Cells, Organs & Tissues, RET-SUL
Even if you feel you have nothing in common with a stinkbug or a ficus, you're guaranteed to share one crucial aspect of life with these beings: you are all made up of cells, the fundamental molecules of life, of which all living things are composed. As an individual unit, the cell is capable of metabolizing its own nutrients, synthesizing many types of molecules, providing its own energy, and replicating itself. In a multicellular organism, cooperative assemblies of similar cells form tissues, and a cooperation between tissues in turn forms organs, which carry out the functions necessary to sustain the life of an organism.
Cells, Organs & Tissues Encyclopedia Articles By Title
Anders Adolf Retzius was an anatomist and anthropologist who is best known for his pioneer studies in craniometry......
Magnus Gustaf Retzius was a Swedish anatomist and anthropologist best-known for his studies of the histology of......
Rh blood group system, system for classifying blood groups according to the presence or absence of the Rh antigen,......
rhabdom, transparent, crystalline receptive structure found in the compound eyes of arthropods. The rhabdom lies......
rhizome, horizontal underground plant stem capable of producing the shoot and root systems of a new plant. Rhizomes......
rhodopsin, pigment-containing sensory protein that converts light into an electrical signal. Rhodopsin is found......
rib, any of several pairs of narrow, curved strips of bone (sometimes cartilage) attached dorsally to the vertebrae......
rib cage, in vertebrate anatomy, basketlike skeletal structure that forms the chest, or thorax, and is made up......
ribosomal RNA (rRNA), molecule in cells that forms part of the protein-synthesizing organelle known as a ribosome......
ribosome, particle that is present in large numbers in all living cells and serves as the site of protein synthesis.......
Dickinson Woodruff Richards was an American physiologist who shared the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine......
Charles Richet was a French physiologist who won the 1913 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his discovery......
rod, one of two types of photoreceptive cells in the retina of the eye in vertebrate animals. Rod cells function......
Martin Rodbell was an American biochemist who was awarded the 1994 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for his......
root, in botany, that part of a vascular plant normally underground. Its primary functions are anchorage of the......
root pressure, in plants, force that helps to drive fluids upward into the water-conducting vessels (xylem). It......
James E. Rothman is an American biochemist and cell biologist who discovered the molecular machinery involved in......
rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER), series of connected flattened sacs, part of a continuous membrane organelle......
royal jelly, thick, white, nutritious substance fed to bee larvae. Secreted from glands in the heads of worker......
Florence Rena Sabin was an American anatomist and investigator of the lymphatic system who was considered to be......
saccade, fast, intermittent eye movement that redirects gaze. Saccades may involve the eyes alone or, more commonly,......
Julius von Sachs was a German botanist whose experimental study of nutrition, tropism, and transpiration of water......
sacroiliac, weight-bearing synovial joint that articulates, or connects, the hip bone with the the sacrum at the......
sacrum, wedge-shaped triangular bone at the base of the vertebral column, above the caudal (tail) vertebrae, or......
saliva, a thick, colourless, opalescent fluid that is constantly present in the mouth of humans and other vertebrates.......
salivary gland, any of the organs that secrete saliva, a substance that moistens and softens food, into the oral......
sap, watery fluid of plants. Cell sap is a fluid found in the vacuoles (small cavities) of the living cell; it......
sapwood, outer, living layers of the secondary wood of trees, which engage in transport of water and minerals to......
sarcoplasmic reticulum, intracellular system of closed saclike membranes involved in the storage of intracellular......
Paolo Sarpi was an Italian patriot, scholar, and state theologian during Venice’s struggle with Pope Paul V. Between......
sartorius muscle, (from the Latin sartor, “mender”), long, narrow, ribbonlike thigh muscle beginning at the front......
scale, in zoology, small plate or shield forming part of the outer skin layers of certain animals. Scales provide......
scapula, either of two large bones of the shoulder girdle in vertebrates. In humans they are triangular and lie......
Randy W. Schekman is an American biochemist and cell biologist who contributed to the discovery of the genetic......
Moritz Schiff was a German physiologist who investigated the effects produced by removal of the thyroid gland.......
Schmidt sting pain index, measure of the relative amount of pain that various insects of the order Hymenoptera......
Max Schultze was a German zoologist and cytologist who defined the cell as a mass of protoplasm with a nucleus......
Schwann cell, any of the cells in the peripheral nervous system that produce the myelin sheath around neuronal......
Theodor Schwann was a German physiologist who founded modern histology by defining the cell as the basic unit of......
sciatic nerve, largest and thickest nerve of the human body that is the principal continuation of all the roots......
sclerenchyma, in plants, support tissue composed of any of various kinds of hard woody cells. Mature sclerenchyma......
sclerotin, a dark-brown biological pigment formed by an enzyme-catalyzed tanning of protein. Sclerotin is found......
scrotum, in the male reproductive system, a thin external sac of skin that is divided into two compartments; each......
seashell, hard exoskeleton of marine mollusks such as snails, bivalves, and chitons that serves to protect and......
sebaceous gland, small oil-producing gland present in the skin of mammals. Sebaceous glands are usually attached......
second messenger, molecule inside cells that acts to transmit signals from a receptor to a target. The term second......
secretion, in biology, production and release of a useful substance by a gland or cell; also, the substance produced.......
semen, fluid that is emitted from the male reproductive tract and that contains sperm cells, which are capable......
semicircular canal, any of three loop-shaped organs in the inner ear that help control balance and stability by......
semilunar valve, either of two pocketlike half-moon-shaped structures located between the left ventricle and the......
seminal vesicle, either of two elongated saclike glands that secrete their fluid contents into the ejaculatory......
semispinalis muscle, any of the deep muscles just to either side of the spine that arise from the transverse processes......
senses, means by which animals detect and respond to stimuli in their internal and external environments. The senses......
sensory neuron, nerve cell that carries information about changes in external and internal environments to the......
human sensory reception, means by which humans react to changes in external and internal environments. Ancient......
serum, the portion of plasma remaining after coagulation of blood, during which process the plasma protein fibrinogen......
serum albumin, protein found in blood plasma that helps maintain the osmotic pressure between the blood vessels......
sex chromosome, either of a pair of chromosomes that determine whether an individual is male or female. The sex......
sex hormone, a chemical substance produced by a sex gland or other organ that has an effect on the sexual features......
