Anatomy Chapter 3 Test Review
Pinocytosis
A form of endocytosis where a cell engulfs liquid into the cell. (cell drinking)
filtration
A process that separates materials based on the size of their particles (the use of hydrostatic pressure to force substances through a membrane)
Phagocytosis
A type of endocytosis in which a cell engulfs large particles or whole cells (cell eating)
Receptor Mediated
A type of endocytosis in which the cell acquires bulk quantities of specific substances, even though they may not be very concentrated in the extracellular fluid.
isotonic
Having the same solute concentration as another solution (no net change)
What is osmosis
a special case of diffusion in which water moves from an area of greater concentration (less osmotic pressure) across a selectively permeable membrane to an area of lower water concentration (greater osmotic pressure)
Solutes move against the concentration gradient, therefore energy is needed.
active transport
define osmosis
diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane
Diffusion = ___________ a concentration gradient (no energy)
down
Diffusion involves the movement of molecules from an area of ___________ concentration to one___________ concentration until equilibrium is reached
greater, lesser
passive transport has a ________ to ________ concentration gradient
high to low concentration gradient
higher osmotic pressure
hypertonic (water will move out of the cell)
lower osmotic pressure
hypotonic (water will move into the cell)
What is the function of the cell membrane
it regulates the movement of substances on and out of the cell
which organ filters the blood and gets rid of waste materials
kidney
What are the three main components of the cell membrane
lipids, proteins, carbohydrates
Endocytosis (into)
molecules that are too large to enter the cell by diffusion or active transport, are conveyed (carried) in a vesicle that forms from a portion of the cell membrane
When a cell is placed in a hypertonic (more concentrated) solution, the water will
move from the inside of the cell to the solution
When a cell is placed in a hypotonic solution (less concentrated), water
moves from the solution to the inside of the cell
Does passive transport require energy
no energy required
faciliated diffusion
no energy required
lipid tail
non-polar (hydrophobic)
Where is DNA located
nucleus
ability of osmosis to lift a volume of water
osmotic pressure
phosphate head
polar, hydrophilic (water loving)
Which molecule in the cell membrane is involved in transporting large molecules across the cell membrane
protein
facilitated diffusion uses membrane ___________ that function as __________ to move molecules like glucose across the cell membrane
proteins, carriers
A type membrane protein that can pump one substance in one direction, while transporting another substance in the opposite direction.
pump transport
Exocytosis (out)
reverse of endocytosis, molecules are transported out of cell
In a saltwater solution, salt is considered the _______.
solute
what is the role of cholesterol
stabilizes the membrane
Endocytosis and exocytosis
types of active transport
Active Transport
uses ATP to move molecules from areas of low concentration to areas of high concentration (AGAINST concentration gradient)
What type of organelle is used during endocytosis and exocytosis?
vesicle
What is lysis
when a cell bursts and will eventually die
facilitated diffusion
when cells use a carrier protein to move substances in and out
capilaries
when veins and artery's meet
glycoprotein is another name for
carbohydrates
proteins
carriers, receptors, pores
hypertonic
cells shrink, water moves out of the cell
hypotonic
cells swell because the water moves into the cell (water wants to move where there is more solute)
Which molecule provides stability to the cell membrane?
cholestrol
What are the 3 major parts of the cell
cytoplasm, nucleus, plasma (cell) membrane (semipermeable)