Why do we talk about heat loss of a mammal in terms of per gram of tissue?
Using per gram of tissue allows comparison as the mass of organisms varies
What are some notes about the concentration gradient in terms of diffusion?
Must go from high to low
The greater the difference in concentration the faster diffusion / osmosis will occur
How does a short diffusion pathway effect the diffusion rate?
Diffusion will occur quicker
On a graph A increases rapidly then plateau and B increases steadily in a linear fashion - which is simple diffusion and which is facilitated diffusion and how do you know?
B is simple diffusion as the rate of transport and concentration difference across the membrane are linear in simple diffusion.
A is facilitated diffusion as facilitated diffusion can be limited by the number of available carrier proteins or channel proteins
What is a hypotonic solution?
Has a low solute concentration and a high water potential
What is a hypertonic solution?
A solution with a high solute concentration and a low water potential
Uncontrolled cell divisions by mitosis can lead to the formation of tumours and cancer
State 7 parts of the cell membrane structure
A = Phospholipid bilayer
B = Channel protein
C = Carrier protein
D = Glycolipid
E = Glycoprotein
F = Receptors
G = Enzyme
What is an aquaporin?
A small channel within the phospholipid bilayer that allows for the movement of charged water
How do molecules get through these structures?
Carrier protein - Facilitated diffusion or active transport.
Channel protein -Facilitated diffusion.
Aquaporins -Water passes through via osmosis but not easily as it is not polar
What is water potential?
The tendency of water to move from one area to another through osmosis.
What is it water potential measured in?
kPa
What does this sign mean? ψ
Water Potential
What would the water potential of pure water be? (measurement)
Pure water would have a water potential of 0kPa
Give some evidence that mitochondria / chloroplasts evolved from bacteria.
Circular DNA
Smaller ribosomes
No membrane bound organelles and are smaller in size compared to other cell organelles
Prokaryotes:
Circular
Shorter
No intros
Not associated with histone proteins
Eukaryotic:
Linear
Longer
Intros present
Associated with histone proteins
What two things happen if you increase the surface area of a membrane in terms of fick's law?
An increase in the length that diffusion can take place across.
An increase in the available proteins needed for transport
What will happen to our cells in an hypotonic solution and a hypertonic solution?
They will burst in a hypotonic solution
They will shrivel in a hypertonic solution
What can we possibly do to treat cancer in terms of mitosis?
We can target the cell cycle by either:
Preventing the synthesis of DNA resulting in no S phase.
Interfere with spindle formation preventing the separation of sister chromatids so that there is no anaphase
Cells can now no longer divide to increase in number.
What does intrinsic and extrinsic mean in terms of movement through a membrane?
Intrinsic: It moves all the way through the bilayer
Extrinsic: It moves halfway through the bilayer
What is Fick's law?
Diffusion rate = (SA x difference in concentration gradient) ÷ length of diffusion pathway
What is the function of these membrane proteins?
Enzymes - for digesting proteins
Receptors - for binding to hormones (often glycoproteins; protein with a carbohydrate chain attached)
Cell recognition - antigens (can be proteins or glycoproteins) to recognise foreign cells
What is meant by the ""fluid mosaic"" model of cell membrane structure?
Fluid - proteins can move around within the membrane by moving between phospholipids
Mosaic - Proteins sit within the membrane at intervals