Concentration gradient allows for _______ diffusion. (HINT: Does it require energy?)
What is Passive?
Water moves from areas of low solute concentration to high solute concentration through this process.
What is Osmosis?
This type of transport moves molecules from high to low concentration without using energy.
What is Passive Transport?
What does cell Compartmentalization mean?
What is Dividing the cell into different membrane-bound areas (organelles) so processes can occur more efficiently?
The theory that explains the origin of mitochondria and chloroplasts.
What is the Endosymbiosis theory?
A carrier protein binds to a substance and in doing so, changes the _____ of the carrier protien.
What is Shape?
A solution that has the same solute concentration as the cell’s interior is called ____.
What is Isotonic?
This process involved water moving across a selectively permeable membrane toward a higher solute concentration.
What is Osmosis?
Which type of cell, Prokaryotic or Eukaryotic, shows compartmentalization?
What is a Eukaryotic cell?
The shape of DNA for Mitochondria and Chloroplast that is similar to Bacterial DNA.
What is Circular?
Materials diffuse (spread out) across the plasma membrane with help of _______.
What is Membrane Proteins?
When a red blood cell is placed in a hypotonic solution, this happens to it.
What is It Swells and Bursts, or Lyses?
This protein assisted transport required energy to move molecules across their concentration gradient.
What is Active Transport?
Why is compartmentalization important for a cell’s chemical reactions?
What is because it keeps reactions in separate environments, preventing interference and increasing efficiency?
The type of bacteria that evolved into mitochondria.
What is Aerobic Bacterium?
What channel proteins allow water to pass through the membrane at a high rate?
What are Aquaporins?
When plant cells are in a hypertonic solution, the cell membrane pulls away from the cell wall in this process.
What is Plasmolysis?
During this process, a cell uses vesicles to take in large solid particles, often called "cell eating."
What is Phagocytosis?
Explain how compartmentalization in mitochondria improves ATP production.
What is because the inner and outer membranes create separate spaces for different steps of respiration, making energy production more efficient?
The type of bacteria that evolved into chloroplast.
What is Cyanobacterium?
The exterior surface plasma membrane allows for polar attachment through what 2 receptors?
What are Proteins and Glycoprotein receptors?
Freshwater fish are this type of tonicity to their environment, making them forced to get rid of extra water through their gills and urine.
What is Hypertonc to their environment?
This equation predicts the movement of water in and out of cells.
What is Water Potential?
How did compartmentalization contribute to the evolution of complex Eukaryotic cells?
What is that it allowed cells to perform many specialized reactions at once, leading to greater complexity and the rise of multicellular organisms?
This structural feature of mitochondria and chloroplasts supports the endosymbiosis theory.
What is Double Membrane?