Unit 2
Eukaryotic
A cell characterized by the presence of a nucleus and other membrane-bound organelles. Eukaryotes can be unicellular (protists) or multicellular (fungi, plants and animals).
What is the purpose of the placebo?
A dummy pill that gives the client a more (false) psychological benefit vs. a real physiological benefit.
What did studies of glucose transport in liposomes reveal?
A liposome wont transport glucose unless it has a glucose transporter incorporated into its membrane.
Flagella
A long, whip-like filament that helps in cell motility. Many bacteria are flagellated, and sperm are flagellated.
asexual reproduction
A reproductive process that involves only one parent and produces offspring that are identical to the parent.
What is an ABC transporter?
ABC stands for ATP- Binding Cassette. Use energy donated by ATP to transport certain ions, sugars, and polypeptides, and amino acids.
Metabolism
All of the chemical reactions that occur within an organism
Community
All the different populations that live together in an area
Chloroplast
An organelle found in plant and algae cells where photosynthesis occurs
Autotroph
An organism that makes its own food (producer)
Prokaryotic
An organism whose cells do not have an enclosed nucleus, such as bacteria.
Desmosomes
Anchoring junctions that prevent cells from being pulled apart
What is the most basic level of chemical organization?
Atom: smallest unit of life.
What type of bonding links peripheral proteins to either surface of the plasma membrane?
Bound to exposed regions of integral proteins with noncovalent interactions.
What is I?
Capsule
What is E?
Cell Wall
What is G?
Cell Wall (p)
Pinocytosis
Cell drinking
Phagocytosis
Cell eating
What is M?
Centrioles (a)
Evolution
Change in a kind of organism over time; process by which modern organisms have descended from ancient organisms.
What is B?
Chloroplast (p)
What is E?
Chromatin (a)
What is M?
Chromatin (p)
What is G?
DNA
What molecule is hereditary information encoded in all living organisms?
DNA
What is C?
Dead bodies
What is B?
Decomposes (bacteria, fungi)
Osmosis
Diffusion of water through a selectively permeable membrane
What is I?
ER (a)
What is P?
ER (p)
active transport
Energy-requiring process that moves material across a cell membrane against a concentration difference
What is A?
Fimbriae
What is C?
Flagellum
To determine the location of a specific protein in a cell using colored stain, what microscope technique will you use?
Florescence microscope.
The function of cholesterol within membranes requires interactions with both hydrophobic and hydrophilic parts of phospholipids, how is this function fulfilled.
Fluidity buffer. Amphicatic. Acts as a "spacer" between hydrocarbon chains.
What is G?
Food
I am neither prokaryotic nor photosynthetic, and I obtain nutrients by secreting digestive enzymes into my environment. What am I?
Fungi
What is E?
Golgi Complex (p)
Hypotonic
Having a lower concentration of solute than another solution
What is H, I, K?
Heat
What would be the ultimate effect on the ecosystem if decomposers were eliminated?
If decomposers did not exist, nutrients would remain locked up in wastes and dead bodies and the supply of elements required by living systems would soon be exhausted.
Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum
Lacks ribosomes; lipid synthesis; drug detoxification; calcium ion storage.
Nucleus
Large structure surrounded by double membrane, contains nucleolus and chromosomes. Information in DNA is transcribed in RNA synthesis; specifies cell proteins.
Who was the first scientist to view living cells?
Leeuwenhoek
What is J?
Light Energy
What is J?
Mitochondrion (a)
What is C?
Mitochondrion (p)
facilitated diffusion
Movement of specific molecules across cell membranes through protein channels
Endoplasmic Reticulum
Network of internal membranes extending through cytoplasm. Synthesizes lipids and modifies many proteins; origin of intracellular transport vesicles that carry proteins.
cell theory
New cells are produced from existing cells
What is H?
Nuclear Area
What is C?
Nuclear Envelope (a)
What is J?
Nuclear Envelope (p)
What is B?
Nuclear Pores (a)
What is I?
Nuclear Pores (p)
What is D?
Nucleolus (a)
What is L?
Nucleolus (p)
What is F?
Nucleus (a)
What is K?
Nucleus (p)
What types of molecules is least likely and which types are likely to cross a cellular membrane by simple diffusion?
Oxygen and carbon dioxide. Polar molecules will not cross. Large polar molecules will not cross. Ions of any size will not cross.
What is K?
Peroxisome (a)
What is A?
Peroxisomes (p)
What is A?
Plant litter, wastes
What is F?
Plasma Membrane
What is F?
Plasma Membrane (p)
General structure of plasma membrane.
Plasma membrane physically separates the inside of a cell from the outside world and defines it as a distance entity. Complex dynamic structures composed of lipids and protein molecules that are in constant motion.
What is D?
Plasmodesmata (p)
What is E?
Primary consumer (caterpillar)
Exocytosis
Process by which a cell releases large amounts of material
What is F?
Producer (plant)
What is D?
Ribosome
What is A?
Ribosomes (a)
What is H?
Ribosomes (p)
Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum
Ribosomes stud outer surface. Manufactures proteins.
What is G?
Rough ER (a)
What is N?
Rough ER (p)
Who proposed the fluid moasic model of cell membrane structure?
S. Johathan Singer and Garth Nicolson in 1972
What is D?
Secondary consumer (bird)
What is included in the domain eukarya?
Single-celled protists, Kindgoms Plantae, Fungi, and Animalia
What is O?
Smooth ER (p)
What is H?
Smooth Er (a)
What is B?
Storage granule
What are the functions of the cell membrane?
Surface for chemical reactions; adhere to communicate with other cells; regulate passage of materials; transmit signals; part of energy storage and transfer system
endomembrane system
The collection of membranes inside and around a eukaryotic cell, related either through direct physical contact or by the transfer of membranous vesicles.
independent variable/ control group
The experimental factor that is manipulated; the variable whose effect is being studied.
