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Eukaryotes
Cells that have a
nucleus
and
membrane-bound
organelles
Prokaryotes
Cells that lack a
nucleus
and
membrane-bound
organelles
Components of animal and plant cells
Cell membrane
Cytoplasm
Nucleus
containing DNA
Components of bacterial cells
Cell wall
Cell membrane
Cytoplasm
Single circular strand
of DNA and
plasmids
Organelles
Structures
in a cell that have
different
functions
Orders of magnitude
Used to understand how much
bigger
or
smaller
one object is from another
Prefixes
Centi
(0.01)
Milli
(0.001)
Micro
(0.000,001)
Nano (0.000,000,001)
Structures in animal and plant cells
Nucleus
Cytoplasm
Cell membrane
Mitochondria
Ribosomes
Structures only in plant cells
Chloroplasts
Permanent vacuole
Cell wall
Structures in bacterial cells
Cytoplasm
Cell membrane
Cell wall
Single circular strand
of DNA
Plasmids
Cell specialisation
The process where cells gain new
sub-cellular
structures to be suited to their
role
Specialised animal cells
Sperm
cells
Nerve
cells
Muscle
cells
Specialised plant cells
Root hair cells
Xylem cells
Phloem cells
Cell differentiation
The process where stem cells switch
on/off
genes to produce different
proteins
and acquire different sub-cellular structures
In animals, most cells
differentiate
early and lose the ability, but some like red blood cells are replaced by adult stem
cells
In plants, many cell types retain the ability to
differentiate
throughout life
Light microscope
Has
two
lenses (objective and eyepiece), illuminated from underneath, maximum magnification of x2000 and resolving power of
200nm
Electron microscope
Uses
electrons
instead of light, can achieve magnification up to x2,000,000 and resolving power of 10nm (SEM) and 0.2nm (TEM)
Calculating magnification of light microscope
Magnification of eyepiece lens x Magnification of
objective lens
Calculating size of object
Size of image / Magnification =
Size of object
Standard form
Multiplying a number by a power of
10
to represent very large or small numbers, with the 'number' between 1 and
10
Culture medium
Contains
carbohydrates
, minerals, proteins and
vitamins
to grow microorganisms
Growing microorganisms in nutrient broth solution
Make suspension of bacteria, mix with sterile nutrient broth, stopper with
cotton wool
,
shake regularly
Standard form
Multiplying a certain number by a power of
10
to make it bigger or smaller, with the 'number' being between 1 and
10
Standard form examples
1.5 x 10^
-5
=
0.000015
3.4
x 10^3 =
3400
Culturing microorganisms
Growing many
microorganisms
in the lab using
nutrients
Components of culture medium
Carbohydrates
Minerals
Proteins
Vitamins
Growing microorganisms in nutrient broth
1. Make
suspension
of
bacteria
2. Mix with
sterile
nutrient broth
3. Stopper flask with
cotton wool
4. Shake regularly to provide oxygen
Growing microorganisms on
agar gel plate
1. Pour hot sterilised
agar jelly
into sterilised
Petri dish
2. Allow to
cool
and
set
3. Inoculate with
microorganism
using
sterilised loop
4. Seal
plate
and
incubate
Reasons for sterilisation
Prevents
contamination
with other
microorganisms
Prevents
competition
for
nutrients
and space
Prevents introduction of
harmful microorganisms
Reasons for sealing plate
Stops
airborne
microorganisms from
contaminating
Allows
oxygen
to enter but prevents
anaerobic
bacteria
Reasons for incubating at
25°C
Prevents growth of bacteria harmful to humans
Testing antibiotic effectiveness
1. Soak paper discs in
antibiotics
and place on agar plate with
bacteria
2. Leave plate to
incubate
3. Measure size of inhibition zone around discs
Bigger
inhibition zone
indicates more effective antibiotic
Chromosomes
Contain
coils
of
DNA
and carry genes
Number of chromosomes
46
in body cells, 23 in gametes
Cell
cycle and mitosis
1. Interphase: cell grows,
organelles
increase,
DNA
replicates
2.
Mitosis
:
chromosomes
line up and are pulled to opposite sides
3.
Cytokinesis
: cytoplasm and cell membrane divide to form two
daughter
cells
Importance of mitosis
Growth and development
Replacing
damaged
cells
Asexual reproduction
Stem cells
Undifferentiated
cells that can divide to produce more similar cells, some of which can
differentiate
Types of stem cells
Embryonic
Adult
(e.g. in bone marrow)
Meristems
in plants
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