skeleton

n=17


a: skeleton ~
b: skyscraper

What:

"What gives buildings their super strength? The secret is in their bones. Well, sort of. Buildings are built around a steel framework. This framework holds the weight and allows the builders to go as high as they want."


Useful?
Writer: Not Stated
LCC:
Where:
Date: Sep 1 2015 9:00 PM



a: skeleton ~
b: house frame

What:


Useful?
Writer: Not Stated
LCC:
Where: Reference Link Has Evaporated
Date: Sep 1 2015 9:06 PM



a: Skeleton ~
b: a frame

What:

"The skeleton is like a frame that has muscles, blood vessels, and skin wrapped around it."


Useful?
Writer: Not Stated
LCC:
Where: Reference Link Has Evaporated
Date: Sep 1 2015 9:07 PM



a: skeleton ~
b: the frame of a house

What:

"Your skeleton is like the frame of a house. Without the frame, a house would fall down. Without bones, you couldn't stand up."


Useful?
Writer: Not Stated
LCC:
Where:
Date: Sep 1 2015 9:10 PM



a: skeleton ~
b: internal scaffolding

What:

"The skeleton is like an internal scaffolding within the body"


Useful?
Writer: Not Stated
LCC:
Where:
Date: Sep 1 2015 9:14 PM



a: Skeleton ~
b: building set

What:

"The human skeleton is like a building set with many
little pieces. It is assembled from more than 200
bones, about half of which belong to the hands and
feet alone. Sometimes however, skeletal development in the embryo can become disordered. Some people are born with an additional finger, while the fingers of others are too short, for example. Even whole bones can be missing, or joints do not exist and bone elements are therefore fused together."


Useful?
Writer: Not Stated
LCC:
Where:
Date: Sep 1 2015 9:18 PM


Cellular Tensegrity Model

a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: a network of muscles tendons and ligaments

What:

"Some argue that cytoskeleton is like a network of muscles tendons and ligaments without bones. Where are the compression elements? Cell shape in tissue depends on the ability of ECM anchoring to withstand compression, but it only helps the internal compression struts to refine cell shape. This situation reminds a camp tent. Surface membrane is made stiff by placing it under tension. It can be accomplished by various means: pushing up tend poles. Pulling membrane against fixed tent pegs in the ground and/or tethering the membrane to an overlying tree branch. The last action is complementary to the first one. If you disrupt the microtubules (tent poles), their function is transferred to the cell adhesive anchors (tree branches). If tension elements are chemically disrupted (microfilaments or intermediate filaments) cell tractional forces exerted on ECM adhesion decrease. The ability of individual microtubules to resist buckling when compressed is greatly enhanced by presence of lateral tensile connections."


Useful?
Writer: Vladimir Vondrejs
LCC:
Where:
Date: Dec 28 2013 8:49 PM



a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: road system

What: "The Cytoskeleton is like the road systems or highways in the city, it's how proteins and other materialsare transported around the cell."

Useful?
Writer: Not Stated
LCC:
Where: Reference Link Has Evaporated
Date: Dec 28 2013 8:52 PM


The Nervous System Of The Cell?

a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: a micro myofascial system

What:

The famous neuroscientist C.S. Sherrington observed the cytoskeleton may act as the nervous system of
single cell organisms. Synaptic connections are formed and regulated by cytoskeletal polymers,including microtubules.

Penrose and Hameroff speculated that the cytoskeleton is like a micro myofascial system, within each cell. This micro myofascial system is made up of a skeleton of tubules filled with fluid and surrounded and interconnected from cell to cell by a viscous ground substance


Useful?
Writer: John F. Barnes, PT
LCC:
Where:
Date: Dec 28 2013 8:56 PM


An Internal Bra?

a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: bra

What:

"The cytoskeleton is like a bra because it provides support."


Useful?
Writer: Jennifer L. Hillemann
LCC:
Where: Reference Link Has Evaporated
Date: Dec 28 2013 8:58 PM


Internal Support

a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: roaler coaster frame

What:

"The cytoskeleton is like the frame of the roller coaster."


Useful?
Writer: Chris "Bama" Fronczek
LCC:
Where:
Date: Dec 28 2013 8:57 PM



a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: the wood frame of a house

What:

"The cytoskeleton is like the wood frame of a house," she says. "It gives the cell structural integrity. The cytoskeleton is very much involved with anything to do with cell movement. The aberrant cell movement involved in cancer integrally involves the cytoskeleton, and makes it a very good target for many anti-cancer drugs, because you can stop the movement."


Useful?
Writer: Kim Middleton, Ph.D
LCC:
Where:
Date: Dec 28 2013 9:03 PM


As Solid State Material.....

a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: a slowly-flowing two-dimensional glass

What:

"An equivalent analogy would be that the cytoskeleton is like a slowly-flowing two-dimensional glass, which cannot hold any shear elastic energy indefinitely. However, if fast deformation is imposed, it can manifest a large instantaneous shear modulus. This happens if the imposed deformation rate far exceeds the cytoskeleton remodeling rate, which theoretically should proceed (albeit very slowly) in the direction of relaxing the in-plane shear elastic energy according to the thermodynamic principle of maximum dissipation."


Useful?
Writer: S. Suresh et al.
LCC:
Where:
Date: Dec 28 2013 9:06 PM


This Guy Too

a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: a network of muscles tendons and ligaments

What:


Useful?
Writer: Donald E. Ingber
LCC:
Where:
Date: Dec 28 2013 9:10 PM



a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: strong beams and columns

What:

"A cytoskeleton is like a factory building that has strong beams and columns that hold up its walls and roof."


Useful?
Writer: castilloga13
LCC:
Where:
Date: Dec 28 2013 9:11 PM



a: Cytoskeleton ~
b: a cell's internal frame

What:

But it's not rigid like the frame of a house or building. It is made of long flexible molecules that can bend and
twist if the cell is compressed or sheared.


Useful?
Writer:
LCC:
Where: Reference Link Has Evaporated
Date: Dec 28 2013 9:15 PM


Cytoskeleton

a: cytoskeleton ~
b: bus

What:

It helps move things around in the cell.


Useful?
Writer: John Green
LCC:
Where: Reference Link Has Evaporated
Date: Nov 12 2014 6:20 PM



Green Venn Diagram

METAMIA is a free database of analogy and metaphor. Anyone can contribute or search. The subject matter can be anything. Science is popular, but poetry is encouraged. The goal is to integrate our fluid muses with the stark literalism of a relational database. Metamia is like a girdle for your muses, a cognitive girdle.