What is homeostasis and why is it important? Provide an example.
The maintenance of constant internal conditions in an organism and it is important because without it your body would not be able to function correctly. Example: regulation of glucose.
How does the sodium potassium pump work?
The process of moving sodium and potassium ions across the cell membrane is an active transport process involving the hydrolysis of ATP to provide the necessary energy.
Taxonomy
The scientific study of how living things are classified
Ecology
The study of how living things interact with each other and their environment
Biology
The study of life
Identify two adaptations in living animals.
Thick fur in a polar bear allows for withstanding frigid temperatures. Feathers and light weight bones allow for birds to fly.
Why are membrane bound organelles faster facilitators of chemical reactions in a cell?
Things are kept in close proximity, so it is easier to pass items from one area to the next.
transmembrane proteins
Transmembrane proteins are integral proteins that extend all the way through the membrane.
How is a transmembrane protein different from other membrane proteins?
Use of alpha helix or a beta pleated sheath (rolled).
What types of molecules are permeable to biological membranes?
Water (slowly), small nonpolar (hydrophobic) molecules: oxygen, carbon dioxide, glucose
Population
a group of organisms of the same species populating a given area
sexual reproduction
a method of reproduction involving the fusion of female gamete (ovum) and male gamete (spermatozoon), resulting in a zygote that develops into an offspring genetically different from the parent organism.
fluid moasic model
a plasma membrane with components constantly in motion, sliding past one another within the lipid bilayer
Why is it advantageous for cells to be small?
a small cell has a small volume relative to surface area, thereby increasing efficient transport
What is a hypothesis?
a testable statement that explains something observed
Cell theory states
all living things are composed of cells, cells are the basic units of structure and function in living things, all cells are produced from other cells
Basic Themes of Biology
biological systems interact; structure and function are interrelated in all biological systems; information must be transmitted within organisms and among organisms; life depends on a continuous input of energy from the sun because every activity of a living cell or organism requires energy; evolution is the process by which populations of organisms change over time.
adhering junction
cell junction composed of adhesion proteins; anchors cells to each other and extracellular matrix
Cellular Organization
cell, tissue, organ, organ system, organism
Plasmodesmata
channels between adjacent plant cells
charistics of life
composed of cells; organisms grow and develop; regulate their metabolic processes; respond to stimuli; reproduce; evolve and become adapted to their environment.
Chromosomes
composed of chromatin, a complex of DNA and protein; condense during cell division, becoming visible as rodlike structures. Contain genes (units of hereditary information) that govern structure and activity of a cell.
what is the variable being tested?
dependent variable/ experimental group
Why does electron microscopes have a much higher resolution than either the human eye or any light microscope?
electrons have short wavelengths which gives them high resolutions.
cell wall
extracellular structure that encloses the entire cell, including the plasma membrane.
anchoring junctions
fasten cells together into sheets
Name one benefit sexual reproduction has over asexual reproduction.
genetic variation.
What is O?
golgi comples (a)
Ribosomes
granuels composed on RNA and protein; some attached to ER some free in cytosol. Synthesize polypeptides in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
Hyper tonic
having a higher osmotic pressure than a particular fluid, typically a body fluid or intracellular fluid.
Biological growth
involves an increase in the size of individual cells of an organism, in the number of cells or in both
What is P?
lysosome
plasma membrane
membrane boundary of cell. Encloses cell contents; regulates movement of materials in and out of cell; helps maintain cell shape; communicates with other cells.
Lysosomes
membranous sacs (in animals); contain enzymes that break down ingested materials; break down damaged or unneeded organelles and proteins.
Vacuoles
membranous sacs (mostly in plants, fungi, algae); store materials, wastes, water; maintain hydrostatic pressure.
Peroxisomes
membranous sacs containing a variety of enzymes. Site of many diverse metabolic reactions: ex: break down fatty acids.
What is N?
microtubules (a)
capsule
mixture of layers of carbst proteins in prokaryotic cells.
simple diffusion
movement of a solute from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration
ultimate source of genetic variation
mutations and natural selection
Heterotroph
organism that obtains energy from the foods it consumes; also called a consumer
integral proteins
penetrate the hydrophobic interior of the lipid bilayer. "imbeded in"
What is L?
plasma membrane (a)
osmotic pressure
pressure that must be applied to prevent osmotic movement across a selectively permeable membrane
Endocytosis
process by which a cell takes material into the cell by infolding of the cell membrane
You discover an organism that is eukaryotic, unicellular, and photosynthetic. Based on this evidence how would you classify this organism?
protist
gap junctions
provide cytoplasmic channels between adjacent animal cells
The nucleoli contain chromosomal regions that specialize in making what nucleotide molecule?
rRNA (ribosomal RNA)
Mitochondria
sacs consisting of two membranes; inner membrane is folded to form cristae and encloses matrix. Site of most reactions of cellular respiration; transformation of energy originating from glucose or lipids into ATP energy.
Golgi Complex/Apparatus
stacks of flattened membrane sacs. Modifies proteins; packages secreted proteins; sorts other proteins to vacuoles and other organelles.
passive transport
the movement of substances across a cell membrane without the use of energy by the cell
Magnification
the ratio of an object's image size to its real size
Explain the importance of information transfer in living systems.
the transfer or genetic info allows for reproduction and for life to exist. DNA to mRNA; mRNA to proteins; signals in protein to the process in rough ER or cytoplasm.
Finbriae
used to adhere to one another or to attach to cell surfaces or organisms.
Nucleoplasm
viscous fluid enclosed by the nuclear envelope
Isotonic
when the concentration of two solutions is the same