CELLS: The Dog Stole the Professor’s Notes
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About this ebook
A quick review of cell structure and function with definitions, terms, core concepts and questions. Alpha Dog’s Stolen notes provide a great opportunity to quickly prepare for class ahead of time, learn more during lecture, and improve your grade.
The notes also provide questions to guide and check learning along the way. Reading and reviewing these notes will speed and enhance your learning, find holes in your knowledge, and provide an additional perspective on the subject. If you can’t save study time, energy, and get your money’s worth from the professor's notes then it is time to switch majors.
Additional links to videos and resources are provided, the same ones the professor uses in his classroom.
Topics include cell structure, organelles, organelles function, types of transport across the membrane, cell cycle, cell division, and cell death.
Carson Robertson DC
Dr. Carson Robertson is a native of central Montana and obtained his bachelor's degree at the University of Montana. He subsequently earned his chiropractic degree from Northwestern Health Sciences University in Minnesota in 2004. While an athlete in school, he saw the benefits of chiropractic after an injury sidelined him. With that in mind, his clinic has a special emphasis and expertise in athletic injuries.Dr. Robertson has also been an adjunct faculty member at Paradise Valley Community College since 2009, where he teaches Anatomy and Physiology classes. Education, information, articles, multimedia teaching materials and videos bridge the PVCC classroom and the clinic. His lovable and demanding Pug helped improve the Anatomy and Physiology curriculum, leading to the Alpha Dog Education Series.When the doctor is not working he can often be found running the trails of South Mountain. He has run multiple marathons and ultra marathons, including the Crown King Scramble 50K, Javelina 100K and Javelina 100 Miler.
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CELLS - Carson Robertson DC
Cell Structure Review - Quick Review Notes Chapter 3
Introduction
The human body consists of 75 trillion cells that look and act very different. Nerve cells look and act different than skin cells. Differences in cell shape make different functions possible. (Nerve vs. Skin)
Example of a Typical Cell
A cell consists of three main parts: the nucleus, the cytoplasm and the cell membrane. The cytoplasm is the fluid that the organelles are contained in. The fluidity of the cytoplasm allows for movement of organelles, cell products and other cellular transport. Organelles are specialized cells that perform a specialized function.
Cell Membrane is the barrier that separates the outside from the inside. The cell membrane communicates with neighboring cells and tissue because of complex adaptations on the outside of the cell membrane. It controls what can pass through the