Cell Cycle
Interphase
Mitosis
Cell Homeostasis
Cell Transport
100

The longest phase of the cell cycle.

What is Interphase

100

The three phases of interphase.

What is G1, S, G2

100

What is the main importance of mitosis and cytokinesis?

Mitosis splits the DNA equally for the 2 cells, Cytokinesis splits the cell equally for the 2 cells

100

Particles always diffuse from:

A high to low concentration

100

The main difference between passive transport and active transport.

What is the use of cellular energy or ATP

200

During interphase the DNA is replicated.  This is done to...

Provide 2 cells each with a full copy of DNA

200

The phase where DNA replication occurs.

What is S phase (synthesis=make)

200

The events in prophase

The DNA condenses into Chromosomes

The nucleus dissolves/breaks up

The centrioles move to opposite ends of the cell

200

Homeostasis is:

What is keeping something stable and/or constant

200

When must cells use energy for transport?

What is moving particles against the concentration gradient

300

Humans have 46 chromosomes, 23 from mom and 23 from dad.  Each of your cells have 46 chromosomes, how many chromosomes will each daughter cell have after mitosis?

What is 46 chromosomes

300

When DNA replication occurs the DNA is unzipped and the complementary bases are added to make 2 strands.  What would be the complimentary base pairing for the following:  A-T-T-C-G-C-T-C-A

What is T-A-A-G-C-G-A-G-T

300

Events in metaphase

The chromosomes line up in the middle of the cell

The centrioles extend mitotic spindles which attach to chromosomes

300

When particles can't be moved, water can be moved instead.  What is the diffusion of water:

What is osmosis

300

The difference between simple diffusion and facilitated diffusion.

Simple diffusion is when nonpolar, small, uncharged molecules move freely across the cell membrane with the concentration gradient.  When the molecules are large, polar, or have a charge a membrane protein must be used to facilitate (help) the particle move with the concentration gradient.

400

The cell cycle has checkpoints built in to check for mistakes and to prevent the cell from continuing the cycle if there are mistakes.  What is often a result of the cell continuing to replicate when there are mistakes?

What is cancer or uncontrolled cell growth.

400

At the end of interphase the cell must go through a checkpoint before entering mitosis.  The checkpoint is making sure what has been done?

What is the cell has grown, replicated its DNA correctly, cell organelles have been duplicated, and the cell has properly carried out its functions.

400

Events of Anaphase

The sister chromatids (chromosomes) are pulled apart to opposite ends of the cell

400

Imagine particles diffusing from A flowing to B.  If we were to move water instead of particles, osmosis would flow from:

What is B to A

400

Exocytosis is moving something ___ the cell where endocytosis is moving something ___ the cell

Out of; in

500

When a cell does not replicate it enters a phase where the cell carries out normal functions but never enters mitosis.  What is the name of this phase?

What is G0.

500

The nucleotide is the monomer or building block of DNA.  The 3 components that make up a nucleotide are

What is a phosphate, deoxyribose sugar, and nitrogenous base (A,T,C,G)

500

Events of Telophase & Cytokinesis

Telophase - two cells begin forming, nuclei reform around chromosomes

Cytokinesis - the cell invaginates and pinches off to form 2 separate cells 

500

In a hypotonic solution the cell's concentration would be _________ than the solutions concentration.

What is higher

500

A cell with a higher concentration of glucose is placed is some water with a lower concentration of glucose.  The cell wants to bring more glucose in.  What type of cell transport will be required?

What is Active Transport (moving glucose AGAINST the concentration gradient)