Essential knowledge 3.D.4:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
How cells die. Two ways that cells die Death by injury Death by suicide.
Advertisements

Congenital and Genetic Disorders Health Science Technology.
Figure S1. ID#1 Lipid Metabolism, Small Molecule Biochemistry, Drug Metabolism.
Endocrine & Cell Communication Part IV:
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Healthy Living Factors in Preventing Serious Disease ( Diabetes, Cancer Heart Attack, Stroke)
CARDIOVASCULAR DISEASE, GENETIC ALTERATIONS, AND GENE THERAPY BY: Mary Harrell, Farah Fevrier, Kareen Carty, Daniel Omotola, and Trey Palmer.
STEM CELL RESEARCH. Pros or Cons KX7lfmv-KQCFVB95QodVDwNigstem cell research
 A healthy diet is the diet that keeps the body in balance, or homeostasis.
Health Disparities Daniel S. Blumenthal, MD, MPH Morehouse School of Medicine.
1 Biochemistry & medicine introduction. 2 1 、 definition  Science concerned with chemical basis of life.
Warm-Up  Why do you communicate?  How do you communicate?  How do you think cells communicate?  Do you think bacteria can communicate? Explain.
Monday, Aug. 25 Standard: Students will comprehend concepts related to health promotion to enhance health. EQ: What is a noncommunicable disease? Opening:
CHAPTER 11 CELL COMMUNICATION 1. WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW: The 3 stages of cell communication: reception, transduction, and response. How G-protein-coupled.
Cancer Facts and Figures Information and Guidelines.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint Lectures for Biology, Seventh Edition Neil Campbell and Jane Reece.
Health Fair.
Noninfectious / Noncommunicable Diseases (Lifestyle Diseases) Cardiovascular Diseases, Cancer, Diabetes A disease that is not transmitted by another person.
Cell Communication Warm-Up 1. Why do you communicate? 2. How do you communicate? 3. How do you think cells communicate? 4. Do you think bacteria can communicate?
Cell to Cell Communication
A functional food is any healthy food claimed to have a health-promoting or disease- preventing property beyond the basic function of supplying nutrients.foodnutrients.
AP Biology Cell Communication CHAPTER 11. Warm-Up 1. Why do you communicate? 2. How do you communicate? 3. How do you think cells communicate? 4. Do you.
Reducing Health Risks 6/13/ Effective ways to reduce the risks from other factors Take action to avoid or reduce known risks Obtain regular check-ups.
Scientific investigations & work from many fields to improve the health and well being of humans and animals.
AP BIOLOGY CURRICULUM FRAMEWORK Cell Communication.
Cell Communication. Communication Cells must communicate with other cells and respond to their environment Basic communication processes are shared across.
Stem Cells.
Homeostasis.
Cellular Communication
Congenital and Genetic Disorders
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
TERMITE TRACKS SP.3, SP. 4; SP 5: SP 6; CER
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Poison Arrow Frog EXAMPLE.
Curious Question What is a second messenger? What are some examples of these molecules? What are the possible responses to signal transduction in a cell?
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Cell Communication.
Signals and Responses Cell Communication.
Concept 4: Analyzing Cell Communication
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Cell Communication Big Idea 3 (D, E) D – Cell-cell and Organism-Organism Communication (Chapter 9,10 of OpenStax Text) E – Information Processing (nervous.
Cell Communication Involves transduction of stimulatory or inhibitory signals from other cells, organisms or the environment Believed to have evolved in.
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Chapter 11 Cell Communication
Novel SIRT1 Mutation Linked to Autoimmune Diabetes in Humans
Cell Signaling.
By Neha, Bodie and Katelyn
From Data to Therapies Research in Xinghua Lu’s Lab
Ch.11: Cell Communication
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Cell Communication.
BIOLOGY 12 Cancer.
Cell signaling and cancer
What makes an apple so healthy?
A Radical Role for p38 MAPK in Tumor Initiation
POGIL: Cell Communication
Суури мэдлэг Basic Knowledge
By: Randy, Nadine, and Sarah
Objective 1 Biomedical Research
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Cell Communication Big Idea 3: Living systems store, retrieve, transmit, and respond to info essential to life processes.
Figure 2 Pathophysiological mechanisms in LGMD
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
A Translational View of the Molecular Pathogenesis of Lung Cancer
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Warm-Up Why do you communicate? How do you communicate?
Objective 1 Biomedical Research
Essential knowledge 2.D.3:
Presentation transcript:

Essential knowledge 3.D.4: Changes in signal transduction pathways can alter cellular response.

a. Conditions where signal transduction is blocked or defective can be deleterious, preventative or prophylactic. To foster student understanding of this concept, instructors caN choose an illustrative example such as: • Diabetes, heart disease, neurological disease, autoimmune disease, cancer, cholera • Effects of neurotoxins, poisons, pesticides • Drugs (Hypertensives, Anesthetics, Antihistamines and Birth Control Drugs)