* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Unit 7A Cells
Embryonic stem cell wikipedia , lookup
Induced pluripotent stem cell wikipedia , lookup
Artificial cell wikipedia , lookup
Cellular differentiation wikipedia , lookup
Cell (biology) wikipedia , lookup
Chimera (genetics) wikipedia , lookup
Hematopoietic stem cell wikipedia , lookup
Cell culture wikipedia , lookup
Neuronal lineage marker wikipedia , lookup
Dictyostelium discoideum wikipedia , lookup
Human embryogenesis wikipedia , lookup
Microbial cooperation wikipedia , lookup
List of types of proteins wikipedia , lookup
State switching wikipedia , lookup
Organ-on-a-chip wikipedia , lookup
Adoptive cell transfer wikipedia , lookup
Key Stage 3 Science Name ________________________Tutor Group_______ Science Teacher _________________________________ Unit 7A Workbook Cells My target for this unit is: 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) -1- What level am I working at? Unit 7A Cells Level I can do this I can name the 7 essential characteristics of life 3 I can name the major organs in humans 4 I know the function of the major human organs 5 I can name the major organs of a flowering plant 5 I can use a microscope safely 3 I can name the major parts of a microscope 4 I can calculate the total magnification of a microscope 5 I can work out the size of the field of view in a microscope, and use this to work out the actual size of the object observed 6 I can describe how to make a specimen microscope slide (cheek cells) 4 I can recognise and name the parts of a typical animal cell 4 I can draw a clear, labelled diagram of cells viewed under high magnification 5 I can describe how to make a specimen microscope slide (onion cells) 4 I can recognise and name the parts of a typical plant cell 4 I can match cell structures to their functions 5 I can describe the differences between a typical plant cell and animal cell 5 I can describe how some cells are adapted for specific functions 6 I can explain how organisms grow 4 I can describe how new cells are formed 5 I can explain that cells have nuclei containing the information that is transferred from one generation to the next 5 Lesson 7 Lesson 6 Lesson 5 Lesson 4 Lesson 3 Lesson 2 Lesson 1 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) I have revised this TEST -2- 7A Key Words and Phrases cell the small, single “building block” of all living things cell wall tough, outer layer of a plant cell, that is made of strong, cellulose fibres which support the cell and help the plant to stay upright chloroplast special packets in plant cells that contain a green pigment called chlorophyll cytoplasm jelly-like substance where many of the important chemical reactions in the cell take place Field of view Area that is visible when you look through the microscope function a special job carried out by a cell, tissue or organ magnification How big the object looks than it actually is membrane the “skin” of the cell that controls the entry and exit of chemicals and water microscope a scientific instrument used to magnify very small objects mitosis Cell division where one cell forms two and two form four cells MRS NERG mnemonic to remember the 7 functions of life nucleus controls all the cells functions and contains all the information (DNA) for making new cells and new individuals organism a living thing organ organ system a group of tissues working together in the same place, e.g. heart, lungs, eyes, leaves and flower a group of organs that have related functions – e.g. digestive system, reproductive system, organelle a smaller structure within a cell, e.g. a chloroplast photosynthesis the chemical process that helps plants trap energy from the sun to produce food respiration using oxygen to get energy from food specimen a biological sample, e.g. cells on a microscope slide specialised cells cells which have special adaptations to help them do a particular job stain to add a coloured chemical to a specimen, to make it easier to see tissue a large number of similar cells grouped together and working together to do a particular function vacuole a space in a cell for storing sap 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) -3- Lesson 1 What are living things made from? Task1 The 7 characteristics of life are: M ________________ R ________________ S ________________ N ________________ E ________________ R ________________ G ________________ Use your key word list to help you complete these sentences: The smallest unit of life is called a cell A tissue is made up of cells that carry out the same function. . An organ is formed from groups of _______________ working together. An ___________ ______________ is a group of organs working together. