1 / 61

Chapter 5 – Cell Communication

Chapter 5 – Cell Communication. Figure 11.0 Yeast. Figure 11.1 Communication between mating yeast cells. Figure 11.3 Local and long-distance cell communication in animals. Figure 11.4 Communication by direct contact between cells. Figure 11.5 Overview of cell signaling (Layer 3).

boysen
Download Presentation

Chapter 5 – Cell Communication

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 5 – Cell Communication

  2. Figure 11.0 Yeast

  3. Figure 11.1 Communication between mating yeast cells

  4. Figure 11.3 Local and long-distance cell communication in animals

  5. Figure 11.4 Communication by direct contact between cells

  6. Figure 11.5 Overview of cell signaling (Layer 3)

  7. Figure 11.6 The structure of a G-protein-linked receptor

  8. Figure 11.7 The functioning of a G-protein-linked receptor

  9. Figure 11.8 The structure and function of a tyrosine-kinase receptor

  10. Figure 11.9 A ligand-gated ion-channel receptor

  11. Figure 11.10 Steroid hormone interacting with an intracellular receptor

  12. Figure 11.11 A phosphorylation cascade

  13. Figure 11.13 cAMP as a second messenger

  14. Figure 11.12 Cyclic AMP

  15. Figure 11-12x cAMP

  16. Figure 11.14 The maintenance of calcium ion concentrations in an animal cell

  17. Figure 11.15 Calcium and inositol triphosphate in signaling pathways (Layer 3)

  18. Figure 11.16 Cytoplasmic response to a signal: the stimulation of glycogen breakdown by epinephrine

  19. Figure 11.17 Nuclear response to a signal: the activation of a specific gene by a growth factor

  20. Figure 11.18 The specificity of cell signaling

  21. Figure 11.19 A scaffolding protein

  22. Chapter 12 – Cell Life Cycle

  23. Figure 12.0 Mitosis

  24. Figure 12.1c The functions of cell division: Tissue renewal

  25. Figure 12.2 Eukaryotic chomosomes

  26. Figure 12.3 Chromosome duplication and distribution during mitosis

  27. Figure 12.5 The stages of mitotic cell division in an animal cell: G2 phase; prophase; prometaphase

  28. Figure 12.5 The stages of mitotic cell division in an animal cell: metaphase; anaphase; telophase and cytokinesis.

  29. Figure 12.5x Mitosis

  30. Figure 12.6 The mitotic spindle at metaphase

  31. Figure 12.7 Testing a hypothesis for chromosome migration during anaphase

  32. Figure 12.8 Cytokinesis in animal and plant cells

  33. Figure 12.9 Mitosis in a plant cell

  34. Figure 12-09x Mitosis in an onion root

  35. Figure 12.10 Bacterial cell division (binary fission) (Layer 3)

  36. Figure 12.15 The effect of a growth factor on cell division

  37. Figure 12.16 Density-dependent inhibition of cell division

  38. Figure 12.17 The growth and metastasis of a malignant breast tumor

  39. Figure 12-17x1 Breast cancer cell

  40. Figure 12-17x2 Mammogram: normal (left) and cancerous (right)

  41. Figure 13.1 The asexual reproduction of a hydra

  42. Figure 13.x1 SEM of sea urchin sperm fertilizing egg

  43. Figure 13.3 Preparation of a human karyotype (Layer 4)

  44. Figure 13.x2 Human female chromosomes shown by bright field G-banding

  45. Figure 13.x3 Human female karyotype shown by bright field G-banding of chromosomes

More Related