UNIT 3-BIOLOGY 1
who invented the microscope? Leeuwenhoek
Who first identified cells? Robert Hooke
three major principles of cell theory? 1. all living things are composed of cells 2. cells are the basic unit of life 3. all cells come from preexisting cells
three major characteristics of prokaryotic cells? 1. no nucleus 2. unicellular 3. no membrane-bound organelles
three major characteristics of eukaryotic cells? 1. nucleus 2. uni/multicellular 3. membrane-bound organelles
which organelle creates energy? mitochondria
which organelle creates proteins? rough ER
which organelle processes proteins? golgi apparatus
which organelle is criss-cross and supports the inside of the cell? cytoskeleton
which organelle processes sunlight into sugar? chloroplast
what organelle is the fluid found in all cells? cytoplasm
which organelle holds DNA? nucleus
what organelle provides rigid cell structure? cell wall
what organelle has protein synthesis? rough ER
which organelle makes lipids? smooth ER
which organelle makes ribosomes? nucleolus
which organelle carries parts from one cell to another? ER
which organelle is a sac with fluid in it? vacuole
What is the endosymbiotic theory? explains how eukaryotic cells may have evolved from prokaryotic cells
what stabilizes lipid tails and prevents them from sticking together? cholesterol
what provides passage across membranes? protein
what allows cell to cell recognition? carbohydrates
What model have scientists developed to describe the arrangement of molecules that make up a cell membrane? fluid mosaic model
what part of a phospholipid is polar/hydrophilic? phosphate head
what part of a phospholipid is nonpolar/hydrophobic? lipid tails
what is selective permeability and semi-permeability do? controls what goes in and out of cell
what is a concentration gradient? the difference in concentration between two areas
what is the movement of molecules from high to low? diffusion
what is the diffusion of water called? osmosis
what is diffusion that requires the use of a channel or a carrier protein called? facilitated diffusion
what is passive transport? movement of molecules without usage of energy
what is isotonic? solutions of equal concentration
what is hypertonic? solutions that have a higher concentration of solutes than a cell does what is hypotonic? solutions that have a lower concentration of solutes than a cell does what is active transport? movement of molecules from low to high concentration with the usage of energy
what is turgid? when the water in a cell swells up
what is plasmolysis? shrinking of cytoplasm due to outward osmotic flow of water
what is cytolysis? bursting of cell membrane when a cell cant hold the excessive amount of water
What is phagocytosis? takes in solid food particles
what is pinocytosis? takes in dissolved substances in liquid form
what is endocytosis? process by which the cell takes in materials that are too large to pass through
what is exocytosis? materials are exported out of the cell
what doesn't move across a cell membrane? solutes
what type of transport is diffusion and osmosis? passive transport
what type of transport is endocytosis and exocytosis? active transport
who first labeled animal cells? schleiden
who first labeled plant cells? schwann
who said that all cells come from preexisting cells? virchow
what is an eyepiece? a viewing lens, ocular
what is the arm? thing to hold microscope what are objective lenses? different lenses to see different ways from slide
what is the stage? where slider will be placed
what is a condenser lens? focuses light onto specimen
what is a light source? light passes through to give light
what are stage knobs? moves stage side to side, doesn't adjust focus
what is coarse focus? raises and lowers stage, big movement
what is fine focus? raises and lowers stage, small movement
what is the base? thing to hold microscope
who invented the microscope? Leeuwenhoek
Who first identified cells? Robert Hooke
three major principles of cell theory? 1. all living things are composed of cells 2. cells are the basic unit of life 3. all cells come from preexisting cells
three major characteristics of prokaryotic cells? 1. no nucleus 2. unicellular 3. no membrane-bound organelles
three major characteristics of eukaryotic cells? 1. nucleus 2. uni/multicellular 3. membrane-bound organelles
which organelle creates energy? mitochondria
which organelle creates proteins? rough ER
which organelle processes proteins? golgi apparatus
which organelle is criss-cross and supports the inside of the cell? cytoskeleton
which organelle processes sunlight into sugar? chloroplast
what organelle is the fluid found in all cells? cytoplasm
which organelle holds DNA? nucleus
what organelle provides rigid cell structure? cell wall
what organelle has protein synthesis? rough ER
which organelle makes lipids? smooth ER
which organelle makes ribosomes? nucleolus
which organelle carries parts from one cell to another? ER
which organelle is a sac with fluid in it? vacuole
What is the endosymbiotic theory? explains how eukaryotic cells may have evolved from prokaryotic cells
what stabilizes lipid tails and prevents them from sticking together? cholesterol
what provides passage across membranes? protein
what allows cell to cell recognition? carbohydrates
What model have scientists developed to describe the arrangement of molecules that make up a cell membrane? fluid mosaic model
what part of a phospholipid is polar/hydrophilic? phosphate head
what part of a phospholipid is nonpolar/hydrophobic? lipid tails
what is selective permeability and semi-permeability do? controls what goes in and out of cell
what is a concentration gradient? the difference in concentration between two areas
what is the movement of molecules from high to low? diffusion
what is the diffusion of water called? osmosis
what is diffusion that requires the use of a channel or a carrier protein called? facilitated diffusion
what is passive transport? movement of molecules without usage of energy
what is isotonic? solutions of equal concentration
what is hypertonic? solutions that have a higher concentration of solutes than a cell does what is hypotonic? solutions that have a lower concentration of solutes than a cell does what is active transport? movement of molecules from low to high concentration with the usage of energy
what is turgid? when the water in a cell swells up
what is plasmolysis? shrinking of cytoplasm due to outward osmotic flow of water
what is cytolysis? bursting of cell membrane when a cell cant hold the excessive amount of water
What is phagocytosis? takes in solid food particles
what is pinocytosis? takes in dissolved substances in liquid form
what is endocytosis? process by which the cell takes in materials that are too large to pass through
what is exocytosis? materials are exported out of the cell
what doesn't move across a cell membrane? solutes
what type of transport is diffusion and osmosis? passive transport
what type of transport is endocytosis and exocytosis? active transport
who first labeled animal cells? schleiden
who first labeled plant cells? schwann
who said that all cells come from preexisting cells? virchow
what is an eyepiece? a viewing lens, ocular
what is the arm? thing to hold microscope what are objective lenses? different lenses to see different ways from slide
what is the stage? where slider will be placed
what is a condenser lens? focuses light onto specimen
what is a light source? light passes through to give light
what are stage knobs? moves stage side to side, doesn't adjust focus
what is coarse focus? raises and lowers stage, big movement
what is fine focus? raises and lowers stage, small movement
what is the base? thing to hold microscope