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How were cells discovered? |
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A result of the microscope being invented 1665 Robert Hooke looked at cork through a microscope and found little boxes |
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All living things are made of 1+ cells Cells are the basic units of structure and function in organisms All cells come from existing cells |
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Why can't cells get too big? |
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As a cell gets larger, the volume grows more quickly than the surface area, and even though the cell needs more nutrients/has more waste, it can't take them in/expel it through the membrane as quickly. |
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Usually long and thin or broad and flat so they have more surface area |
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layer that covers, protects, and controls what moves in and out of the cell |
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area of cell inside the membrane |
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organelles where protiens are made |
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a structure that does a particular job for the cell |
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What features do all cells have? |
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cell membrane, cytoplasm, ribosomes, DNA |
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How are prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells different? |
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DNA structure (prokaryotic: a big tangle; eukaryotic: in the nucleus) Nucleus (prokaryotic cells don't have one) Eukaryotic cells are more complex and can do more Prokaryotes are always unicellular whereas eukaryotes can have 1+ cells Cell walls (prokaryotic: always; eukaryotic: sometimes) |
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A web of protein fibers in both types of cells that: Helps the cell move, Support and holds the shape of the cell Organizes parts of cell and keeps some structures in place |
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How are activities of the cell directed? |
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By proteins that are made from DNA/RNA instructions |
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A double membrane that surrounds the nucleus |
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Center of the nucleus, where parts of ribosomes are made (namely RNA) |
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Places that materials can move in and out of the nucleus |
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A system of membranes found in the cytoplasm that assists in production, processing, and transport of proteins, and in the production of lipids |
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Basically just stores stuff (especially ions) and creates steroids or something (not important) |
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an organelle that helps make and package materials to be transported outside the cell |
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special kinds of vesicles with enzymes that can break molecules down (food or screwed-up/unused organelles) |
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a small cavity/sac that contains materials in a eukaryotic cell |
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fluid-filled vesicle found in cytoplasm of plant cells or protist cells |
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a large vacuole in many plant cells that stores water, ions, nutrients, and wastes, and controls rigidity of cell through its amount of water |
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some protists have these; they pump water out of the cell |
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an organelle in some eukaryotic cells that uses light energy, carbon dioxide, and water to make sugars through photosynthesis (more on that later) |
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an organelle in eukaryotic cells that breaks down organic compounds, such as sugars, to make ATPs (more on that later) |
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a long, threadlike structure that helps cells move |
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short, thick structures that grow out of a prokaryotic cell's surface and help it attach to surfaces or other cells |
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How are protiens transported? |
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a collection of genetically identical cells that live in connected groups but don't depend on each other |
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What body types can organisms have? |
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Unicellular or multicellular |
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the process in which specialized cells form |
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when cells have different structures that let them carry out particular functions for the organism |
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a group of similar cells that perform a similar function |
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a collection of tissues that carry out a specialized function of the body |
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a collection of organs that carry out a specialized function of the body |
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maintenance of stable internal conditions in a changing environment |
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4 ways in which the cell membrane helps a cell maintain homeostasis |
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It... controls which substances pass into the cell helps the cell keep its shape recognizes substances that might harm the cell communicates with other cells (Basically acts like a gatekeeper) |
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a specialized lipid with a phosphate, polar, hydrophilic "head" and two fatty acid, nonpolar, hydrophobic "tails" |
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two layers of phospholipids that make up the basic structure of a biological membrane |
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allows only certain substances, such as small nonpolar molecules, to pass through |
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a membrane protein that announces a cell's identity |
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a membrane protein that recognizes and binds to substances outside the cell |
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membrane proteins that play a role in many chemical reactions inside the cell |
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membrane proteins that help move many substances across the cell membrane |
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Surface Area to Volume Ratio |
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More surface area is good Smaller cells have a higher surface area : volume ratio (more SA; less volume) |
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Cell Membrane - controls what moves in and out of cell Cytoplasm - jelly-like substance inside of cell membrane Ribosomes - organelles where proteins are made DNA - genetic material |
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prokaryotes/prokaryotic cells have |
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Cell membrane Ribosome Cytoplasm DNA - in a single tangled loop, located in cytoplasm Cell wall - surrounds membrane, gives structure and support to cell |
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Cell membrane Cytoplasm Ribosomes DNA - located in nucleus Nucleus |
