Eukaryotic cells have a nucleus. Examples of Eukaryotic cells are Plant, Animal and Fungal cells
Eukaryotic cells contain genetic material (DNA) in their nucleus
Prokaryotic cells
Prokaryotic cells don't have a nucleus. Examples of Prokaryotic cells are bacteria cells
Prokaryotic cells don't contain DNA in the nucleus their DNA is free
Bacteria are prokaryotes.
Plant and Animal Cells
Plant cells
Plant cells usually have all the bits Animal cells have, plus a few extra things that Animal cells don't have: 1. Rigid Cell wall - made from Cellulose. 2. Permanent Vacuole - Filled with cell
sap and helps to keep cells turgid depending on the amount of water in cell. 3. Chloroplast - Contains chlorophyll - where photosynthesis happens
The different types of a cell are called subcellular structures
Animal Cells
Most Animal cells have the following subcellular structures: 1. Nucleus - The control centre of the cell. contains genetic material. 2. Cell Membrane - Thin layer around the cell that controls everything that enters and leaves the cell. 3. Mitochondria - Place within cells
where aerobic respiration takes place to release energy. 4. Ribosomes - An organelle in the cell in which protein synthesis takes place. 5. Cytoplasm - Material in a cell but not the material in the nucleus. Most chemical processes take place here.
Specialised cells
A cell that has a special shape and features that help it do it's job
Examples of Specialised Animal cells
Specialised cells differentiate.
Examples of Specialised Plant cells are Palisade cells, Root hair cells, Phloem cells and Xylem cells
Palisade cells. Function - To carry out photosynthesis and to help
make plant food. Specialisations - Found at the top of the leaf.
Packed with chloroplast to absorb sunlight
Root hair cells. Function - Absorbs minerals and water from soil.
Specialisations - Large surface area to absorb lots of water. Thin cell wall
to allow water to pass through easily. Doesn't contain chloropast
Phloem Cells. Function - Carries food around the plant. Specialisations -
Mitochondria in companion cells to keep them alive, Special sieve plates
that allow water with dissolved food to move through the plant
Xylem cells. Function - Carries water and minerals
and supports. Specialisation - long hollow tube that
allows water and minerals to move. Spirals of
lignin support the cell and makes it strong
Examples of Specialised Cells for Animal cells: Sperm cells, Muscle cells, Nerve Cells, Ciliated Cells
Sperm Cell. Function - To carry the father's genetic information (DNA) to the
egg. Specialisations - Lots of Mitochondria/ - Has a long tail to swim to find an
egg
Muscle Cell. Function - Contracts and relax in pairs to move our bones.
Specialisations - Special proteins to make fibres contract. - Lots of
Mitochondria for respiration, stores glucose used in respiration
Nerve Cells. Function To carry nerve impulses around your body.
Specialisations - Extremley long cell. - Branches to connect to other nerve
cells
Ciliated cells. Function - Designed to Stop lung damage. Traps dust and bacteria back up the throat to be
swallowed. Specialisations - They line all air passages down to the lungs. They have tiny hairs called cilia
Bacterial cells
Bacteria cells have a : Cell membrane, cell wall, cytoplasm and don't have chloroplasts or mitochondria
Bacteria cells don't have a nucleus instead they have a single circular strand of DNA that floats freely in the cytoplasm
Topic 2: BY1.2 Movement of substances
Diffusion
Diffusion - The passive movement of particles from an area of high
concentration to an area of low concentration
Factors which effect the rate of
diffusion: Surface Area, Temperature
and Concentration Gradient
Surface Area - The longer the surface area
the higher the rate of diffusion
Temperature - The higher the temperature the faster the movement of the particles
Concentration Gradient - The bigger the difference the faster the movement
Osmosis
The net movement of water molecules from a high concentration to
a low concentration through a partially permeable membrane
Active Transport
Active transport - it is the
movement of substances
against the concentration
gradient using energy
Active transport requires energy to work. Active transport uses special carrier
proteins in the cell membrane. Active transport moves substances to areas of
high concentration. Active transport occurs across a semi - permeable cell
membrane.
Topic 3: BY2.1 Organs and systems (heart, lungs and plants)
The blood
The function of Red Blood cells is to carry
oxygen from the lungs to all the cells
Four components of Blood: White blood cell,
Platelets, Plasma and Red blood cells
Red Blood cells carry oxygen. White blood cells defend against infection. Platelets help
blood clot. Plasma is the liquid that carries everything in blood.
