Bio Paper 1

Cards (72)

  • 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
  • Subcellular structures

    • Cell membrane
    • Cell wall
    • Cytoplasm
    • Mitochondria
    • Ribosomes
    • Chloroplasts
    • Vacuole
  • Bacterial binary fission

    1. Number doubles every 10 minutes
    2. Practical: Grow culture on agar plate using aseptic technique
    3. Calculate size of culture from initial drop or area not grown
  • 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
  • Diffusion
    Movement of molecules/particles from high to low concentration, 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
  • Tissues
    • Heart
    • Digestive
  • Digestive system processes

    • Acid in stomach
    • Bile and enzymes in small intestine
    • Emulsification of fats
  • Enzymes
    Biological catalysts, 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 taken for starch to be broken down against temperature or pH
    4. Find optimum temperature or pH
  • Food tests

    • Iodine for starch
    • Benedict's solution for sugars
    • Biuret's reagent for proteins
    • Ethanol for lipids
  • Respiration
    Provides energy for cells, different from breathing
  • Gas exchange
    1. Air moves down trachea, bronchi, bronchioles to alveoli
    2. Oxygen diffuses into blood, carbon dioxide diffuses out
  • Circulatory system components

    • Heart
    • Arteries
    • Veins
    • Capillaries
  • Blood flow through heart

    1. Deoxygenated blood enters right atrium
    2. Passes through right ventricle to lungs
    3. Oxygenated blood enters left atrium
    4. Passes through left ventricle to body
  • Pacemaker
    Regulates heart contractions
  • Arteries vs Veins

    Arteries carry oxygenated blood, have thicker walls
    Veins carry deoxygenated blood, have valves
  • Coronary arteries supply heart muscle with oxygen
  • Cardiovascular disease

    Non-communicable disease caused by internal factors
  • Other non-communicable diseases include autoimmune conditions and cancer
  • 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 heart valves can replace faulty ones to prevent backflow
  • Blood components

    • Plasma
    • Red blood cells
    • White blood cells (combat infections)
    • Platelets (clot wounds)
  • Cardiovascular disease (CVD)

    Non-communicable disease caused by factors within the body, e.g. obesity, diet, smoking
  • Communicable disease

    Caused by a pathogen (virus, bacteria, fungus, or parasite) that enters the body
  • Carcinogen
    Anything that increases the risk of cancer, e.g. ionizing radiation
  • Benign cancer
    Doesn't spread through the body and is relatively easy to treat
  • Malignant cancer
    Cancerous cells spread through the body, much worse