Biology

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Cards (122)

  • what are parts of an animal and plant cell?
    nucleus, cytoplasm, cell membrane, mitochondria
  • what are parts of a plant cell?
    Cell wall, cell membrane, cytoplasm, nucleus, mitochondria, chloroplasts, vacuole
  • what does the nucleus do?
    Controls the cell and contains genetic material
  • what does cytoplasm do?
    area where chemical reactions take place
  • what does cell membrane do?

    Controls what enters and exits the cell
  • what does mitochondria do?
    where most reactions for respiratory take place, respiration releases energy that cells need to work
  • what does the rigid cell wall do?
    made up of cellulose and supports the cell
  • what does chloroplast do?
    Photosynthesis
  • what is plasmid?

    Circular DNA molecule
  • difference between light and electronic microscope?
    Light microscopes nucleus, mitochondria and chloroplasts. Electric microscopes help us see things in more detail we can even see things such as plasmids.
  • what's DNA?
    DNA is a complex chemical that carries genetic information, its found in chromosomes.
  • what structure is DNA in?
    Double Helix.
  • what is a gene?
    A gene is a small peace od DNA that gives us our hair, eye and skin colour.
  • What are the parts of an animal (and plant) cell?
    Nucleus
    Cytoplasm
    Cell membrane
    Mitochondria
  • What are parts of a plant cell?
    Rigid cell wall
    Large vacuole
    Chloroplasts
    (nucleus, cytoplasm, cell membrane and mitochondria)
  • What does the nucleus do?
    Contains DNA that controls what the cell does
  • What does the cytoplasm do?
    Its a gel-like substance where most of the chemical reactions happpen
  • What does the cell membrane do?
    Holds the cell together and controls what goes in and out
  • What does the mitochondria do?

    This is where most of the reactions for respiration take place. Respiration releases energy that the cell needs to work.
  • What does the rigid cell wall do?
    It is made up of cellulose and it gives support for the cell
  • What does the large vacuole do?
    Contains cell sap, a weak solution of sugar and salts
  • What do chloroplasts do?
    This is where photosynthesis occurs. They contain a green substance called chlorophyll.
  • What are the features of a bacteria cell?
    Chromosomal DNA
    Plasmids
    Flagellum
    Cell wall
  • What is chromosomal DNA?
    Chromosomal DNA controls the cells activities and replication. It floats free in the cytoplasm.
  • What are plasmids?

    Plasmids are small loops of extra DNA that aren't part of the chromosome. Plasmids contain genes for things like drug resistance and can be passed between bacteria.
  • What is the flagellum?

    The flagellum is a long, hair-like structure that rotates to make the bacterium move.
  • What does the cell wall do?
    Support the cell
  • What is magnification?
    How much more bigger the image is than the specimen
  • How do you work out magnification?

    length of image / length of specimen
  • What is the difference between light microscopes and electron microscopes?
    Light microscopes let us see things like the nuclei, chloroplasts and mitochondria. Electron microscopes let us see much smaller things in more detail like the internal structure of mitochondria and chloroplasts and even tinier things like plasmids.
  • What is DNA?
    DNA is the complex chemical that carries genetic information. DNA is found in chromosomes which are found in the nucleus of most cells.
  • What is the structure of DNA? (6marker)
    -A DNA molecule has two strands coiled together in the shape of a double helix.
    -The two strands are hold together by chemicals called bases. The four bases are adenine, thymine, guanine and cytosine.
    -The bases are paired, and they always pair up in the same way; A-T and C-G. This is called base pairing.
    -The base pairs are joined together by weak hydrogen bonds.
  • What is a gene?

    A gene is a short piece of DNA that codes for a specific protein. You have genes for hair structure, eye colour enzymes and every other protein in your body.
  • Who discovered the structure of DNA?
    -Rosalind Franklin and Maurice Wilkins worked out DNA had a helical structure by directing beams of X-rays onto crystallised DNA and looking at the patterns of x-rays formed as they bounced off.
    -James Watson and Francis Crick used these ideas along with the idea the amount of adenine+guanine matched the amount of thymine+cytosine to make a model of the DNA molecule where all the pieces fitted together.
  • What would be a practical to extract DNA?(6 marker)
    -Mash or chop fruit or vegetable (e.g kiwi) and mix with salty water and detergent to break open the cells and help release the DNA from the nuclei.
    -Add protease enzyme to the filtered mixture to break up proteins in cell membranes and so release more DNA.
    -Add ice cold ethanol carefully down inside the tube into the mixture. The ethanol makes the DNA separate from the liquid so it is easy to lift out.
  • How does a cell make proteins?
    By stringing amino acids together in a particular order. There's only 20 different amino acids that are used to make up thousands of different proteins. The order of bases in a gene tells cells in what order to put the amino acids together. Each set of three bases (triplet) codes for a particular amino acid.
  • What can DNA determine?
    Which genes are switched on or off and so which proteins the cell produces e.g keratin. That in turn determines what type of cell it is e.g. red blood cell, skin cell.
  • What are proteins made by?
    Proteins are made in the cell by oraganelles called ribosomes.
  • Why does the cell need mRNA?
    Because DNA is found in the nucleus and can't move out of it because its too big. The cell needs to get the information from the DNA to the ribosome in the cell cytoplasm. This is done by using a molecule called mRNA, which is very similar to DNA, but it's shorter and only a single strand. Also, instead of thymine, mRNA has the base uracil (u), which pairs with adenine. mRNA is like a messanger between the DNA in the nucleus and the ribosome. It happens during transcription and translation.
  • What happens during transcription?
    -Transcription takes place in the nucleus.
    -The weak hydrogen bonds break and a section of DNA is unwound and the two strands separate.
    -One strand is used as a template.
    -Complementary bases to this strand link to it.
    -mRNA is formed.
    -mRNA stands for messenger RNA
    -mRNA moves out of the nucleus into the cells cytoplasm