Cell Anatomy
Definitions
Mem. Transport
Mem. Trans. con't.
Cell Division
100

The nucleus, cytoplasm, and plasma (or cell) membrane

What are the three main regions of a (generalized) cell?

100
The smallest unit, or the building block, of all living things

What is a cell?

100

The fluid found within the cell (the nucleoplasm and the cytosol)

What is intracellular fluid?

100

 Solute pumping and vesicular transport

What are the two most important mechanisms of active transport?

100

Interphase and cell division

What are the two major periods of the cell life cycle?

200

DNA is contained here

What is the nucleus?

200

Groups of cells that are similar in structure and function 

What are tissues?

200

The fluid that bathes the exterior of the cells

What is interstitial fluid?

200
A type of solute pump that carries sodium ions out of the cell and potassium ions into the cell

What is the sodium-potassium pump?

200
The event that always preceded cell division

What is DNA duplication?

300

The nucleolus, chromatin, and nuclear envelope

What are the three regions of the nucleus?

300

This refers to how the shape of human cells and the relative abundance of their various organelles relate to their function in the body 

What is cell diversity?

300
These are the two basic methods through which membrane transport occurs

What are passive and active transport?

300

Exocytosis and endocytosis

What are two types of vesicular transport?

300

The two events of cell division

What are mitosis and cytokinesis?

400

Fragile, transparent, double-layer lipid barrier of the cell; selectively permeable; functions in membrane transport and cell-to-cell interactions; separates cell contains from the surrounding environment

What are characteristics of the plasma membrane?

400

This means that a barrier allows some substances to pass through it while excluding others

What is selective permeability?

400
Requires no energy input from the cell in order for this type of transport to occur

What is passive transport?

400

Phagocytosis (cell-eating) and pinocytosis (cell-drinking)

What are the two forms of endocytosis?
400

The stage of mitosis where the mitotic spindle is formed

What is prophase?

500

Microvilli and cilia

What are two types of cell extensions?

500

A homogeneous mixture of two or more components

What is a solution?

500

Requires that the cell provides the energy (ATP) to drive this transport process

What is active transport?

500

Molecules/ions move down the _________ gradient (from high to low) in the diffusion process.

What is concentration?

500

The stage of mitosis where the chromosomes cluster and become aligned at the center of the spindle

What is metaphase?

600

The organelles, inclusions, and cytosol

What are the three major elements of the cytoplasm?

600

The substance in the largest amount in a solution; also referred to as the dissolving medium

What is the solvent?

600

Diffusion and filtration

What are the two types of passive membrane transport?

600

Water and solutes move down (high to low) along a _________ gradient in the filtration process.

What is pressure?

600

The stage of mitosis where the chromosomes move to opposite ends of the cell

What is anaphase?

700

Tight junctions, desmosomes, and gap junctions

What are examples of how cells are bound together?

700

Components or substances present in smaller amounts in a solution

What are the solutes?
700

Simple, osmosis, and facilitated

What are the three different types of diffusion?

700

The specific term for the diffusion of water across a cell membrane.

What is osmosis?

700

The stage of mitosis where the chromosomes uncoil and become chromatin again

What is telophase?