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AS level biology
Unit 1 Mrs Carne
Cell membrane and transport test revision
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What is the fluid-mosaic model of cell membranes?
A model that describes the
structure
of
cell
membranes
as a
mosaic
of various components.
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What are the main components of the fluid-mosaic model?
Phospholipids
and
proteins
.
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What does it mean for a membrane to be selectively permeable?
It allows some
substances
to pass through more easily than others.
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What is diffusion and how does it occur?
Net movement of
particles
from higher to lower
concentration
.
Continues until particles are evenly distributed.
Passive process
; does not require energy.
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What factors affect the rate of diffusion?
The
concentration difference
,
temperature
, surface area, and distance.
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What is facilitated diffusion?
Diffusion across a membrane involving
carrier
or
channel proteins
.
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What is the role of channel proteins in facilitated diffusion?
They help transport
specific molecules
across the membrane.
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What is active transport?
The movement of molecules against their
concentration gradient
, requiring energy.
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How is the rate of active transport related to respiration?
The rate of active transport is directly related to the rate of
respiration.
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What are the key features of active transport?
Molecules move against the
concentration gradient
.
Requires energy (
ATP
).
Involves specific carrier proteins.
Rate affected by
temperature
and
ATP availability
.
Can be saturated;
maximum transport rate
.
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What is ATP and its role in active transport?
ATP is
adenosine triphosphate
, the main
energy currency
of cells.
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What happens during the process of active transport?
The
carrier protein
changes shape to move the molecule across the membrane.
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What is osmosis?
The movement of water across a
selectively permeable
membrane.
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What is the water potential gradient?
The difference in water potential across a distance that drives
osmosis
.
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How does osmosis affect plant cells?
It helps maintain
turgor pressure
, keeping the plant upright.
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How does osmosis affect animal cells?
It can cause animal cells to swell or shrink depending on the
surrounding
solution.
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What are the key terms related to transport across membranes?
Concentration gradient
Diffusion
Facilitated diffusion
Passive transport
Selectively permeable
Active transport
ATP
Carrier protein
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What are the two main processes for bulk transport in cells?
Endocytosis
and
exocytosis
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How does endocytosis occur?
Material is engulfed by extensions of the
cell membrane
, forming a
vesicle
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What happens during phagocytosis?
Granulocytes engulf bacteria, forming a phagosome that is digested by enzymes
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What are the two larger forms of endocytosis?
Phagocytosis
: uptake of solid material
Pinocytosis
: uptake of liquid
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What is formed when granulocytes engulf bacteria?
A
phagosome
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What occurs to the products of digestion in phagocytosis?
They pass into the
cytoplasm
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What is pinocytosis?
The uptake of liquid by the
cell membrane
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How do substances leave the cell during pinocytosis?
They pass through the
cytoplasm
in a vesicle that fuses with the
cell membrane
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What is exocytosis?
The process by which substances leave the cell, packaged in
vesicles
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What type of substances are often secreted by exocytosis?
Digestive enzymes
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What is the energy requirement for endocytosis and exocytosis?
Both processes are active
They use
ATP
generated by
respiration
The cell membrane changes shape during these processes
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What is required for the processes of endocytosis and exocytosis to occur?
Energy in the form of
ATP
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Why are endocytosis and exocytosis considered active processes?
They require energy to change the shape of the
cell membrane
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How does the cell membrane play a role in endocytosis and exocytosis?
The
cell membrane
is essential for
both
processes
to occur
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Hypertonic
?
A solution with low water potential (high
solute
concentration
)
Hypotonic
?
Solution with a high
water potential
(low
solute concentration
)
Isotonic
?
Equal
solute
and water
potential
= no net movement of water
Hydrophobic
?
Non-polar
Hydrophillic
?
Polar
How to determine the rate of
diffusion
?
Rate of diffusion =
surface area
x difference in
concentration
/length of diffusion path
What is co-transport in biology?
Co-transport is a
mechanism
used by cells to move
substances
across their membrane.
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How does co-transport typically function?
It involves the simultaneous transport of two different molecules across the
membrane
.
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In what directions can co-transport occur?
Co-transport can occur in the
same
or
opposite
directions.
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