Cells
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100

What are the three parts of cell theory?

1. All living organisms are composed of one or more cells 

a. Unicellular (singe-cell-like bacteria: 

b. Multicellular (like us) where they work together to form complex life 

2. Cells are the smallest unit of life 

3. New cells come from existing cells 



100

Eukaryotic cells have membrane bound organelles that helps to create different regions in the cell (compartmentalizations):

Benefits 

- Incompatible reactions can be separated 

- Increases surface area (which does what?) increases efficiency 

- Allows reactants to be concentrated to where the reactions are that allows it to make a product.



100

What is a polymer?

It is a group of repeated monomers. Monomers are the subunits of a polymer.

100

 What is it called when the removal of water happens to form a chemical bond between two monomers? 



It is called the dehydration reaction and it creates a polymer 



100

 Dehydration reaction: polymer synthesis.

 This is when water is lost. This is called elongation. 


200

What are the 4 basic features that cells have? 



1. Ribosomes (synthesize proteins) 

2. Plasma membrane/ cellular membrane (macromolecules of phospholipids, carbohydrates, and proteins) 

3. Cytoplasm (the jelly or liquid in the cell that holds everything in there)

4. Nucleic acids (macromolecule- DNA and RNA) genetic material 

200

Hydrolysis reaction: polymer breakdown

This is when water is added.

200

High permeability Gasses (like oxygen and CO2)

Very small uncharged molecules like ethanol

200

Moderate permeability Small size but polar: water

Low Permeability Mostly barred: polar organic molecules (sugar)


200

Very Low permeability Ions (Na+, K+)

Charged polar molecules (amino acids, ATP, polysaccharide, nucleic acid)



300

Why do we care about surface area to volume ratio? 



Nutrients getting into cells: a higher SA/v ratio = more efficiency 

We can tell the function of the cell by how it looks 



300


Endomembrane system: what does it do? 



- manufactures, swaps, recycles material 

- Rough ER- proteins (sorting), inserts membrane proteins 

- Smooth ER- lipid synthesis and modification and responsible for liver detoxification. It is also responsible for storing calcium ions 

- Nucleos 

- Nucleic envelope connects to the rough ER 



300


One of the factors that affect the ability of solutes to cross a lipid bilayer is size meaning...


a. Small solutes diffuse faster 

b. Large solutes diffuse slower 



300

One of the factors that affect the ability of solutes to cross a lipid bilayer is polarity meaning...

a. Non-polar- diffuse very quickly 

b. Polar- diffuse slower 



300

One of the factors that affect the ability of solutes to cross a lipid bilayer is charge meaning...

a. Non charged molecules will diffuse faster than charged

400

 Do prokaryotes have DNA, organelles, neither, or both? 



All cell share DNA, they do not have organelles. 

- Prokaryotes have cells walls (plants do as well) 

- Capsule can also be called Glycocalyx- prevents desiccation (viscous layer outside the cell wall) 



400

What does hydrophobic mean?

It means they hate water.

400

Components to membranes?

1. Phospholipids 

2. Carbohydrates 

a. Glycolipids (carb attached to lipid) 

b. Glycoproteins (carbs attached to a protein) 

3. Proteins: 3 types of them the thing that can span over the membrane or on top of it 

4. Cholesterol: only in animals 



400

Hypotonic

 the solution has a lower concentration outside of the cell



400

Hypertonic

 the solution has a higher concentration outside of the cell

500

Plants and animals contain what type of cells? Are fungi and protis part of this?

Eukaryotic cells, yes

500

Unsaturated or Saturated 

Low melting point, Liquid at room temperature, Plant fats like olive oil and cold fish, Double bond, Pack less density 

Unsaturated 

500

Unsaturated or Saturated 

Densely packaged, Animal fats, Single bond, solid at room temperature, High melting point

Saturated 

500

Passive transport

 (does not need the energy) and driven by a concentration gradient Simple diffusion: movement of solute molecules from an area of high to low concentration



500


We consider bio molecules semi permeable: 

Three factors that affect the ability of solutes to cross a lipid bilayer 



Size, Polarity, Change