Chapter 3
... – They can be sold as prescription drugs and used to treat certain diseases – They may also be abused with serious consequences, such as liver damage that can lead to cancer ...
... – They can be sold as prescription drugs and used to treat certain diseases – They may also be abused with serious consequences, such as liver damage that can lead to cancer ...
Revision summary 2. Movement, Molecules and Enzymes File
... Understand how the functioning of enzymes can be affected by changes in pH All enzymes have an optimum pH where they work fastest At high or low pH, the enzyme is denatured so is inactive or less active ...
... Understand how the functioning of enzymes can be affected by changes in pH All enzymes have an optimum pH where they work fastest At high or low pH, the enzyme is denatured so is inactive or less active ...
General Characteristics of the Six Kingdoms
... Some are autotrophs and have chloroplast and perform photosynthesis Some are heterotrophs that ingest small food particles & digest it inside food vacuoles containing digestive enzymes cilia, flagella & pseudopodia Can reproduce asexually or sexually Can be found in pond or stagnant water ...
... Some are autotrophs and have chloroplast and perform photosynthesis Some are heterotrophs that ingest small food particles & digest it inside food vacuoles containing digestive enzymes cilia, flagella & pseudopodia Can reproduce asexually or sexually Can be found in pond or stagnant water ...
HERE - No Brain Too Small
... (Can also state the reactants and products in a non-balanced chemical equation.) C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + Energy (ATP). (May mention that fats and proteins can also be consumed as reactants.) Glucose is consumed by animals or made by plants. Glucose molecule is broken down and reacts with ox ...
... (Can also state the reactants and products in a non-balanced chemical equation.) C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + Energy (ATP). (May mention that fats and proteins can also be consumed as reactants.) Glucose is consumed by animals or made by plants. Glucose molecule is broken down and reacts with ox ...
Cell Membranes
... What is active transport? Active transport is the movement of a substance against its concentration gradient. (From low to high concentration) What does active transport require? Active transport requires ATP for energy. Is active transport used when a particle wants Active transport occurs against ...
... What is active transport? Active transport is the movement of a substance against its concentration gradient. (From low to high concentration) What does active transport require? Active transport requires ATP for energy. Is active transport used when a particle wants Active transport occurs against ...
Diffusion, osmosis and transport of substances in cells
... Ex. 1 b. Fill in the missing words: chloroplasts, wall, nucleus, photosynthesis Plant cells have a cell……. and a vacuole which gives them rigidity. The also have small green organelles called ……………necessary for …………….. Animal cells seen under a microscope are much simpler because the only organelle ...
... Ex. 1 b. Fill in the missing words: chloroplasts, wall, nucleus, photosynthesis Plant cells have a cell……. and a vacuole which gives them rigidity. The also have small green organelles called ……………necessary for …………….. Animal cells seen under a microscope are much simpler because the only organelle ...
Lecture2_Chap1 File
... use R to represent “any substituent.” It may be as simple as a hydrogen atom, but typically it is a carbon-containing group. When two or more substituents are shown in a molecule, we designate them R1, R2, and so ...
... use R to represent “any substituent.” It may be as simple as a hydrogen atom, but typically it is a carbon-containing group. When two or more substituents are shown in a molecule, we designate them R1, R2, and so ...
Cell Analogy Project Exemplar Mini-Essay Your Task from Part V. of
... Aristotle once said, “The whole is more than the sum of its parts.” What Aristotle meant was, the bigger idea of something means more than an individual thing that makes up the “something.” Like a car is more than the leather seats that are inside of it, or an apple pie is more than the tin that hol ...
... Aristotle once said, “The whole is more than the sum of its parts.” What Aristotle meant was, the bigger idea of something means more than an individual thing that makes up the “something.” Like a car is more than the leather seats that are inside of it, or an apple pie is more than the tin that hol ...
5.4 Asexual Reproduction
... Binary Fission and Mitosis 1. Binary fission is similar in function to mitosis – Binary Fission occurs in most Prokaryotes – Binary fission produces two daughter cells genetically identical to the parent cell. parent cell ...
... Binary Fission and Mitosis 1. Binary fission is similar in function to mitosis – Binary Fission occurs in most Prokaryotes – Binary fission produces two daughter cells genetically identical to the parent cell. parent cell ...
What are parts of a cell?
... Control reactions by speeding them up (catalyze) Work by changing shape Fig 3.6 ...
... Control reactions by speeding them up (catalyze) Work by changing shape Fig 3.6 ...
