Life Functions

Organ Systems

Circulatory System

Lungs

Blood Vessels

Veins

Arteries

Heart

Digestive System

Pharynx

Gall Badder

Pancreas

Mouth

Esophagus

Large Intestine

Small Intestine

Liver

Stomach

Respiratory System

Pharynx

Mouth

Nasal Cavity

Larynx

Trachea

Lungs

Urinary System

Kidney

Ureter

Urethra

Bladder

Cells

Types

Eukaryotic

Prokaryotic

Animal

Bacteria Cells

Plant

White Blood Cells

Red Blood Cells

Gametes

Somatic

Organelles

Cell Membrane

Cell Wall

Endoplasmic Reticulum

Nucleus

Nucleolus

Ribosome

Cytoskeleton

Golgi Apparatus

Lysosomes

Vacuoles

Mitochondria

Chloroplast

Centrioles

Mitosis

Interphase

Prophase

Metaphase

Anaphase

Telophase

Cytokinesis

Transportation

Concentration Gradient

Passive Transport

Osmosis

Diffusion

Facilitated Diffusion

Active Transport

Carrier Protein

Endocytosis

Phagocytosis

Pinocytosis

Energy + Nutrients

Macromolecules

Protein

Amino Acids

Enzymes

Lipids

Triglycerides

Saturated Fats

Unsaturated Fats

Steroids

Carbohydrates

Sugar base

Starch

Nucleic Acid

DNA

RNA

Nucleotides

GCAT

GCAU

Reproduction

Inheritance

DNA

Nucleotides

Guanine

Cytosine

Adenine

Thymine

Uracil

Chromosome

Centromere

Homologous Pairs

Sister Chromatids

Chromatin

Subtopic

Loci

Genome

Gene

Alleles

Traits

Dominant Resesive

Incomplete Dominance

Codominance

Genotype

Phenotype

Genetic Disorders

Offspring

Gonads

Testicles

Ovaries

Meiosis

Independent Assortment

Crossing Over

PMAT X2

Haploid

Diploid

DNA is in macromolecules, which is a source of nutrients for our bodies. In inheritance, we get our own set of DNA. DNA is an essentially factor of life

Both meiosis and mitosis are the processes of the division of cells. Despite meiosis being the division of sex cells and mitosis being the division of somatic cells, they still carry out the same function with the steps of PMAT.

In meiosis chromosomes preform independent assortment in the second metaphase. This is part of what gives us a unique genetic code

In the same process of meiosis in metaphase 1, homologous pairs preform a step called crossing over. The pairs swap parts of their DNA.

Both White and Red Blood Cells travel through blood vessels.

Red Blood cells are critical for the lungs because they supply the lungs with oxygen

A phenotype is the physical characteristics that are a results of the genotype. Traits are an overall representation of an individuals phenotype.

Plant and Prokaryotic cells are the only kinds of cells that have a cell wall

The endoplasmic reticulum is the organelle that makes and produces protein

The purpose of gametes are to create diversity in the offspring. These sex cells allow for the mixing of genetic information from one generation to the next