Immune System
Membranes & Transport
Metabolism
Review: Unit 2 Part 1
Mixed!
100

What are the three types of natural barriers?

chemical, biological, mechanical

100

In osmosis, water moves from places of _______ solute concentration to ________ solute concentration

low, high

100

What is our biological definition of metabolism?

Complex chemical reactions that allow us to build and break down molecules for energy use and storage

100

what types of cells are eukaryotic?

plant cells and animal cells

100

the energy stored in chemical bonds is called what?

bond energy

200

what is the difference between an antibody and an antigen?

antibodies are produced by humans, antigens are on the pathogens

200

What is exocytosis?

a type of bulk transport (a type of active transport), moving large amounts of substances out of the cell using a vesicle.

200

what are the three molecules we use for energy ($100, $5, loose change)

lipids, carbohydrates, ATP

200

what are two differences between plant and animal cells?

*several potential answers*

200
what do vaccines do, and why are they useful?

they expose our bodies to a less harmful version of a pathogen so that our B cells can create antibodies and memory B cells

300

What are macrophages, what do they do, and what part of the immune response do they fall under?

They are a type of white blood cell that is part of the nonspecific immune response. The perform phagocytosis, in which they consume pathogens, break them down, and spit them out.

300

What types of substances do NOT move through the membrane easily

large substances, polar substances/ions

300

what are the reactants and products of cellular respiration

reactants: glucose, oxygen

products: ATP, CO2, H2O

300

What are the three outer layers in prokaryotic cells?

cell membrane, cell wall, capsule

300

What is a thylakoid (where is it, what does it do, what does it contain)?

small pancake-like structures in the chloroplast that contain chlorophyll within the lumen. This is where the light dependent reactions take place.

400

what is the difference between a T cell and a B cell?

T cells kill pathogens, but B cells produce antibodies. Both are part of the specific (adaptive) immune system

400

What is facilitated diffusion (be as specific and detailed as possible--what does it involve, does it use energy, what does it do with the concentration gradient)?

Using a protein channel to allow polar substances and ions to move across the membrane. This moves in the direction of the concentration gradient and does not require energy.

400

what are the first two steps of cellular respiration, and what is occurring in these two steps

glycolysis and Krebs cycle --> breaking down glucose in order to create high energy electrons

400

What are two different structures in the mitochondria (and describe what they are)?

cristae, matrix, inner membrane, outer membrane

400

what is the difference between bacteriostatic and bactericidal?

bacteriostatic antibiotics slow or stop bacterial growth, but bactericidal antibiotics kill bacteria

500

what are the three jobs of antibodies

agglutinate, neutralize, signal

500

What are protein pumps, and what do they do?

the allow for active transport, which uses energy to force molecules against the concentration gradient

500

What are the two parts of photosynthesis, and what is made at the end of each part?

light dependent reactions -- high energy electrons

light independent reactions -- glucose

500

When packaging and shipping proteins outside of the cell, what is the order of organelles that must be used, starting with the nucleus?

nucleus --> ribosome --> ER --> Golgi

(may also include vesicles, which are the packages that carry substances around cells)

500

what are three characteristics that all living things share?

*multiple answers*