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How Do Proteins Move Out of the Cell? |
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Endoplasmic reticulum (ER) - Ribosomes on rough ER make proteins ER packages them in vesicles which move to the golgi apparatus Golgi apparatus - Changes proteins and repackages them in new vesicles Vesicle - That vesicle goes to the membrane and releases proteins outside of the cell Vesicle becomes part of cell membrane |
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the difference in concentration in different areas |
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movement of substances down the concentration gradient (from higher concentrated area to lower) |
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No energy required Down the concentration gradient Simple diffusion - smaller molecules pass directly through the lipid bilayer Facilitated diffusion - larger molecules need transport proteins to move through the lipid bilayer Carrier protein - a transport protein, binds to molecules then changes shape and releases molecule into the cell |
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type of passive transport, water diffuses across membrane into whatever is outside of cell |
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what happens when a cell is in a hypertonic solution? |
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Hypertonic solution - lower concentration of water; water goes out of cell |
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what happens when a cell is in a hypotonic solution? |
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Hypotonic solution - higher concentration of water; water goes into cell |
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what happens when a cell is in an isotonic solution? |
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Isotonic solution - equal concentration of water; water goes in and out of cell |
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Move substances against concentration gradient Energy required Carrier proteins may be used |
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a type of active transport 1. 3 sodium ions and a phosphate group from atp bind to the protein pump 2. The protein releases the sodium outside the sell 3. 2 potassium ions from outside the cell bind to the pump 4. The pump releases the phosphate group and the potassium ions |
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vesicles move materials in |
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vesicles move materials out |
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anything that serves to direct, guide, or warn |
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a protein that binds specific signal molecules, which causes the cell to respond |
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a molecule that is generated when a specific substance attaches to a receptor on the outside of a cell membrane, which produces a change in cellular function |
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How do cells respond to signals? |
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Three ways: Change permeable-ness of membrane Activate enzymes, which trigger chemical reactions Form a second messenger (signal molecule within the cell) |
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What do cells use to communicate? |
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Receptor proteins used to communicate over short distances Hormones and electrical signals used for long distance communication |
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Photosynthesis: overall input and output |
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6CO2 + 6H2O + light energy --> C6H12O6 + 6O2 |
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Cellular respiration: overall input and output |
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C6H12O6 + 6O2 --> 6CO2 + 6H2O + 38 ATPs |
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all of the chemical reactions that occur within an organism |
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organisms that carry out photosynthesis |
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an enzyme that uses energy from moving hydrogen ions to produce ATP from ADP and a phosphate ion |
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organelles in photosynthetic organisms that enable them to carry out photosynthesis |
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the space inside the inner membrane of the chloroplast |
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a membrane within the stroma |
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flat, disc-like sacs that the thylakoid membrane is folded into |
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the main molecule that absorbs light (pigment) during photosynthesis |
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a substance that absorbs light and energy with it, and can transfer the energy |
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a single unit of light that carries energy |
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energy-capture part of photosynthesis takes place in the thylakoid membrane electrons absorb energy from sun and are moved to the stroma |
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second part of photosynthesis energy in electrons from light-dependent reaction is used to combine CO2 and H2 into glucose |
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ALL ORGANISMS PERFORM SOME KIND OF RESPIRATION |
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what else do i need to say i mean come on really |
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first step of cellular respiration takes place in the cytoplasm enzymes split glucose (C6H12O6) into two 3-carbon pyruvates -2+4 ATP = 2 ATP produces 2 NADH |
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a fold in the inner membrane of a mitochondrion |
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the compartment inside the inner membrane of a mitochondrion |
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according to the stupid khan academy guy, the space between the outer and inner membranes of a mitochondrion |
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takes place in the matrix every reaction in it is enzyme-catalyzed pyruvate oxidation happens: we get to a 2-carbon molecule makes all the components for the electron transport chain produces 2 ATP for each molecule of glucose produces 6 CO2 for each molecule of glucose |
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start with 10 NADH and 2 FADH2 oxidation: NADH=>NAD+ and H+ and 2 electrons (e-) electrons are high-energy, they go through a bunch of "transition molecules" and lose energy on each one, eventually being used to make H2O the energy that's released in each one is used to pump protons (H+) into the outer membrane then they go back into the matrix through an atp synthase atp synthase uses proton gradient to push adp and a phosphate group together |
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total amount of ATP produced in cellular respiration |
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glucose is split into 2 molecules of pyruvate, 2 ATP generated, occurs in cytoplasm |
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pyruvate is broken down into CO2, 2 ATP generated, occurs in mitochondria |
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electron transport summary |
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electrons transferred to membrane proteins in mitochondria, 32 ATP generated, O2 required |
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the breakdown of carbohydrates by enzymes, bacteria, yeasts, or mold in the absence of oxygen |
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