Water (by Tyla)
Macromolecules
Cells
Plasma Membrane
Transport
100

Is water a polar or nonpolar molecule?

Polar
100

What are the four types of macromolecules and what are their monomers

carbohydrates - monosaccharides

lipids - glycerol+fatty acids

nucleic acids - nucleotides

proteins - amino acids

100

Define cell

The smallest unit of life.

100

The plasma membrane separates these two fluids:

intracellular fluid + extracellular fluid

100

What is the difference between endocytosis and exocytosis?

Endocytosis is the uptake of material foreign or useful to the cell, whilst exocytosis is the ejection of any waste.

200

What are the four main properties of water?

Cohesion, adhesion, high heat capacity, and reactivity/universal solvent.

200

What form of carbs are used in plants? in Animals?

Starch and glycogen

200

What are the three classes of extracellular materials?

ECF, Cellular Secretions and Extracellular Matrix

200

What is the function of phospholipids and cholesterol in the plasma membrane?

Form the base structure of the membrane, the tails prevent the water-soluble substances from crossing - Phospholipids

Stiffens membrane and decreases water solubility - Cholesterol

200

Difference between active and passive transport

Active transport needs ATP to move substances along the concentration gradient

300

Come up to the board and how dehydration or hydrolysis would work with the two molecules

Dehydration - removing H2O to bond monomers

Hydrolysis - adding H2O to break apart monomers.

300

What are the four types of lipids?

Phospholipids (modified triglycerides with a phosphate group and key part of cell membrane), triglycerides (major form of stored energy), steroids (flat molecules  and eicosanoids (20-Carbon fatty acids)

300

Three main parts of a human cell

Nucleus, cytoplasm and plasma membrane

300

What is the difference between integral proteins and peripheral proteins and which would transport proteins be under.

Integral - firmly inserted into lipid bilayer (channel here)

Peripheral - attached loosely to lipid bilayer

300

This type of diffusion uses transmembrane proteins to transport molecules that are polar, sugars or lipids which are too large to pass through on their own? Name the full name of this transport

Carrier-mediated facilitated diffusion

400

Why happens when we put MgCl into water and why does it happen?

MgCl will dissociate into Mg+ and Cl- ions, due to water's polar properties as a universal solvent will attract the salt and break it into ions.

400

Name at least three differences between RNA and DNA?

different cellular site (Nucleus in DNA vs cytoplasm in RNA)

function (DNA has genetic info, RNA carries out instructions)

Structure (double DNA, single RNA)

Sugar (deoxy DNA, ribose RNA)

Based (thymine DNA, uracil RNA)

400

Name four functions of cells.

nutrient storage

fighting diseases

moving organ and body parts

connecting body parts

gathering information and controlling body functions

reproduction

400

What are the three junctions of the plasma membrane and what do they do?

Tight, desmosomes, and gap: tight is impermeable and prevent molecules passing, desmosomes anchor and bind cells together like Velcro, and gap is for communication and allows ion passage!

400

Osmosis is a diffusion of water from _____________ to ____________ concentration

low solute to high solute

500

Define hypotonic, isotonic and hypertonic

Hypertonic - cells lose water by osmosis and shrink in this solution

Isotonic - cells retain their normal size and shape in this solution -> water in=water out

Hypotonic - cells take on water by osmosis until they become bloated and burst

500

This structure is responsible for forming spirals and sheets.

Secondary

500

Name the three parts of cell theory

cells smallest unit of life,

organisms 1+ cells

cells can only come from other cells

500

Phospholipid tails can be saturated or unsaturated but which type makes the membrane most fluid?

Unsaturated due to the double bonds

500

What the two most important qualities of any transport processes?

Specificity and saturability