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) -4- Match up the pictures to the structures - Tissue, Organ system, Cell, Organ The structure below is found in a leaf Blood The structure below is located in the trachea The structure below is found in muscles 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) -5- Task 2 Body Systems Name of system Organs of the system Functions of the system Which characteristic of life? Excretory system Nervous system Digestive System Circulatory system Reproductive System Respiratory System Muscle and skeletal system 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) -6- Task 3 Human Organs Label the organs (L4) Say what organ system they belong to (L4) Explain their functions (L5) 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) -7- Flowering Plant Organs Task 4 Root leaves bud Flower 1. label the plant using the following words from the box 2. What is the job of the leaves in plants? 3. How does water get to the leaves? 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) stem -8- Using a Microscope Lesson 2 Label the parts Task 5 eyepiece magnification objective lens magnification x10 x40 x10 x100 x50 x10 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) total magnification x500 x200 -9- How to use a microscope 1 Place a prepared slide on the microscope stage and carefully secure it using the stage clips. 2 Turn the objective lenses until the smallest lens is over the hole in the stage. This is the lens with the lowest magnification. 3 Now slowly rotate the large focusing knob (sometimes called the coarse focusing wheel) until the object on the slide comes into view. As soon as you can see your object, stop using the focusing knob. This will prevent you from breaking the slide. 4 To get your object focused Warning! If you are using a microscope with a mirror, never focus on sunlight. clearly and sharply, use the fine focusing knob. 5 If you want to look more closely at the object on the slide, turn the objective lenses so that the next longest lens is over the hole in the stage. 6 To focus the image, slowly turn the fine focusing knob until the object becomes clear and sharp. Do not use the coarse focusing knob, as you may move the lens too close and break the slide. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 10 - Extension : Field of View 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 11 - Looking at Cells under a Microscope Lesson 3 Preparing an animal cell slide 1 Take a clean unused cotton bud and wipe it around the inside of your cheek. 2 Carefully smear a small amount of the saliva and cheek cells onto a microscope slide. Put your cotton bud in disinfectant now. 3 Stain the saliva with one drop of methylene blue. Wear eye protection. 4 Using a mounting needle, carefully lower a coverslip over the stained saliva and cheek cells. 5 View the sample using a microscope. 6 After you have observed the slide and recorded your observations place the slide in disinfectant. Do not let another pupil use your slide or cotton bud. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 12 - Task 6 A) Put these instructions into the correct order: Preparing a slide of human cheek cells __ Place the cover slip on top __ Add a few drops of methylene blue __ Use a cotton bud to collect the cheek cells __ Place the slide onto the stage of the microscope __ Rub the cotton bud over the slide __ Put the cotton bud into the disinfectant B) View two different animal cells and sketch what you see in the space provided. Don’t forget to add the magnification you used on the microscope. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 13 - Lesson 4 Preparing a plant cell slide 1 Take a piece of onion and peel away the skin on the inside surface using your fingernails or forceps. 2 From the skin you have removed cut a small piece (no more than about 5 mm square). 3 Place a drop or two of water in the centre of a microscope slide, then place the onion skin on the water drops. Take your time and ensure that the skin is flat and not doubled up. 4 Using a mounting needle, carefully lower a coverslip onto the onion skin. Take care to avoid air bubbles. 5 At one end of the coverslip place a drop of iodine solution and at the other, a paper towel. The iodine should be drawn under the coverslip, staining the onion skin. Take care not to get iodine on your hands. Wear eye protection. 6 View the onion skin using a microscope, and draw your observations. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 14 - Task 7 A) Put these instructions into the correct order: Preparing a slide of onion tissue __ Place the slide onto the stage of the microscope __ Add a few drops of iodine __ Take a very thin piece of onion __ Place a cover slip on top __ Place the onion flat onto a slide B) View two different plant cells and sketch them in the space provided. Don’t forget to add the magnification you used on the microscope. