AQA - biology paper 1

Cards (173)

  • Microscopes
    Normal light microscope can see cells and nucleus, electron microscope can see subcellular structures in more detail
  • Calculating cell size
    1. Measure image size
    2. Divide by magnification
  • Eukaryotic cells
    Have a nucleus containing DNA
  • Prokaryotic cells
    Do not have a nucleus, DNA is in a ring called a plasmid
  • Cell structures
    • Cell membrane - holds the cell together and controls what enters
    • Cell wall (in plants and bacteria) - support for cell
    • Cytoplasm - where most of the chemical reactions take place
    • Mitochondria - respires for chemical reactions
    • Ribosomes - where proteins are made in the cell
    • Chloroplasts (in plants) - where photosynthesis occurs
  • Bacterial binary fission
    1. Number doubles every 10 minutes
    2. Practical: Grow culture on agar plate using aseptic technique
    3. Calculate culture size from area or initial drop
  • Diploid cells
    Have 23 pairs of chromosomes
  • Haploid cells
    Have 23 single chromosomes
  • Mitosis
    1. Genetic material duplicated
    2. Nucleus breaks down
    3. Chromosomes pulled to opposite sides
    4. New nuclei form
  • Specialised cell types
    • Nerve
    • Muscle
    • Root hair
    • Xylem
    • Phloem
  • Stem cells
    Unspecialised cells that can differentiate into various cell types
  • Diffusion
    Movement of molecules/particles from high to low concentration, down concentration gradient, passive process
  • Osmosis
    Diffusion of water across a semi-permeable membrane
  • Practical: Osmosis
    1. Cut potato cylinders
    2. Weigh and place in sugar solutions
    3. Reweigh after a day
    4. Calculate percentage change in mass
    5. Plot against sugar concentration to find no change point
  • Active transport
    Using energy to move substances against a concentration gradient
  • Digestive system processes
    • Stomach acid breakdown
    • Bile emulsification of fats
    • Enzyme breakdown of food molecules
  • Enzymes
    Biological catalysts that are specific to certain substrates, work on a lock and key principle
  • Practical: Enzyme activity
    1. Mix amylase and starch at different temperatures or pH
    2. Test for starch breakdown over time
    3. Plot time taken vs temperature/pH to find optimum
  • Food tests
    • Iodine for starch
    • Benedict's solution for sugars
    • Biuret's reagent for proteins
    • Ethanol for lipids
  • Breathing vs respiration
    Breathing provides oxygen for respiration in cells
  • Gas exchange in lungs
    1. Air moves down trachea, bronchi, bronchioles to alveoli
    2. Oxygen diffuses into blood, carbon dioxide diffuses out
  • Circulatory system
    Double circulatory system, deoxygenated blood enters right side of heart, oxygenated blood leaves left side
  • Heart structure
    Right atrium and ventricle, left atrium and ventricle, valves to prevent backflow
  • Blood vessels
    Arteries carry oxygenated blood away from heart, veins carry deoxygenated blood towards heart, capillaries allow diffusion
  • Coronary arteries supply the heart muscle with oxygen</b>
  • Cardiovascular disease

    Non-communicable disease caused by factors within the body, e.g. atherosclerosis
  • Coronary artery
    Delivers blood to the heart muscle to supply oxygen
  • Heart attack
    Occurs when coronary arteries are blocked by buildup of fatty deposits, causing coronary heart disease (CHD)
  • Stents
    Little tubes inserted into blood vessels to keep them open and allow blood flow
  • Statins
    Drugs that reduce cholesterol, which reduces fatty deposits
  • Faulty heart valves
    Result in backflow, can be replaced with artificial ones
  • Blood
    Carries plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells (combat infections), and platelets (clot wounds)
  • Cardiovascular disease (CVD)

    An example of a non-communicable disease, caused by factors within the body
  • Examples of non-communicable diseases
    • Cardiovascular disease
    • Autoimmune conditions
    • Cancer
  • Communicable disease

    Caused by a pathogen (virus, bacteria, fungus, or parasite) that enters the body
  • Carcinogen
    Anything that increases the risk of cancer
  • Benign cancer
    Doesn't spread through the body, relatively easy to treat
  • Malignant cancer

    Cancerous cells spread through the body, much worse
  • Leaves
    Where photosynthesis takes place, producing food for the plant
  • Transpiration
    The diffusing of water out of leaves, allowing water and minerals to be drawn up from the roots