BMS 110 Unit 1 Ch. 3

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Karteikarten am BMS 110 Unit 1 Ch. 3, erstellt von Makenna Ornes am 18/09/2021.
Makenna Ornes
Karteikarten von Makenna Ornes, aktualisiert more than 1 year ago
Makenna Ornes
Erstellt von Makenna Ornes vor etwa 3 Jahre
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Zusammenfassung der Ressource

Frage Antworten
cell theory 1) 1 or more cells 2) smallest unit of living things 3) all cells come from preexisting cells
3 things in common for all cells 1) plasma membrane 2) DNA 3) cytoplasm
prokaryotic cell & example -single-celled -no nucleus -no membrane-bound organelles -have DNA (not enclosed in a nucleus) -ex: bacteria
eukaryotic cell & examples -has a "true nucleus" that contains DNA -membrane-bound organelles -unicellular or multicellular
in body, what % are human or bacterial cells/ 10% body cells are human 90% body cells are bacterial
why does surface to volume ratio matter? responsible for small size of cells but maximizes interaction surfaces -as linear dimensions (3D object) increase, volume increases faster than surface area does
what are not considered organelles? ribosomes & centrioles
chemical reactions take place in... organelles
microscopy use of microscopes to view objects
micrograph photograph of image formed by microscope
compound light microscope 2 or more glass lends that bend light rays to form enlarged image -cells are often dyed -only provides sharp images when mag is 2000x or less
electron micoscope uses magnetic lends to bend beams of electrons -reveals smaller details than light microscopes; great depth
receptor proteins docks for signaling molecules like hormones; triggers changes in cell activities
recognition proteins sit on surface of cell; chemical fingerprints that identify cell as certain type
transport proteins allow specific substances to move across membrane
selective permeability allows some substances in but not some others -controls when & how much crossing -small, nonpolar substances are permeable -ions or large, polar molecules cross through transport proteins or pumps
lipids/proteins can have sugars attached to external surface which are glycoproteins & glycolipids
key functions of the nucleus 1) prevents DNA from getting tangled up with structures in cytoplasm - protects it 2) outer membranes of nucleus are boundary where movement of substances to & from cytoplasm can be controlled
nuclear envelope -double-membrane system -surrounds fluid part of nucleus (nucleoplasm) & proteins embedded in layers -threadlike proteins attach to inner surface & anchor DNA molecules to envelope & keep them organized
masses in nucleus are called... what do they do? nucleolus -construction site where proteins & RNA are combined to make parts of ribosomes
chromatin cell's DNA & all proteins associated with it
chromosomes double-stranded DNA molecule that carries genetic information
endomembrane system system in cells that includes ER, golgi apparatus, & vesicles; in which new proteins are modified into final form & lipids are assembled
endoplasmic reticulum flattened channel that starts at nuclear enveloped & goes through cytoplasm -lipids assembled in smooth er -rough er modifies new polypeptide chains -"raw" polypeptide chains are processed into final proteins
ribosome platform for building a cell's proteins -parts synthesized in nucleolus
rough er -strudded with ribosomes -modifies new polypeptide chains
smooth er -no ribosomes; flat connecting pipes -lipids are assembled
golgi body/apparatus -series of flattened sacs -enzymes on sacs finish proteins/lipids, then package in vesicles for shipment to specific locations
vesicle tiny sac that moves through the cytoplasm or takes up positions in it
lysosome type of vesicle that breaks down/chemically digests substances -can digest whole cell or just cell parts -often fuse with other vesicles that formed at plasma membrane & contain bacteria
peroxisomes sacs of enzymes that brask down fatty acids & amino acids -creates hydrogen peroxide which is converted to water & oxygen
mitochondria -makes ATP in inner compartment -double-membrane system -requires oxygen -has own DNA: mtDNA & has some ribosomes -in outer compartment, enzymes
the inner membrane of mitochondria is called... cristae
cytoskeleton system of interconnected fibers, threads, & lattices in cytosol
microtubules largest cytoskeleton elements; spatially organize interior of cell & help move cell parts -long tiny tubules made of tubulin protein chromosone movement during cell division tracks for organelle movement
microfilaments -reinforce part of cell; anchor some membrane proteins -long filaments constructed of actin protein subunits -responsible for cellular locomotion & muscle contraction -establish basic shape/strength of cell