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 15 - Task 8 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 16 - Task 9 Lesson 5 Label the diagrams and complete the table below Animal Cells Cell structure Plant cell Function cell membrane nucleus cytoplasm cell wall vacuole chloroplasts 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 17 - Task 10 Comparing plant and animal cells Plant cells Animal cells 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 18 - Task 11 Cell Project Your task is to produce a 3-dimensional cell model. This can be a typical/generic plant or animal cell The model must correctly label 5 parts of the cell and their function. The model must be correct in that the parts should be located in the correct position (e.g. chromosomes inside the nucleus etc.) and the shapes and sizes should be to scale (the nucleus is bigger than the chloroplast). If you want to be more ambitious, then you can make a model of a specialised cell. This will put you in the Level 6-7 category. You will also have to explain how the special features help the cell do its particular job. Criteria: Criteria Your Score My Score Cell has 5 labelled parts with functions included - 10 marks (1 mark each for the part and function) Cell is to scale, in terms of size and location of organelles - 5 marks Cell is aesthetically pleasing and shows evidence of quality build - 5 marks A list of references is included that includes one internet site and one print source - 5 marks Levels 6 and 7 A specialised cell showing the special features accurately. Using scientific knowledge, explain how the cell’s shape helps it do its job. – 10 marks Level: 7a 7b 7c 35 34 32-33 6a 6b 6c 30-31 28-29 26-27 5a 5b 5c 23-25 20-22 17-19 4a 4b 4c 14-16 11-13 9-10 3a 3b 3c 7-8 5-6 0-4 To be more representative of an actual cell my model needs: _________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________ _________________________________________________________________ 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 19 - Specialised Cells Task 12 Animal and plant cells are all specialised to certain jobs How is it Cell Name Function adapted for its job? red blood cells root hair cell carry oxygen around the body absorbs water from the soil carries electrical nerve cell messages very quickly to the brain traps sunlight in the leaf palisade cell and carries out photosynthesis carries genetic sperm cell information to egg cells in order to make a new life Ciliated epithelial move dirt out of the cell lungs 1. Why do root hair cells have no chloroplasts? 2. Why are red blood cells ‘biconcave’? (like a dented ball) 3. Why do root hair cells have a long extension? 4. Why are nerve cells covered in an insulating material? 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 20 - Starter Lesson 6 Task 13 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 21 - How do cells grow and multiply Task 14 The words in the box below may be used once, more than once or not at all. multiply cell mitosis identical larger All organisms start out as one __________ . Organisms grow because the cells get bigger and ____________ . Cells reproduce themselves by a process called ________________ . Cell division: 1. the cell gets ____________ 2. the _________ splits into 2 identical copies 3. the cell splits into 2 __________ 4. each ‘daughter’ cell grows and cells reproduces again 5. the cells keep on dividing and form a bundle of cells 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) 6. The cells keep dividing and begin to grow into specialised cells to form tissues and organs - 22 - Task 15 In the right conditions yeast cells divide approximately once every 20 minutes. 1 Which of the labelled axes is the x-axis?________________________ 2 How many yeast cells will there be after 110 minutes?___________ 3 Describe the shape of the graph _________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ 4 If you start with a single yeast cell, how many would you have after 2 hours? _________________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ ___________________________________________________ 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 23 - Homework and Extension: Matching organs 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 24 - 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 25 - Extension Amoeba The amoeba is a protozoan that belongs to the Kingdom Protista. The name amoeba comes from the Greek word amoibe, which means change. (Amoeba is also spelled amoeba.) Protists are microscopic unicellular organisms that don't fit into the other kingdoms. Some protozoans are considered plant-like while others are considered animal-like. The amoeba is considered an animal-like protist because it moves and consumes its food. Protists are classified by how they move, some have cilia or flagella, but the amoeba has an unusual way of creeping along by stretching its cytoplasm into fingerlike extensions called pseudopodia. (The word "pseudopodia" means "false foot".) When looking at amoeba under a microscope, an observer will note that no amoeba looks the same as any other; the cell membrane is very flexible and allows for the amoeba to change shape. Amoebas live in ponds or puddles, and can even live inside people. There are two types of cytoplasm in the amoeba, the darker cytoplasm toward the interior of the protozoan is called endoplasm, and the clearer cytoplasm that is found near the cell membrane is called ectoplasm. By pushing the endoplasm toward the cell membrane, the amoeba causes its body to extend and creep along. It is also by this method that the amoeba consumes its food. The pseudopodia extend out and wrap around a food particle in a process call phagocytosis. The food is then engulfed into the amoeba and digested by the enzymes contained in the amoeba's lysosomes. As the food is digested it exists in a structure called a food vacuole. