AQA Biology Paper 1 Flashcards

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FlashCards sobre AQA Biology Paper 1 Flashcards, criado por Catherine Gannon em 28-02-2018.
Catherine Gannon
FlashCards por Catherine Gannon, atualizado more than 1 year ago
Catherine Gannon
Criado por Catherine Gannon quase 7 anos atrás
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Resumo de Recurso

Questão Responda
Name three features of arteries -Walls are strong and elastic -Thick walls -Contain layers of muscle
Name three features of capillaries -Permeable walls for diffusion -Walls only one cell thick -Carry blood close to the cell
Name three features of veins -Vein walls less thick than artery's -Bigger lumen to help blood flow -Contain valves to keep blood flowing in the right direction
What shape are red blood cells? Biconcave (Like a doughnut!)
Why do red blood cells have a specific shape? So that it has a larger surface area for carrying oxygen! Those particles are pretty big...
What do platelets do? Help blood clot
What is does plasma do? Carries everything in the blood (nutrients)
What is the name for an INFECTIOUS disease? Communicable disease (you can COMMUNICATE ya sick with other people)
Put BACTERIA, PROTISTS, FUNGI and VIRUSES in size order Fungi, Bacteria, Viruses, Protists
What kind of organisms are Protists? Single-celled Eukaryotes (Remember: You-Carry-Oats)
Give me a disease caused by a fungus Rose Black Spot! It causes the leaves to go YELLOW and fall off. (Bumblebee disease, spots are black, leaves are yellow)
Name the three MAIN Viral diseases (That you HAVE to know, like, it's mandatory) Measles, HIV and TMV (tobacco mosaic virus) Remember: HIV, TMV, Measles, si?
Name a disease caused a protist Malaria (Remeber, the microorganism has to be very small to fit inside a mosquito...)
Name FOUR ways to prevent the spread of disease -Be hygienic -Destroying vectors (carriers) -Isolate Infected Individuals -Vaccination
Describe what happens in PRECLINICAL TESTING of drugs -Drugs are tested on human cells and tissues in a lab -The drug is then tested on live animals to test for efficacy and toxicity -The law in Britain means the drug should be tested on two different live MAMMALS
Describe what happens in the CLINICAL TRIAL of a new dug -Drug is tested on healthy volunteers (test for side effects) -Low dose given at the start -Drug is then tested on sick people -Put patients into two groups (one gets the drug, other gets placebo) -CLINICAL TRIALS ARE BLIND -Results of trials are peer-reviewed, then published
How do we extract monoclonal antibodies? -Mouse is injected with an antigen -B-lymphocytes are main in the mouse's to fight the antigen -At the same time, tumour cells are made in a lab -B-lymphocytes are taken from the mouse and fused with the tumour cell -Creates a HYBRIDoma -This divides quickly and creates the monoclonal antibody
How are monoclonal antibodies used in pregnancy tests? -Part of the stick has antibodies to HCG with blue beads attached -The test strip has more antibodies to HCG stuck to it -Antibodies bind to HCG and move up the stick (carrying blue beads) -Blue beads and HCG bind to the fixed antibodies -Beads stuck to test strip, test strip goes blue
What is respiration? The process of transferring energy from GLUCOSE
Give three examples of how organisms use the energy from respiration -Build up larger molecules -Contracting muscles -Keep body temperature regular
Give the word equation for aerobic respiration glucose + oxygen --> Carbon dioxide + water
Give the symbol equation for aerobic respiration C6H12O6 + 6O2 --> 6CO2 + 6H2O (Respiration is the devil's work)
What is the word equation for anaerobic respiration? glucose ----> lactic acid Simple!
What is the word equation for anaerobic respiration in yeast? glucose ----> ethanol + carbon dioxide
Name each part of the nervous system -CNS -Sensory Neurones -Motor Neurones -Effectors
List the reflex arc, from Stimulus to Response -Stimulus -Receptor -Sensory Neurone -CNS -Motor Neurone -Effector Response SRSCMER! Catchy...
Name the steps taken by the body when blood glucose level is too HIGH -Glucose levels high -Insulin secreted by pancreas -Glucose moves from blood into liver/muscle cells -Insulin makes liver turn glucose into glycogen -Blood glucose restored
Name the steps taken by the body when blood glucose level is too LOW -Glucose levels low -Glucagon released by pancreas -Glucagon makes liver make glucose -Glucose released into blood by liver -Blood glucose restored
What does Type 1 diabetes cause? Pancreas produces little/no insulin
What does Type 2 diabetes cause? Body becomes resistant to its own insulin
What is the function of the kidneys? To act as filters to clean the blood
Describe the process of making and removing urea -Excess proteins are converted into fats/carbohydrates -Ammonia is a waste product from this process -Ammonia is converted to urea and excreted in urine
How does the body respond when water levels are too HIGH? -Water levels too high -Brain receives information and coordinates a response -Pituitary gland reduces less ADH -Less water absorbed from kidneys -Water levels restored
Describe the process of dialysis -Blood flows between partially permeable membranes -Dialysis fluid has the same concentration of glucose as healthy blood -No useful ions lost, only waste -Clean blood returned to body
Name three problems with kidney transplants -Long waiting list/High demand -Risk of rejection -Risky surgery, painful recovery
Name the reproductive hormones made (and where they're made) in men and women MEN: Testosterone, made in testes WOMEN: Oestrogen, made in ovaries
Describe the menstrual cycle Day 1: Uterus lining breaks down Day 4: Uterus lining builds back up from day 4-14 Day 14: An egg develops and is released from an ovary Day 28: If no fertilised egg lands on the uterus, then the cycle restarts
Name the four hormones involved in the menstrual cycle -FSH -Oestrogen -LH -Progesterone
What is the role of FSH? -Produces in pituitary gland (Fish swim in the Pit) -Causes an egg to mature (Mature Fish Eggs) -Stimulates ovaries to produce oestrogen
What is the role of Oestrogen -Produced in ovaries -Causes uterus lining to grow (Growstrogen) -Inhibits LH and FSH
What is the basic idea of genetic engineering? Transfering a gene with desirable characteristics from one organism to another
Four examples of genetic engineering? -GM crops -Sheep producing medicinal milk -GM treatments for inherited disease -Insulin-producing bacteria

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