The blood vessels
Arteries - These carry the blood away from the heart. Narrow lumen. Thick
muscular walls. Elastic walls
Vein - These carry the blood to the heart. Thin walls and thin layers of muscle. Wider lumen
Capillary - These are involved in the exchange of materials at the tissues. Carry blood from the arteries to veins
Structure of an artery - The heat pumps blood through the arteries at high blood pressure. Thick muscular walls
protects arteries from bursting. Elastic walls allow arteries to stretch and expand with every heartbeat
Structure of the vein - Muscles around veins squeeze veins pushing blood through. Valves stop the blood from going backwards.
structure of the capillary - Substances need to easily diffuse from the blood into the surround tissue and back again so the walls need to be as thin as possible..
The heart
Coronary artery - The coronary arteries supply the heart muscle with blood that it needs
The heart is positioned at an angle on the left side of your body. The heart sends blood to two
places at the same time. The lungs and the body
The Structure of the Heart: First, deoxygenated blood goes into the right atrium via the vena cava .
The blood then goes into the right ventricle. The right ventricle then pumps the blood out of the
heart to the lungs. The oxygenated blood from the lungs goes into the left atrium vi the
pulmonary vein. It then goes into the left ventricle. The left ventricle then pumps the blood out of
the heart, to the lungs.
Cardiovascular diseases
Cardiovascular disease is a name to describe diseases that affect the blood vessels
of the heart. Coronary heart disease (CHD) is a very common disease affecting the
coronary arteries.
The coronary arteries supply your heart muscle with oxygen - rich blood. This is needed
for respiration. if they don't get oxygen - rich blood it can cause a heart - attack
CHD can be treated by using statins, diet and
exercise, bypass surgery a heart transplant
Stent - a wire mesh that is put into an
artery to keep coronary arteries open
and reduce the chance of a heart attack
Risk factors: Obesity, Family history, Smoking, Gender, Blood Pressure, Lack of
exercise and Alcohol consumption
If the heart doesn't get blood, it doesn't get oxygen or
glucose, heart muscle cells can't release energy via
respiration causing cells to die.
Breathing and gas exchange
Gas Exchange - The exchange of gases via diffusion
occurring at the lungs and at the respiring tissues
Features that allow for efficient gas exchange:
One cell think – short diffusion distance
Large surface area - many alveoli and
folded alveoli walls Large concentration
gradient - efficient blood supply Moist
lining – gases dissolve
Breathing in : Rib cage moves up and out.
Diaphragm contracts and moves down. Pressure
in lungs decreases, and air comes rushing in
Breathing out: Rib cage moves down and in.
Diaphragm relaxes and moves up. Pressure in
lungs increases, and air comes rushing out
Tissues and organs in plants
Meristem - The meristem is a type of tissue
found in plants. It consists of undifferentiated
cells capable of cell division
Xylem and Phloem are the
transport tissues in plants
Transpiration
Transpiration - The process by which
water is carried through plants from
roots to small pores on the underside of
leaves, where it changes to vapour and
is released to the atmosphere
Transpiration is the loss of water from plants by evaporation by the process of osmosis. Air around
the plant usually contains less water than the cell of the plant, so water evaporates into the air
Factors affecting the rate of transpiration: Light intensity, Temperature, Humidity and Wind speed
Translocation - movement of liquids
from place to place
Topic 4 :BY2.2 Enzymes and
digestion
Enzymes
Enzyme - A protein molecule that acts as a biological catalyst.
Enzymes are proteins. Enzymes are biological catalysts.
A catalyst is a substance that speeds up a reaction by
lowering the activation energy but is not used.
Enzymes can either: Break things
down from large, to smaller
molecules. Build things up from
smaller, to larger molecules. Alter
molecules
Active site: The enzyme is the lock, and the reactant is the key.
Factors affecting enzymes
Denature - loss of shape of the active site of the enzyme
Temperature AND pH
Problems with enzymes denaturing
The enzyme loses the shape of it's active site and can no longer bind to the substrate.
Therefore cannot catalyse the reaction. And therefore cannot form products
Food groups and enzymes
Enzyme specificity - Enzymes can only
act upon their specific substrate their
specific substrate that is specific in
shape to their active site.
The effect of pH on enzyme function required practical