Epidermal Stem Cells
... 2-stage skin carcinogenesis • Mutations are caused by applying a mutagen ( for example DMBA) to shaved back skin • Tumour growth is promoted by repeated applications of TPA over several weeks • Multiple benign papillomas, some of them convert to malignant carcinomas. • When applied to transgenic or ...
... 2-stage skin carcinogenesis • Mutations are caused by applying a mutagen ( for example DMBA) to shaved back skin • Tumour growth is promoted by repeated applications of TPA over several weeks • Multiple benign papillomas, some of them convert to malignant carcinomas. • When applied to transgenic or ...
Tissue Engineering of the Heart
... 1940- The design was perfected and a new apparatus was patented, this is the apparatus and technique we use today ...
... 1940- The design was perfected and a new apparatus was patented, this is the apparatus and technique we use today ...
Chapter 12 mitosis notes
... ii) The two daughter chromosomes actively move apart 7) The Evolution of Mitosis a) Since prokaryotes preceded eukaryotes by billions of years it is likely that mitosis evolved from bacterial cell division b) Certain protists exhibit types of cell division that seem intermediate between binary fissi ...
... ii) The two daughter chromosomes actively move apart 7) The Evolution of Mitosis a) Since prokaryotes preceded eukaryotes by billions of years it is likely that mitosis evolved from bacterial cell division b) Certain protists exhibit types of cell division that seem intermediate between binary fissi ...
Links For Cell City Webquest - Paintvalleylocalschools.org
... Purpose: To construct a 3-d model of a typical plant or animal cell using materials that are edible. Rules for Constructing the Cell: 1. The models must include the following organelles: a. cell membrane b. nuclear membrane c. nucleus d. nucleolus e. mitochondria f. ribosomes g. rough endoplasmic re ...
... Purpose: To construct a 3-d model of a typical plant or animal cell using materials that are edible. Rules for Constructing the Cell: 1. The models must include the following organelles: a. cell membrane b. nuclear membrane c. nucleus d. nucleolus e. mitochondria f. ribosomes g. rough endoplasmic re ...
chapter 7 section 3 notes
... transported across the cell membrane by processes known as endocytosis and exocytosis. The transport of these larger materials sometimes involves changes in the shape of the cell membrane. ...
... transported across the cell membrane by processes known as endocytosis and exocytosis. The transport of these larger materials sometimes involves changes in the shape of the cell membrane. ...
Ultrastructure of the Infectious and Reproductive
... granular material. At the end of the cell distal from the cytoplasm, a tip containing less osmiophilic fine granular material was observed. Freeze-fracture and freeze-etching studies revealed differences in the patterns of intramembranous particles between the two forms. It is suggested that some of ...
... granular material. At the end of the cell distal from the cytoplasm, a tip containing less osmiophilic fine granular material was observed. Freeze-fracture and freeze-etching studies revealed differences in the patterns of intramembranous particles between the two forms. It is suggested that some of ...
Osmolarity and Tonic..
... hyperosmolar and hypertonic (as compared to the normal situation) as glucose cannot easily enter cells in these circumstances. Water moves out of the cells until the osmolar gradient is abolished. In some situations, a more operational definition of tonicity is used to explain the term: though not i ...
... hyperosmolar and hypertonic (as compared to the normal situation) as glucose cannot easily enter cells in these circumstances. Water moves out of the cells until the osmolar gradient is abolished. In some situations, a more operational definition of tonicity is used to explain the term: though not i ...
bio12_sm_10_1
... 6. Since it is derived from cholesterol, it is a steroid hormone and should use an internal receptor mechanism, passing through the lipid bilayer plasma membrane and activating a receptor molecule inside the cell’s cytosol or nucleus. 7. Answers may vary according to the hormone students chose to il ...
... 6. Since it is derived from cholesterol, it is a steroid hormone and should use an internal receptor mechanism, passing through the lipid bilayer plasma membrane and activating a receptor molecule inside the cell’s cytosol or nucleus. 7. Answers may vary according to the hormone students chose to il ...
Unit 1 Topic 1: Cells - Inverness Royal Academy
... Measure out 20cm3 of water into 1 beaker and 20cm3 of yeast suspension into another beaker. Add one portion of flour to the water and the other to the yeast suspension and stir with stirring rods. Pour the dough into 2 labelled plastic beakers. Record the volume and put the cylinders into a water ba ...
... Measure out 20cm3 of water into 1 beaker and 20cm3 of yeast suspension into another beaker. Add one portion of flour to the water and the other to the yeast suspension and stir with stirring rods. Pour the dough into 2 labelled plastic beakers. Record the volume and put the cylinders into a water ba ...