Cell Communication
Cell Communication 2.0
Homeostasis
Cell Cycle
Random
100

How do animal and plant cells communicate when in direct contact with each other?

Animal cells: gap junctions

Plant cells: plasmodesmata

100

What is the main job of second messengers?

What is the most common second messenger?

To amplify the signal that the ligand brought to the cell.

cAMP - Cyclic AMP (adenosine monophosphate)

100

Define homeostasis.

A state of relatively stable internal conditions.

100

If a cell has 20 centromeres, how many chromatids are there?

40!

100

What macromolecule is glucose?

Carbohydrate!

200

What's the difference between paracrine and synaptic signaling?

Both are types of local regulators.

Paracrine typically deals with growth factors/hormones that release via exocytosis to a nearby cell.

Synaptic deals specifically with the nervous system - neurotransmitters diffusing across the synaptic cleft

200

What are the 2 types of receptors? 

G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs)

Ligand Gated Ion Channels

200

What are set points?

Give me an example.

Set Point: Values for various physiological conditions that the body tries to maintain

Temperature: 98.6 degrees Farenheit

Heartrate: 60 bpm (there is more of a range on heartrate depending on bmi, etc.)


200

Differentiate between haploid vs diploid cells.

Haploid: 1 set of chromosomes, gametes (n=23 for humans)

Diploid: 2 sets of chromosomes, somatic cells (2n=46 for humans)

200

Which one of Santa's reindeer has the same name as another holiday mascot?

Cupid!

300

There are 2 places that receptors can be located, where are those 2 places?

AND which molecules bind to which ones?

Plasma Membrane - Hydrophilic, large/polar molecules

Intracellular - Hydrophobic, small/nonpolar molecules

300

What does it mean when it says that ligand-receptor binding is highly specific?

It means that only certain ligands can bind with certain receptors. Insulin ligands would bind with insulin receptors. 

Think of enzymes and their active sites. It's like a lock-and-key model.

300

Define negative feedback.

Give me an example.

Negative feedback: when the effect of the stimulus is reduced.

Ex: Sweating, Shivering, Insulin/Glucagon production for blood sugar

300

Put the following in order:

Metaphase, Prometaphase, Cytokinesis, G2, S, Telophase, Prophase, G1, Anaphase

G1 - S - G2 - Prophase - Prometaphase - Metaphase - Anaphase - Telophase - Cytokinesis

300

What organelle packages and ships proteins?

Golgi apparatus!

400

What are 3 possible responses at the end of a signal transduction pathway?

1. Proteins will alter membrane permeability

2. Enzymes will change a metabolic process

3. Proteins will turn genes on or off

400

What's the difference between kinase and phosphatases?

Kinase - relays message by phosphorylating

Phosphatase - shuts off pathways by dephosphorylating them

400

Define positive feedback.

Give me an example.

Positive feedback: when the effect of the stimulus is amplified/increased.

Ex: childbirth, fruit ripening (ethylene), blood clotting

400

What are the 3 cell cycle regulators?

-Growth Factors

-Contact/Density Inhibition

-Anchorage Dependence

400

Which process builds up molecules - catabolic or anabolic?

Anabolic!

Feral CATs break things down!

500

Compare and contrast how plant and animal cells communicate via long-distance.

Both use hormones.

Plants release hormones which travel through their xylem and phloem (which go throughout the entirity of the plant)

Animals use endocrine signaling - releases hormones into the circulatory system (goes throughout the entire body)

500

What are the 3 stages of cell signaling? Briefly describe all 3 stages.

1. Reception: ligand binds to receptor

2. Transduction: the message from the ligand is transferred from an extracellular to an intracellular message (cell is processing what the message actually means)

3. Response: something is going to happen in the cell in response to whatever message the ligand sent

500

What can happen if phosphatase is mutated?

Pathways will not be shut off properly, and the messages will still go through. - Could lead to cancer cells that divide uncontrollably.

500

What stage of the cell cycle do the 4 following events take place?

1. Nuclear envelope fragments

2. Chromatin condenses

3. 2 daughter nuclei form

4. Checkpoint that could lead to cell death

1. Prometaphase

2. Prophase

3. Telophase

4. G2 Checkpoint

500

How many long FRQs and how many short FRQs are on the real AP Biology exam?

2 Long

4 Short