Biology Paper1

Cards (70)

  • Microscopes
    Normal light microscope can see cells and nucleus, electron microscope can see subcellular structures in more detail
  • 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
    • Cell wall (in plants and bacteria)
    • Cytoplasm
    • Mitochondria
    • Ribosomes
    • Chloroplasts (in plants)
  • Bacterial binary fission

    1. Number doubles every 10 minutes
    2. Practical: Grow culture on agar plate, use aseptic technique
    3. Calculate culture size from area or initial drop
  • Diploid cells
    Have 23 pairs of chromosomes
  • Haploid cells

    Have 23 chromosomes (not in pairs)
  • 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 different 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 % 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

    • Acid in stomach
    • Bile and enzymes in small intestine
    • Nutrients absorbed by villi
  • Enzymes
    Biological catalysts that are specific to certain substrates, work on a lock and key principle
  • Practical: Enzyme activity

    1. Mix amylase and starch
    2. Test for starch every 10 seconds with iodine
    3. Plot time to complete reaction against temperature or pH
    4. Find optimum conditions
  • Food tests

    • Iodine for starch
    • Benedict's solution for sugars
    • Biuret's reagent for proteins
    • Ethanol for lipids
  • Breathing and gas exchange
    1. Air moves down trachea to alveoli
    2. Oxygen diffuses into blood
    3. Carbon dioxide diffuses out
  • Double circulatory system

    Blood enters heart twice per cycle, deoxygenated blood to lungs, oxygenated blood to body
  • Blood vessel types

    • Arteries (thick walls, narrow lumen)
    • Veins (thin walls, valves)
    • Capillaries (one cell thick)
  • Coronary arteries
    Supply heart muscle with oxygen
  • Non-communicable diseases

    Caused by internal factors, e.g. cardiovascular disease, cancer, autoimmune conditions
  • Communicable diseases

    Caused by external pathogens, e.g. infectious diseases
  • Coronary artery

    Delivers blood to the heart muscle to supply oxygen
  • Coronary heart disease (CHD)

    Occurs when coronary arteries are blocked by fatty deposits, causing a heart attack
  • Stents
    Little tubes inserted into blood vessels to keep them open and allow blood flow
  • Statins
    Drugs that reduce cholesterol and fatty deposits
  • Heart valve replacement

    Artificial valves can replace faulty ones to prevent backflow
  • Blood components

    Plasma, red blood cells, white blood cells, platelets
  • White blood cells
    Combat infections
  • Platelets
    Clump together to clot wounds and stop bleeding
  • Cardiovascular disease (CVD)

    Non-communicable disease caused by factors within the body
  • Other non-communicable diseases

    • Autoimmune conditions, allergic reactions, cancer
  • Communicable disease

    Caused by a pathogen that enters the body, leading to viral, bacterial or fungal infection
  • Type 2 diabetes
    Caused by obesity and too much sugar
  • Risk factors for heart disease

    Bad diet, smoking, lack of exercise, alcohol
  • Carcinogen
    Anything that increases the risk of cancer, e.g. ionizing radiation
  • Cancer
    Result of damaged cells dividing uncontrollably, leading to tumours
  • Benign cancer

    Doesn't spread through the body, relatively easy to treat