Topic 2- Chemistry
Topic 3- Macromolecules
Topic 4- Cell Structures
Topic 5- Membranes & Transport
Topic 6- Metabolism
100

What are the three subatomic particles of an atom, their charge, mass, and location in the atom?

Electron- negative charge, no mass, orbitals surrounding nucleus

Proton- positive charge, mass of 1, in nucleus

Neutron- no charge, mass of 1, in nucleus


100

What is the difference between a dehydration synthesis and a hydrolysis reaction?

Water is taken out in a dehydration synthesis to form a bond. Water is added in a hydrolysis reaction to break a bond.

100

What are the differences and similarities between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells?

eukaryotic cells contain membrane-bound organelles. prokaryotic cells do not have membrane-bound organelles and are always a part of unicellular organisms. Both types of cells have the same organelles. 

100

What are the components of the cell membrane?

hydrophobic fatty acid tails and hydrophilic phosphate heads

100

What is metabolism and its two main pathways?

Metabolism is a collection of chemical reactions in a cell. Catabolic is the breakdown of molecules releasing energy and anabolic is the synthesis of molecules requiring energy

200

What is an isotope and how are they useful?

An isotope is an atom of an element with a different amount of neutrons, but the same number of protons and electrons. Isotopes are used in radioactive labeling and carbon-dating

200

What are the main macromolecules and their monomers, bonds, and functions?

Carbohydrates- CH chains or rings, glycosidic bonds, fuel and building material

Proteins- amino acids, peptide bonds, hydrogen bonds, disulfide bridge, enzymes, storage, receptors, etc. 

Nucleic Acids- nitrogenous bases, phosphodiester bonds, hydrogen bonds, DNA, RNA, store and transmit genetic information

Lipids- fatty acid, glycerol, ester linkage, store energy, create membranes

200

Compare and contrast plant and animal cells and explain the importance. 

Differences- cell wall (structure), chloroplasts (photosynthesis), large central vacuole (storage)

similarities- ribosomes, ER, plasma membrane, Golgi, nucleus

200

What factors that affect membrane fluidity and how?

unsaturated vs saturated fats, embedded membrane proteins, membrane selectivity, diffusion & transport 

200

What is the difference between kinetic and potential energy?

Kinetic is energy in movement. potential is the energy stored.

300

What are the three types of chemical bonds (how and why they form)?

Ionic- the donation/acceptance of an electron, creating an anion (-) and a cation (+); the exchange of the electron creates two stable ions

Covalent- the equal or unequal share of electrons to have stability; Based on the difference in electronegativity, the bond is either polar or nonpolar

Hydrogen- electrostatic attraction between slightly positive hydrogen ions and slightly negative ions

300

What is the difference between saturated and unsaturated fatty acids in terms of structure and function?

Saturated fatty acids only have single bonds which allow them to stack tightly and be solid at room temperature. Unsaturated fatty acids have double bonds which give a kink in structure which means they can't stack tightly and are liquid at room temperature. 

300

What is the Endosymbiont theory and the 4 main pieces of evidence?

A prokaryote engulfed an aerobic bacterium which reproduced to what is now a eukaryote. 

1. mitochondria/chloroplasts- its own dna

2. double membranes

3. mitochondria/chloroplasts- own ribosomes

4. reproduce independently 

300

What are the types of proteins found in the cell membrane?

Transport- diffusion, active, passive

Enzymatic- catalyzing reactions

Signal Transduction- pathways, secondary messenger

Cell-cell recognition

300

Explain how enzymes affect a chemical reaction.

Enzymes lower the activation energy so the reactions proceed quicker. 

400

What are the five properties of water, how do they work, and why are they essential?

Density- transient hydrogen bonds; ice floats on water allowing aquatic life to survive in the cold

Adhesion & Cohesion- surface tension (floating) and water flowing upwards in a tree

High heat capacity- temperature regulation

Solvent of Life- making solutions, transporting nutrients in the body, cleaning

400

What is the construction of a protein from primary to quaternary structure?

primary- linear, peptide bonds

secondary- alpha helix, beta sheets, hydrogen bonds

tertiary- folding, hydrogen bonds, disulfide bridges

quaternary- subunit complex, hydrogen bonds

400

What are the structures and function of the cellular structures?

nucleus, ribosomes, rough er, smooth er, golgi, lysosome, vacuoles, cytoskeleton, cell membrane, cell wall, chloroplast, mitochondria

400

What are the factors that affects a molecule's ability to enter a cell and how are these dealt with?

polarity, chemical gradient, electrical gradient, cotransporter, size

400

Describe what factors affect enzyme reactions and how.


pH, temperature, substrate concentration, enzyme concentration, and inhibitors

500

How does change in pH affect protein structure?

pH is the measure of hydrogen ion concentration in a solution. With more hydrogen ions, there is a lower pH and a greater chance for the hydrogen ions to interfere with the hydrogen bonding within the protein structure

500

What is the importance of protein shape to its function?

A protein's structure decides the protein's function. For example, if the protein is working as an enzyme there is an active site in its structure to allow for substrate binding. 

500

What are viruses and their basic structures?

DNA or RNA covered in protein coating; bacteriophages insert their DNA or RNA into a host cell and use its machinery to replicate

500
Explain the different types of transport across the membrane.

Diffusion (gradient), facilitated diffusion (protein, gradient), osmosis (water and solute), active transport (ATP), large cargo transport (vesicles)

500

What is the difference between competitive and noncompetitive inhibition?

Competitive inhibition occurs when the inhibitor attaches to the active site. Noncompetitive inhibition occurs when the inhibitor attaches to an allosteric site (another site on the enzyme that's not the active site).

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