Section 1- Structures and Functions in Living Organisms
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Cambridge IGCSE Biology (Section 1- Structures and Functions in Living Organisms) Mapa Mental sobre Section 1- Structures and Functions in Living Organisms, criado por beccalaw7 em 03-06-2014.
Section 1- Structures and Functions in Living Organisms
Characteristics of Living Organisms
M= Movement
R= Respiration
S= Sensitivity
G= Growth
R= Reproduction
E= Excretion
N= Nutrition
Levels of organisation
Animal Cells
Plant Cells
Organelles
Tiny structures within cells.
E.g. the nucleus or chloroplasts
Specialised Cells
Cells that are specialised are
made to carry out a specific
function
(Stem cells are not
specialised so can be told
to do whatever we want)
E.g. red blood cells are
specialised in carrying
oxygen
E.g. egg and sperm cells
Tissues
A tissue is a group of
similar cells that work
together to carry out a
particular function
E.g. xlyem tissue (for
transporting water and
mineral salts) and phloem
tissue (for transporting
sucrose and amino acids).
Tissues can
contain more than
1 cell type
Organs
These form Organ systems
Organs work together to form
organ systems. Each system
does a different job.
E.g. the digestive system
An organ ia a group of
tissues that work together
to perform a function
E.g. Lungs
Plants, Animals and Fungi
Plants
Multicellular
Carry out photosynthesis
Have cell walls
Store carbohydrates as sucrose or starch
Animals
Multicellular
Cannot photossynthesise
due to not having
chloroplasts and plant cell
structures/organelles
Don't have a cell wall
Most have a nervous
system so are able to
react and adapt to their
surroundings
Can move easily
Can store carbohydrate in form of glucogen
Fungi
Some are single-celled
Others have a body called a
mycelium made up of hyphae
Can't photosynthesise
Have cell walls made of chittin
Feed off other living things
Store carbohydrates as glucogen
All living things are split into 5 kingdoms
The Kingdoms
The Animal Kingdom
The Plant Kingdom
The Bacteria Kingdom
The Fungi Kingdom
The Protist Kingdom
Viruses are NOT part of any kingdoms because they
have to live in or on something else and rely on them.
Depend on other living organisms=parasites
Protocists, Bacteria and Viruses
Protoctists
Single-celled
Some have
chloroplasts
like plant cells
Others
are like
animal
cells
Microscopic
Bacteria
Single-celled
Microscopic
Don't have a nucleus
Circular chromosome of DNA
Some can photosynthesise
Feed of other
living/dead organisms
Viruses
Particles rather than cells and are
smaller than bacteria
Can only reproduce inside living cells
Infect all types of
living organisms
Don't have a
structure, they come
in many shapes and
sizes
Enzymes
Enzymes are catalysts produced by living
things that speed up the rate of reaction without
being changed or used up in the reaction
Optimum temperature
Enzymes work best at 37C
Higher= Denatured
Loses active site's shape and
cannot function
Lower= slower reaction
Also have optimum Ph
'Lock and key model'
Active site
Substrate
A molecule that is changed in a reaction
Reaction
Proteins that are made up of chains of amino acids
Osmosis
The movement of water molecules through a partially
permeable membrane from an area of higher water
concentration to an area of lower water concentration
Partially permeable
membrane= only small
molecules can get
through
To 'even up' the
concentrations on either side
of the membrane (reach equilibrium)
Cells use osmosis
Short of water
Solution inside becomes
concentrated
Water molecules move into
the cell to 'even up' the
concentration again
(osmosis)
Too much water
Solution inside becomes
more dilute than that of
outside
Water is drawn out of the
cell to 'even up' the
concentration again
(osmosis)
Plant Cells
Too much water/well watered= turgid
Turgor pressure= when the cell is so
full it pushes against the cell wall
Not enough water/wilting= Flaccid
Loses turgor pressure
Diffusion
The movement of particles from an area or
higher concentration to an area of lower
concentration
Liquids and gasses,
not solids as the
particles cannot move
about freely
The bigger the difference in
concentration, the faster it
happens
Warmer temperature
makes diffusion happen
faster too
Cell membranes use diffusion (and osmosis
and active transport) to let small molecules
(e.g. glucose, amino acids, water, oxygen) in
and out of the cell
Active Transport
The movement of particles against a concentration
gradient using energy released during respiration
E.g. from an area of lower concentration to an area of higher
concentration
Used in digestive system when there is
a low concentration of nutrients in
stomache but a high concentration of
nutrients in the blood
Main factors that affect the movement of substances
Surface area+volume
Large surface area/volume= faster reaction
Temperature
Warmer= more energy= faster reaction
Concentration gradient
Bigger difference in concentration= faster reaction