Vocabulary
Processes
Concepts
The Cell Membrane
Wild Card
100

This is a temporary state of existence in which there is a higher concentration of something on one side of a cell member

What is a concentration gradient?

100

These types of molecules are capable of simple diffusion

What are small/uncharged?

100

Cells in _______________ solutions will stay the same size

What is isotonic?

100

Nature always tends towards ________________

What is 'equilibrium?'

100

This is the only major biomolecule NOT found in the cell membrane

What are nucleic acids?

200

These types of membrane proteins act as nametags for each type of cell

What are cell surface markers?

200

This term refers to the creation of a vesicle to move a large substance into a cell

What is endocytosis?

200

Cell transport is necessary in order for living organism to maintain ___________________

What is homeostasis?

200

This term refers to the movement of water molecules from an area of higher [] to an area of lower [] that move through aquapores in the cell

What is osmosis?

200

These types of molecules go through facilitated diffusion

What are large/charged molecules?

300

Name and define the two parts of every solution

What is 1) solute - whatever is broken down/dissolved into solution and 2) solvent - whatever breaks down and dissolves something else in solution

300

Cells go through this process to reach equilibrium on either side of a cell membrane

What is diffusion/osmosis/facilitated diffusion/passive transport? 

300

This type of membrane protein collects information about the environment outside of the cell and relays that info back to the nucleus

What are receptor proteins?

300

These are the three jobs of the cell membrane:

What is 1) protection, 2) regulation/filter, 3) structure/shape?

300

All cell membranes are made mostly out of this biomolecule

What are lipids (phospholipids)?

400
These are the three major jobs of the Sodium-Potassium pump

What are 1) nerve signaling, 2) kidney function, 3) muscular contractions?

400

Membrane pumps move substances from areas of ____ concentration to areas of _____ concentration

What is 'from areas of low concentration to areas of higher concentration?'

400

Nature always tends to move things from _____ concentration to ___________ concentration

What is 'higher concentration to lower concentration?'

400

A cell in a hypotonic solution will

What is 'swell and burst?'

400

Briefly explain the difference between the two types of transport proteins

What is 'channel proteins act like open doorways and do not use energy to allow substance to move from high to low []; carrier proteins act like locked doors and require energy to physically change their shape and move molecules from low to high []?'

500

Give the full definition of facilitated diffusion

What is 'the movement of large or charged molecules from an area of high [] to an area of lower [] through channel proteins in the cell membrane?' 

500

These are the two major reasons why active transport occurs

What is 1) to move substances from low [] to high [] (against the gradient), or 2) to move very large substances in/out of cells?

500

Briefly explain why a cell in a hypertonic solution will shrink/shrivel?

What is 'because there is a higher concentration of solute outside of the cell (less room for water outside) and a lower concentration of solute inside the cell (more room for water) so water will leave the cell?'

500

Briefly explain the difference between the terms 'isotonic' and 'equilibrium'

What is 'isotonic refers specifically to a type of solution surrounding a living cell; equilibrium refers a broader concept/idea of a temporary state of existence in which there approximately equal amounts of particles or molecules on either side of a membrane?' 

500

List the four types of membrane-embedded proteins

What are 1) cell surface markers, 2) transport proteins, 3) enzymes, 4) receptor proteins?

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