This is the main function of the plasma barrier
What is protect the cell and regulate what comes in and what goes out?
This is the transportation of a molecule/ion against its concentration gradient
What is active transport?
The difference in concentration of a substance between two areas, causing the particles to move from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration?
What is a concentration gradient?
The largest organelle within the cell that hosts its genetic material
What is the nucleus?
Crestor
What is a drug?
These are the two components of a lipid bilayer
What are phospholipids and cholesterol?
Energy is required for passive transport (T/F)
What is false?
This ion has a high concentration outside of the cell
What is Na?
This organelle fuses with other vesicles in order to digest the contents inside them
What is Lysosome?
Sentret
What is a Pokemon?
The heads of a phospholipid have this affinity for water
What is hydrophilic?
This process is described as the process in which the plasma membrane encloses around macromolecules into a vesicle that moves into the cytoplasm of the cell
What is endocytosis?
This molecule is hydrolyzed in order to energize active transportation
What is ATP?
The cytoskeleton is made of these three components
What are Microtubules, Actin filaments, and Intermediate filaments?
Gliscor
What is a Pokemon?
These parts of the phospholipid make up the middle of the bilayer
What are the tails?
This type of passive transport requires gated channels for ions to move in and out of the cell
Facilitative Diffusion
To move Potassium into the cell, energy would need to be exerted (T/F)
What is the rough endoplasmic reticulum?
Lumineon
What is a Pokemon?
This part of the exterior membrane, specifically pointed out using a picture of a blood vessel, are very hydrophilic and restrict passage of hydrophobic molecules through the plasma membrane.
What is the glycocalyx?
This type of transport is used with the biological drug, brentuximab vedotin. A drug that is used to treat Hodgkin's lymphoma.
What is vesicular transport?
This type of transport is possible because it relies on a molecule piggybacking off of this ion moving with its concentration gradient
Na+ co-transport. (Seen in class with glucose).
Vesicles containing lipids or proteins synthesized in the Endoplasmic Reticulum fuse with this organelle
Fuzeon
What is a drug? (Enfuviritide HIV drug)