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Published byLoraine Morton Modified over 9 years ago
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Cells vary in size, shape, and function; the shape is closely related to function
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Cytoplasmic organelles perform specific function, but the nucleus controls the overall activities of the cell
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forms outermost boundary selectively permeable – controls movement of substances into and out of cells mainly phospholipids but also includes proteins, & carbohydrates molecules lipid soluble will pass easily; barrier to water soluble substances proteins function as receptors or form channels
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Cytoplasm is the area between nucleus and cell membrane, contains organelles – Fig. 3-2, Table 3-1, ***Know functions of each organelle***
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Enclosed in double layered (pores) nuclear envelope that controls the movement of substances between the nucleus& cytoplasm Nucleolus is a dense body of protein & RNA that functions in the production of ribosomes Chromatin is composed of loosely coiled fibers of protein and DNA that condenses into the structures known as chromosomes during cell division
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Passive transport – no energy required, substances move from an area of high concentration to low concentration (concentration gradient) – Fig. 3-2 diffusion - scattering of molecules or ions from high concentration to low concentration - responsible for the exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide within the body - rate of diffusion can be increased by short distance, high concentration of diffusion molecules, low molecular weight, & high temperature facilitated diffusion – carrier molecules (usually proteins) transport a substance from [high] to [low]
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isotonic – a solution that neither gains or loses H 2 O, has the same concentration of solutes as the solution with which it is being compared hypertonic – a solution that gains H 2 O because it has a higher concentration of solutes than the solution with which it is being compared hypotonic – a solution that loses H 2 O because it has a lower concentration of solutes than the solution with which it is being compared
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blood pressure causes filtration of H 2 O & dissolved substances through porous capillary walls urine formation – nephrons of kidney
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Permease (pump systems) – protein driven transport systems – Fig. 3-4 Endocytosis – cells take in large molecules from their surrounding Phagocytosis – large molecules, ex. – white blood cell engulfing bacteria Pinocytosis – water and small molecules Exocytosis – cells release materials
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Mitosis – a parent cell divides once to produce two genetically identical daughter cells; daughter cells contain the same number of chromosomes as the parent cell; both are diploid in chromosome number (2n) Meiosis – a parent cell divides twice to produce four cells (gametes) that contain a haploid (n) number of chromosomes; “male” & “female” gametes fuse at fertilization to produce a zygote (2n)
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DNA – double helix, sugar is deoxyribose adenine (purine) – thymine (pyrimadine) guanine(purine) – cytosine (pyrimadine) RNA – Single stranded, sugar is ribose, uracil (pyrimadine) replaces thymine Gene – a segment of a chromosome that is made up of specific base pairs and codes for proteins
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transcription – synthesis of RNA using a DNA template translation – the assembly of amino acids to form a polypeptide chain, in a sequence specified by the order of nucleotide in a molecule of mRNA
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Interphase – cell grows and “does its specific job”, chromosomes are replicated (duplicated) during this phase Mitosis – division of the chromosomes – Table 3-5 **Know** Cytokinesis – division of the cytoplasm
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