Membrane Basics
Diffusion/ Osmosis
Cell Transport
Cells and Cell Theory
Other
100

What is another name for the cell membrane? 

phospholipid bilayer / plasma membrane

100

The movement of molecules from an area of high concentration to low concentration is ...

diffusion

100

Osmosis, diffusion, and facilitated diffusion are all examples of _________________ transport. 

Passive transport 

100

What are the three parts of the Cell Theory?

1) All living things are made of cells 

2) Cells are the basic unit of life

3) All cells come from pre-existing cells.

100

Substance in which a solute is dissolved

Solvent

200

What does “semi-permeable” mean when describing the cell membrane?

Only certain molecules can pass through the membrane while others cannot.

200

The diffusion of water across a semi-permeable membrane from an area of HIGH concentration to an area of LOW concentration is...

Osmosis 

200

List two substances that can enter and exit cells via FACILITATED DIFFUSION

sugars and ions

200

The invention of this device made it possible to visualize cells

The compound light microscope

200

 The concentration of solute is LOWER on the outside of the cell

Hypotonic 

300

What are the four main components of a cell membrane?

Phospholipids, carbohydrates, cholesterol, proteins

300

The three types of solutions where Osmosis is observable in cells are...

Hypertonic, Hypotonic, and Isotonic Solutions

300

The process of moving substances against their concentration gradient from _________ to __________ is called __________________. 

low to high , ACTIVE TRANSPORT

300

What four things do ALL CELLS have in common?

DNA, Ribosomes, Cell Membrane, Cytoplasm

300

Diffusion will continue until ...

Equilibrium

400
Phospholipid HEADS are ______ and _______ ; whereas their TAILS are _______ and __________. 

Heads are POLAR and HYDROPHILIC

Tails are NONPOLAR and HYDROPHOBIC 

400

What components make up a solution? Make an example with percentages.

Solution = (Solute + Solvent) = 100%

Ex: Saltwater = 20% salt (Solute) + 80% water (solvent)

400

List two examples of when a cell would use ACTIVE TRANSPORT

to move Na+ / K+

for Endo / exocytosis 

400

What are the differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells?

Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus and membrane-bound organelles; prokaryotic cells do not.

400

Pressure exerted by the movement of water during osmosis 

osmotic pressure

500

Describe the relationship between carbohydrate chains on the cell membrane surface and blood types. 

Carbohydrates, based on specific sugar patterns, determine blood type (A, B, AB, O) and are how blood types are identified. 

500

Proteins that allow water molecules to get past the hydrophobic nonpolar center of the phospholipid bilayer

Aquaporin protein channels 

500

A FRESHWATER fish is placed in a SALTWATER environment. Describe what happens to its cells in terms of Osmosis.

Water moves out of the fish’s cells into the saltier environment (hypertonic solution), causing the cells to shrink and dehydrate. This can be fatal to freshwater fish.

500

Who were the two main scientists involved in creating the cell theory based on early observations of cells and the invention of the light microscope?

Robert Hooke and Antonie Van Leeuwenhoek

500

What are the two types of bulk transport? What are they used for? 

Endocytosis = ENTER, cell membrane forms a phospholipid vesicle around large cargo like an Amoeba eating a microbe. 

Exocytosis = EXIT, cell membrane forms vesicle around waste, vesicle fuses with membrane to release waste.  

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