion cells

- magnocellular neurons (larger than parvocellular) in lat geniculate

- from all cones and rods

- best with moderately-sized objects

- motion

- luminance


- k ganglion cells

- apparently just for the color blue?

- also lateral geniculate but didn't say what type of cell?



retina and visual fields stuff


- nasal retina

- sees temporal space

- crosses before optic chiasm

- temporal retina

- sees nasal space

- does not cross


meyer's loop in the temporal lobe processes top field

dorsal optic radiation in the parietal lobe processes lower field


proceeds from retina to chiasm to tracts to lgn to radiations


as you go further back, damaging an area does different stuff


damage to fovea loses middle of image

optic nerve kills whole eye's vision

chiasm loses mirrored sides of vision [the lateral sides, i believe idk tho]

tract loses same side (either left or right) [left tract loses right side of image]

meyer's loop loses either both top l or both top r

dorsal optic radiation is same but bottom l or bottom r instead

any further back does weird shit where center of image is spared (macular sparing) but like it's pretty unpredictable and stuff b/c more and more has been processed by that point the further back you go



visual pathways


dorsal is the "where" pathway; ventral pathway is "what" pathway

        where in space                identification
       parietal cortex                temporal cortex
      vis. guided mvmts             recognition/interp
   e.g., navigating a crowd       e.g., identifying a rose
     m cells --> magno                p cells --> parvo


color vision misc stuff


- dichromatic vision

- one type of cone is fucked

- protanopia: loss of red

- deuteranopia: loss of green

- tritanopia: loss of blue

- anomalous trichromacy

- absorbance wavelengths shifted in some way

- protanomaly: weirdness w/ red perception

- deuteranomaly: weirdness w/ green perception

- tritanomaly: weirdness w/ blue perception

- monochromatic vision

- very rare


those color blindness test plates you've seen before are named ishihara plates


taste???


sensory systems encode:

- modality

- location

- intensity

- timing


modalities are activated by particular receptors


receptors


- umami

- t1r1 + t1r3

- sweet

- t1r2 + t1r3

- bitter

- t2r

- sour

- type iii

- protonated sour tastant enters and protonates proton-sensitive channel, deactivating it

- salty

- complete fucking mystery


ok hello next day has arrived, last night i only drank a wee bit of the new bottle of jack before things went off the rails; maybe 4 or 5 shots only. i was honetsly sober by the endd;;;


i just drank the remainder wtwenty minutes ago? it is time


exam is tomorrow


oprepare your study




!!!





let us comtinue



in a trimeric g-protein, α leaves βγ complex and does some signalling


lots of differnt types of α


also different variants of βγ (5 & 14 types respectively)


ok im worse now thatn i was last night like at least last night idont think i made any typos but now i've made like a lot looking back and a lot of this is incomprehensible? like today i had the remainder of the jack (what like 13-4 shots?), 2 beers, 1 lil baby pint bottle of vodka


oh,., there's something to talk about in a legit gemini blog post, although i should probably be sober to write it: my pushing of the boundaries of """functional""" alcoholism. as a case-study, there's the time i was hospitalized because adam sandler isn't funny. i'll probably put a link here to it when i've written and published it. it's a fabulous story and you should all read it. i mean nobody is reading this tho so who cares ayy


for now, i have a fucking exam to study for which is what this si supposed to be about fuck



for t1r and t2r receptors (so sweet, bitter, umami):


the ligand binds gpcr; α dissoc. from βγ


then proceeds as follows:

βγ --> plc --dag-> ip3 -------\
 α --> pde --| camp --> pka -| ip3r --> ca[2+] --> trpm5 --> na+ --> more na+ by nav --> depol --> calhm1 --> atp + neurotransmission of sensation

this neurotransmission occurs by the loss of atp through pannexins (or the hemichannel calhm1)


calhm1 = calcium homeostatic modulator 1 btw


p2x and hemichannel transfer atp; p2y transfers adp


p2x does afferent projections; p2y interacts between cell types @ the sensor


afferent can also use 5-ht


2 releases atp; has 5ht/gaba receptors; 3 has p2y and can be modulated by that


tissues shit


lmao my notes begin wtih my realization that my lab partner wasnt there that day and as a consequence iw as going to have to take the group quiz on my fucking own


and guess what, i was done literally 20 minutes before any of the other groups and i got a fucking 95 which is better than any of the grades we got on those quizzes together before now so fuck yeahhhh~


but she knows the content better than me negl i think we just take a while b/c indecisionand i did well only b/c due to her absence i studied like a FUCK ton in lecture


the point of all of this is to say that this tissues lecture didn't get a whole lotta notes from me, so ayy


there's a review session @ 7 tonight that i gotta go to (it is presently 4:20 btw mlaoo)


wow this is really bad; this whole modification is really bad.


continuing:


tissue types

- nervous

- epithelial

- muscle

- connective



nervous


senses deviations, signals for homeostatic response


ok im relistening to the lecture

my typing is really loud in the recording lol


what is important about the biochemistry

- maintaining polarization status

- neurotransmitters exist



cell features


- large cell body

- long cell processes

- dendrites have lots of branching


cell types


- glia

- more supportive in function

- neurons

- main ones

- long bodies

- long processes



functions


- send and receive electrical signals very quickly

- process sensory info

- encode via pattern / frequency



location


- in cns/pns

- this was a pretty silly slide

- why the fuck did you put this here [redacted prof name]



embryonic stem cell layer

arises from ectoderm



regenerative capacity


- glia do a pretty good job

- neurons do a pretty bad job



arrangement


- connected in series usually

- cell bodies usually in groups

- motor cell bodies in vent horn

- sens cell bodies in dors root gang

- lots and lots of glia per neuron

- very cellular tissue



vascularity


- very metabolic --> very vascular



innervation


- not in any way



identification


- large cell bodies

- something else


muscle


biochem


- ca causes ctrxn

- ctrctile proteins: actin/myosin



cell features


               striated     nuclei          gap junctions   fibers
    cardiac    +            1 central       y               branch
    skeletal   +            multi periph    n               parallel
    smooth     -            1 central       y               layers


function

- contraction



germ cell layer


from mesoderm



regenerative capacity


only smooth regens



innervation


yes



vascularity


yes



organization


- skel: all fibers parallel

- card: branching

- sm: in layers



epithelial tiss.


features


- desmosomes

- tight junctions

- basement membrane

- allows there to be an apical surface

- three types

- squamous --> passive maintenance of boundary

- cuboidal --> active secretion/absorption

- columnar --> lots of active absorption, + moving cilia, doing other things; secreting mucus; etc, etc...



function


- absorption/secretion

- filtration

- protection

- differentiation

- sensation



location


- anywhere anything lines anything

- any gland or organ that needs to secrete or do any bullshit



germ cell layer


- skin from ecto

- gi from endo

- pericardium/peritineum/other shit from meso


so all three!



regenerative capacity


fast



organization


either simple, stratified, pseudostratified



vascularity


no



innervation


hell yeah



misc notes


simple cuboidal for secretion/abs in kidney y'know



connective tissue


misc notes first


cells make & secrete ecm but cell bodies themselves aren't the focus


biochem


idk she didn't really say much whatever



types


- fibroblasts (make matrix); fibrocytes (live in it)

- chondroblasts (make cartillage); chondrocytes (live in it)

- osteoblasts (make bone); osteocytes (live in it)

- adipocytes (live in fat and other conn tissues)

- leukocytes (white bc)

- erythrocytes (red bc)


where


between any other



function


produce that matrix



embryonic germ cell origin


mesoderm



regenerative capacity


pretty good

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