Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Grab Bag
Grab Bag II
100

This type of lipid forms bilayers in water.

What is a phospholipid?

100

A cell organelle found in all cell types.

What is a ribosome?

100

This protein allows free water movement in and out of a cell.

What is an aquaporin?

100

This is the domain containing eukaryotic cells.

What is Eukarya?

100

A solution where water moves into a cell

What is a hypotonic solution?

200

The most common monosaccharide.

What is glucose?

200

DNA is stored here, in a eukaryotic cell.

What is the nucleus?

200

This substance buffers the cell membrane, making the membrane more tolerant to temperature changes.

What is cholesterol?

200

This organelle is found in photosynthesizing organisms.

What is a chloroplast?

200

This is the part of the amino acid molecule that gives its unique characteristics, distinguishing it as "hydrophobic", "acidic", or "nonpolar".

What is the R group?

300

Subjecting proteins to high temperatures can lead to this.

What is denaturing? 
300

This microscope type is the best one to use to view a human red blood cell.

What is a light microscope?

300

In this type of solution, water will leave the cell and the cell will shrink.

What is a hypertonic solution?

300

This reaction involving water occurs when a bond is broken during the separation of two molecules.

What is hydrolysis?

300

This type of protein is on the edge of the cell membrane, and does not penetrate through the membrane.

What is a peripheral protein?

400

This form of starch is unbranched.

What is amylose?

400

If this organelle was missing, molecules would not be able to be packaged up and shipped to another place in the cell.

What is the Golgi apparatus?

400

This is the regulatory process by which cells maintain constant osmotic pressure in different solutions.

What is osmoregulation?

400

This occurs to a plant cell in a hypertonic solution, when the cell membrane pulls away from the cell wall.

What is plasmolysis?

400
To solidify a liquid oil, this element must be added to it.

What is hydrogen?

500

This DNA base always pairs with guanine.

What is cytosine?

500

These proteins "walk" on cells on the cytoskeleton, carrying materials around the cell.

What is a motor protein?

500

An example of this is when LDL cholesterol binds to transmembrane receptors and enters a cell.

What is receptor-mediated endocytosis?

500

The difference between these two sugars is in the position of the carbonyl group.

What is aldose and ketose?

500

A passive transport process where a transmembrane protein is needed to move a substance into or out of a cell.

What is facilitated diffusion?

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