Sir Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer was an English physiologist and inventor of the prone-pressure method (Schafer......
Sir Charles Scott Sherrington was an English physiologist whose 50 years of experimentation laid the foundations......
shoulder, in anatomy, the joint between the arm, or forelimb, and the trunk, together with the adjacent tissue,......
sieve element, in vascular plants, elongated living cells of the phloem, the nuclei of which have fragmented and......
sigmoid colon, a terminal section of the large intestine that connects the descending colon to the rectum; its......
skeletal muscle, in vertebrates, most common of the three types of muscle in the body. Skeletal muscles are attached......
skeleton, the supportive framework of an animal body. The skeleton of invertebrates, which may be either external......
human skeleton, the internal skeleton that serves as a framework for the body. This framework consists of many......
human skin, in human anatomy, the covering, or integument, of the body’s surface that both provides protection......
skull, skeletal framework of the head of vertebrates, composed of bones or cartilage, which form a unit that protects......
small intestine, a long, narrow, folded or coiled tube extending from the stomach to the large intestine; it is......
smell, the detection and identification by sensory organs of airborne chemicals. The concept of smell, as it applies......
smooth endoplasmic reticulum (SER), meshwork of fine disklike tubular membrane vesicles, part of a continuous membrane......
smooth muscle, muscle that shows no cross stripes under microscopic magnification. It consists of narrow spindle-shaped......
sodium-potassium pump, in cellular physiology, a protein that has been identified in many cells that maintains......
soft palate, in mammals, structure consisting of muscle and connective tissue that forms the roof of the posterior......
soleus muscle, a flat, broad muscle of the calf of the leg lying just beneath the gastrocnemius muscle. It arises......
soma, in biology, all the living matter of an animal or a plant except the reproductive, or germ, cells. The distinction......
sound reception, response of an organism’s aural mechanism, the ear, to a specific form of energy change, or sound......
- Introduction
- Invertebrate Organs
- Tympanal Organs, Hearing, Ears
- Electrophysiology, Hearing, Perception
- Fishes, Amphibians, Mechanisms
- Hearing, Ears, Sensory Cells
- Amphibians, Hearing, Sensitivity
- Lizard Hearing, Acoustic Signals, Vibrations
- Turtle Hearing, Low Frequency, Adaptations
- Auditory Perception, Bird Hearing, Acoustic Signals
- Mammal Hearing, Frequency, Acoustics
- Echolocation, Bats, Sonar
- Echolocation, Mammals, Bats
Lazzaro Spallanzani was an Italian physiologist who made important contributions to the experimental study of bodily......
sperm, male reproductive cell, produced by most animals. With the exception of nematode worms, decapods (e.g.,......
spermatic cord, either of a pair of tubular structures in the male reproductive system that support the testes......
spermatogenesis, the origin and development of the sperm cells within the male reproductive organs, the testes.......
Roger Wolcott Sperry was an American neurobiologist. He was a corecipient with David Hunter Hubel and Torsten Nils......
sphincter muscle, any of the ringlike muscles surrounding and able to contract or close a bodily passage or opening.......
spinal cord, major nerve tract of vertebrates, extending from the base of the brain through the canal of the spinal......
spinal nerve, in vertebrates, any one of many paired peripheral nerves that arise from the spinal cord. In humans......
spinalis muscle, any of the deep muscles of the back near the vertebral column that, as part of the erector spinae......
spiracle, in arthropods, the small external opening of a trachea (respiratory tube) or a book lung (breathing organ......
Ernest Henry Starling was a British physiologist whose prolific contributions to a modern understanding of body......
Ralph M. Steinman was a Canadian immunologist and cell biologist who shared the 2011 Nobel Prize for Physiology......
stem, in botany, the plant axis that bears buds and shoots with leaves and, at its basal end, roots. The stem conducts......
stem cell, an undifferentiated cell that can divide to produce some offspring cells that continue as stem cells......
Nicolaus Steno was a geologist and anatomist whose early observations greatly advanced the development of geology.......
Elizabeth Stern was a Canadian-born American pathologist, noted for her work on the stages of a cell’s progression......
sternum, in the anatomy of tetrapods (four-limbed vertebrates), elongated bone in the centre of the chest that......
stolon, in biology, a special slender horizontal branch serving to propagate the organism. In botany a stolon—also......
stomach, saclike expansion of the digestive system, between the esophagus and the small intestine; it is located......
stomate, any of the microscopic openings or pores in the epidermis of leaves and young stems. Stomata are generally......
sucking, drawing of fluids into the mouth by creating a vacuum pressure in the oral cavity. Mammalian infants rely......
John Sulston was a British biologist who, with Sydney Brenner and H. Robert Horvitz, won the Nobel Prize for Physiology......