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What are eukaryotic cells?
Cells with a nucleus
What size are eukaryotic cells?
10-100 micrometers
What are prokaryotic cells?
Cells with no nucleus
What size are prokaryotic cells?
1-10 micrometers
Where is the genetic material found in prokaryotic cells?
Cytoplasm and in plasmids
State the function of the nucleus
Controls all activities of the cell, contains genetic information
State the function of mitochondria
Contains the enzymes for cellular respiration
State the function of cell membrane
Contains receptor molecules, selective barrier to control what enters cell
State the function of cytoplasm
Site of chemical reactions
State the function of ribosomes
Site of protein synthesis
Name three subcellular structures a plant cell has that an animal cell does not
Chloroplast, cell walll, vacuole
State the function of chloroplasts
Contain chlorophyll which absorbs light energy for photosynthesis to occur
Where are chloroplasts found?
Only in green parts of the plant
What is the function of the cell wall?
To protect and support the cell
What is a plants cell wall made from?
Cellulose
State the function of the vacuole
Contains cell sap which keeps the cell rigid and the plant upright
What is the cell wall in a prokaryote made from?
Peptidogylcan
State the function of flagella
Tail like structures that allow the cell to move through liquids
State the function of pili
Hairlike structures that allow the cell to attach to structures and transfer genetic material between bacteria
State the function of a slime capsule
Prevents dehydration of cell and protects it from poisonous substances. Also allows cell to stick to smooth surfaces
State the function of plasmids
Circular rings of DNA used to store extra genes
State the advantages of a light microscope
Cheap, portable, simple to prepare sample, natural colour of specimen seen, specimen can be alive
State the advantage of an electron microscope
Specimen can be viewed in higher resolution so subcellular structures can be seen
State the disadvantages of an electron microscope
Expensive, not portable, complex sample preparation, imagine in black and white, specimen must be dead
Define resolution
The smallest distance between two points that can be seen as separate entities
Describe how to observe cells through a light microscope [6]
Move the stage to its lowest position, select the objective lens with the lowest magnification, place slide with cells on it on the stage, raise stage to highest position, lower stage slowly using coarse focus knob until you see your image, turn fine focus knob slowly until object comes into clear focus.
Why do scientists stain cells?
To make the cells clearer or more visible
What does DNA stand for?
Deoxyribonucleic Acid
Define chromosome
A strand of DNA which contains genes
How many chromosomes are in each human cell
46
Define genes
Section of DNA which codes for a specific protein
What is the DNA monomer called?
Nucleotide
What does a nucleotide consist of?
Sugar, phosphate, base
What are the complementary base pairs in DNA?
A-T, C-G
Rank the following in order from smallest to largest: nucleus, cell, gene, chromosome
Gene, chromosome, nucleus, cell
Describe the structure of DNA
Two strands are joined together by complementary base pairs. Forms a double helix shape
What is the purpose of transcription?
To produce mRNA strand
Describe the process of transcription
DNA unzips, complementary base pairs pair up which forms an mRNA strand, mRNA strand leaves the nucleus, DNA zips back up
What is the purpose of translation?
To produce a protein from an mRNA strand
Describe the process of translation
mRNA strand attaches to ribosome, it is read in threes by tRNA, each triplet codes for a separate amino acid (triplet code), amino acids join together to form polymers, the chain of amino acids determines which protein will fold
What is the monomer of proteins?
Amino acids
Define enzyme
A protein which acts as a biological catalyst
State an example of when enzymes are used
Breaking down large molecules into smaller ones in digestion
What is it called when the substrate binds to the enzyme?
Enzyme-substrate complex
What is the active site?
The active site is the region on the enzyme where the substrate binds
What is the substrate?
The molecule that binds to the active site
Which factors affect enzymes?
pH, temperature, enzyme and substrate concentrations
What happens to enzymes if the conditions are too extreme?
They denature and the shape of the active site is changed so the substrate cannot bind to it
Define cellular respiration
The process in which cells make ATP by breaking down organic compounds, occurring in all mitochondria
What kind of reaction is cellular respiration?
Exothermic
Define metabolic rate
The rate at which reactions take place in the body
What are carbohydrates broken down into?
Monosaccharides
Name the monosaccharides
Glucose, fructose, galactose
Why are carbohydrates needed in the body?
Energy store
Why are proteins needed in the body?
Growth and repair of muscle tissue
What do proteins break down into?
Amino acids
What are lipids broken down into?
Glycerol and three fatty acid molecules
What enzyme breaks lipids down?
