Cell Structure
Prokaryotic vs Eukaryotic Cells
Microscopes
Cell Membranes
Cell Organelles
100
What is the basic unit of all living things?

The cell.

100

What is a prokaryotic cell?

The simplest cellular organism with no nucleus.
100

What is the purpose of a microscope?

To magnify small objects to make them visible.

100

What is the plasma membrane and what is its function?

The outer boundary of the cell that controls movement in and out.

100

What is the function of the mitochondrion?

To generate ATP, the energy currency of the cell. 

200

What do all cells have?

A plasma membrane, cytoplasm, ribosomes, and DNA.

200

True or False: Bacteria are single-celled eukaryotes.

False. They are prokaryotes.

200

Define depth of field.

The vertical distance within a specimen that appears in sharp focus at one time.

200

Define selective permeability. 

The property of a membrane that allows certain substances to pass while blocking others.

200

What are chloroplasts for?

To conduct photosynthesis to convert light energy into chemical energy.

300

What structure regulates what enters and exits the cell?

The plasma membrane. 

300

What is a key difference between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells?

Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus and complex organelles, while prokaryotic cells do not.

300

How do you calculate total magnification?

The ocular lens magnification times the objective lens magnification.

300

What is the difference between active and passive transport?

Active transport requires energy (ATP) while passive transport does not.

300

True or False: DNA is contained in the nucleolus.

False. DNA is contained in the nucleus, the nucleolus makes _____.

400

Name one function of the cell wall.

Provides protection, maintains cell shape, and prevents excessive water loss/uptake.

400

What do plant cells contain in addition to all of the organelles found in eukaryotic cells?

Chloroplasts, cell walls, central vacuole.

400

When would you use a compound vs dissecting microscope?

Compound: for fine detail on thin samples; light comes from _______ sample.

Dissecting: for lower magnification of larger, opaque, 3D samples; light comes from _____ sample.

400
What is exocytosis?

A type of active transport in which large substances contained in vesicles inside the cell fuse with the cell membrane and the material is put outside the cell.

400

What is the function of lysosomes?

To break down waste materials and cellular debris.

500

What is the role of ribosomes in a cell?

To synthesize proteins.

500

True or False: Plant cells are autotrophic.

True.

500

True or False: As magnification increases, both the depth of field and field of view decrease.

True.

500

Describe osmosis.

A type of passive transport in which water moves across a semi-permeable membrane from low to high solute concentration.

500

Describe the difference between the Rough ER and Smooth ER.

Rough ER: ribosomes attached; protein synthesis Smooth ER: no ribosomes; lipids and carbohydrates