intermediate filaments -strong cables of protein subunits -type depends on intermediate -adds strength; anchors filaments of 2 proteins (actin & myosin) when they interact in muscle cells; enables muscles to contract
flagella tail-like motile structures in eukaryotic cells -arise from centrioles
cilia short, hair-like projections in eukaryotic cells -arise from centrioles
concentration # of molecules of a substance in a certain amount of fluid
gradient # of molecules in one region is not same as in another
diffusion net movement of like molecules/ions down a concentration gradient -high to low
passive transport diffusion of solute through channel/carrier protein without use of energy
ventilation movement of gases (not passive)
respiration exchange of gases (passive)
osmosis diffusion of water across selectively permeable membrane in response to solute concentration gradients
water ALWAYS moves from... hypotonic to hypertonic
tonicity concentration of solutes in a solution
isotonic solute concentrations same on either side of cell membrane -no net flow of water
hypotonic fewer solutes in solution, higher solute concentration inside cell; water will move into cell & will cause cell to swell & burst AKA HEMOLYSIS
hypertonic more solutes in solution, lower solute concentration inside cell; water will move out of cell & will cause cell to shrink & shrivel AKA CRENATION
transporter proteins -span lipid bilayer -help solutes cross membrane -specific to solute -provide a channel for ions/molecules down concentration gradients -doesn't require ATP energy
active transport -requires energy -membrane pumps = move substances against their concentration gradient -ATP provides most energy for this type
endocytosis -active transport; vesicle transport -"coming inside cell"; cell takes in substances next to its surface -small indentation forms, balloons inward, pinches off -phagocytosis = when it brings in organic matter "cell eating"
exocytosis -active transport; vesicle transport -"moving out of cell"; vesicle moves to surface & protein-studded lipid bilayer of its membrane fuses with plasma membrane -contents released to outside
chemical reactions either _____ or _____ energy release or require energy
anabolism put together small molecules
catabolism breaks down large molecules
metabolism def chemical reactions in cells
where is energy store in ATP? stored energy is contained in bond between 2nd & 3rd phosphate groups
ATP supply must be renewed so... phosphate/phosphate group (has already been split off) is attached to ADP (adenosine diphosphate)
ATP/ADP cycle -mechanism of ATP renewal; when ATP donates a phosphate group to other molecules, reverts to ADP, & forms again by phosphorylation of ADP
reactant any substance that is part of a metabolic reaction
intermediate substance that forms between beginning & end of metabolic pathway
products substances present at end of reaction/pathway
most enzymes are proteins but ALL are... catalysts
substrate reactant/precursor for reaction; specific molecule(s) that an enzyme can chemically recognize, briefly bind to, & modify in specific way
active site crevice on surface of enzyme where substrate is present & a specific reaction is catalyzed
homeostasis pH range of enzymes 7.35 to 7.4
many coenzymes are derived from... vitamins
controls can... 1) boost action of enzymes 2) slow it down 3) adjust how fast new enzyme molecules are made
cellular respiration process by which cells break apart carbohydrates, lipids, proteins to form ATP -glucose is common raw material -mostly aerobic
step 1: glycolysis -process by which glucose is partially broken down to pyruvate with net yield of 2 ATP -substrate: glucose -intermediate: PGAL -products: 2 pyruvate, 2 NADH, 2 net ATP -occurs in cytoplasm; ANAROBIC
pyruvate 3 carbons
phosphorylation attachment of unbound phosphate to a molecule -adds energy to glucose to begin steps of glycolysis
step 2: Krebs cycle aka citric acid cycle -stage of AEROBIC respiration in which pyruvate is completely broken down to carbon dioxide & water & 2 ATP form -substrate: 2 pyruvate -intermediate: acetyl-CoA -products: 2 ATP, 6 CO2, 8 NADH, 2 FADH2 -NADH & FADH2 are electron carriers -occurs in mitochondria
step 3: electron transport chain/system -AEROBIC; occurs in mitochondria -NADH & FADH2 carry electrons to this step -H+ flows across membranes & flow drives ATP formation -substrate: NADH/FADH2, oxygen -intermediate: hydrogen concentration ish -products: 32 ATP, H2O -H+ concentration gradient is formed
total net yield of cellular respiration 36 ATP
lactate fermentation -process coverts pyruvate from glycolysis to lactic acid; makes ADP -ANAROBIC; produces ATP quickly but not for long -occurs during sudden, strenuous exercise -excess glucose is stored as glycogen
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