Lipase
What can happen once food molecules are completely broken down?
They are absorbed into your bloodstream and travel to the cells that need them
Define aerobic respiration
Exothermic reaction that breaks down glucose to release energy using oxygen
What is the balanced symbol equation for aerobic respiration?
C6H12O6 + 6O2 -> 6CO2 + 6H2O
What is transferred in aerobic respiration?
ATP
When does your body use anaerobic respiration?
During strenuous exercise
What is the word equation for anaerobic respiration?
Glucose -> lactic acid
Why do we normally respire aerobically?
Produces more ATP molecules per glucose molecule than anaerobic, lactic acid in anaerobic can cause cramp
Define oxygen debt
The amount of oxygen required to break down lactic acid
What is the word equation for fermentation?
Glucose --> ethanol + carbon dioxide
What organism performs fermentation?
Yeast
What can the products of fermentation be used for?
Make bread, beer, and wine
Define photosynthesis
The process by which green use sunlight to sythnesise foods from carbon dioxide and water.
What is the main producer of food on earth?
Photosynthetic organisms
How does carbon dioxide enter the plant for photosynthesis?
Diffuses from the air through the stomata and into the plant
How does water enter the plant for photosynthesis?
Enters the root from the soil by osmosis
What is the balanced symbol equation for photosynthesis?
6CO2 + 6H2O --> C6H12O6 + 6O2
Describe the two stages of photosynthesis
Stage 1 is the light dependent stage where energy transferred from light splits water molecules into oxygen gas and hydrogen ions.
Stage 2 is the light independent stage where carbon dioxide combines with the hydrogen ions to make glucose
What type of reaction is photosynthesis?
Endothermic
What do plants do with glucose if they don't need to use it immediately?
Convert it to starch
How do you test a leaf for starch?
Boil the leaf to kill it, place leaf in boiling ethanol to remove all the chlorophyll, wash the leaf, place leaf on a white tile, add a few drops of iodine. If starch is present, iodine will turn from brown to blue-black.
How do you prepare a food sample?
Get a piece of food and break it up. Transfer to a beaker and add some distilled water. Stir with glass rod. Filter solution to remove any bits of solid food.
How do you test for sugars?
Add Benedict's reagent to food sample and heat it using water bath. Turns from blue to brick red if sugars are present.
How do you test for lipids?
Add a few ml of ethanol to the food sample. If lipids are present, solution turns from clear to cloudy white.
How do you test for proteins?
Add biuret solution to food sample and shake. If proteins present, then from blue to purple.
What precaution should be taken when testing for proteins and why?
Handle the Biuret solution with care as it contains copper sulfate and sodium hydroxide
How can you test if a plant is photosynthesising?
Test it for starch
How can you prove light is needed for photosynthesis?
Take a destarched plant and cover part of its leaves with black card so light can't reach this part of the plant. Place plant in sunlight for several hours, remove the card, test the leaf for starch
How can you prove carbon dioxide is needed for photosynthesis?
Take a destarched plant, place in polythene bag, add pot of soda lime inside bag, seal bag, place plant in sunlight for several hours, test it for starch. It should be negative.
How can you prove oxygen is given off in photosynthesis?
Place upturned test tube above pondweed. Allow plant to photosynthesis until test tube is full. Test the tube for oxygen using glowing splint
How can you investigate the effects of light intensity on photosynthesis?
Take a boiling tube filled with sodium hydrogen carbonate solution and pondweed and place it 10cm away from LED light source. Count the number of bubbles given off in one minute. Repeat experiment using different distances from the light source
What is the problem with counting gas bubbles when testing light intensity in photosynthesis?
Bubbles can move too fast to count accurately and bubbles aren't always the same volume
State the inverse square law
Light intensity is directly proportional to 1/distance^2
If you double the distance from the light source in photosynthesis, what happens to the light intensity?
Falls by four times
What are the limiting factors of photosynthesis?
light intensity, carbon dioxide, and temperature
What are the benefits of using a water bath?
Reduces fire risk and temperature can be set to an exact amount
Define diffusion
The movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration
Give an example of diffusion
Carbon dioxide diffusing out of respiring cells
At what point is the concentration gradient zero?
When concentration of particles is the same everywhere
Why is diffusion a passive process?
Energy is not transferred
What factors would increase the rate of diffusion?
Decreasing the distance particles need to move, increasing the concentration gradient, increasing the surface area, increase temperature
Define osmosis
The movement of water molecules from an area of high water potential to an area of low water potential across a partially permeable membrane
What is water potential?
The concentration of free water molecules