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 26 - Also visible in the amoeba is the nucleus, which contains the amoeba's DNA. In order to reproduce the amoeba goes through mitotic division, where the nucleus duplicates its genetic material and the cytoplasm splits into two new daughter cells, each identical to the original parent. This method of reproduction is called binary fission. Another structure easily seen in the amoeba is the contractile vacuole, who's job is to pump out excess water so that the amoeba does not burst. During unfavorable conditions, the amoeba can create a cyst, this hardwalled body can exist for a long period of time until conditions become favorable again. At this point it opens up and the amoeba emerges. Often cysts are created during cold or dry periods where the amoeba could not survive in its normal condition. Amoebas can cause disease. A common disease caused by the amoeba is called Amoebic Dysentery. A person becomes infected by drinking contaminated water. The amoeba then upsets the person's digestive system and causes cramps and diarrhoea. A person is most likely to be infected in countries where the water is not filtered or purified. Questions: 1. How does an amoeba move? 2. What structure contains the amoeba's DNA? 3. How does an amoeba reproduce? 4. During unfavorable conditions, an amoeba forms a __________ ? 5. Fingerlike extensions of the amoeba's cytoplasm are called __________ ? 6. What disease is caused by the amoeba? 7. To what Kingdom does the amoeba belong? 8. How are protozoans classified? 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 27 - 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 28 - 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 29 - 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 30 - 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 31 - When cell division goes wrong You may or may not want to do this if someone you know has cancer. Cancer is a very common disease in MEDCs (More Economically Developed Countries) but more people from LEDCs are developing it too. You may know of someone who has it, or who has had it. You will use a website to find out about what happens to the body when someone gets cancer. Go to this link http://www.abpischools.org.uk/page/modules/celldiv_cancer/cancer4.cfm?coSiteNavigation_allTopic=1 Pages 4, 6 and 8 are most relevant to you. Make a summary to answer these questions 1) What do the cells do to cause cancer? (This links into the last lesson) 2) What are the meanings of the following words? a) Tumour b) Metastasized c) Carcinogen 3) What is the difference between chemotherapy and radiotherapy? 4) What other treatments are there for cancer? 5) What could be the new ways to prevent cancer in the future? 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 32 - 7A Summary Cells and their functions All living things are made from cells. There are two basic types of cell: Animal cell Plant cell Cells are very small. A microscope is used to see them. To use a microscope you: i Place the smallest objective lens over the hole in the stage. ii Turn the focusing wheel to move the objective lens close to the stage. iii Place the slide on the stage. iv Adjust the light source or mirror. v Look into the eyepiece lens vi Turn the focusing wheel until what you see is clear (in focus). A microscope makes things appear bigger. It magnifies things. There are two lenses in a microscope. To work out the total magnification you multiply the magnification of the objective lens by the magnification of the eyepiece lens. The object you want to look at using a microscope is called the specimen. It has to be thin to let light get through it. It is placed, with a drop of water, onto a slide. A coverslip is put on top. The coverslip stops the specimen from drying out, holds it flat and stops it moving. A stain might be used to help you see parts of the cell. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 33 - Some cells have special shapes. They are adapted to do certain jobs. Cilated epithelial cells are found in tubes leading to the lungs. The strands at the top (cilia) wave about to move dirt out of the lungs. Muscle cells are able to change length. This helps us to move. Root hair cells in plant roots take water out of the ground quickly. The root hair gives the water more surface to get into the cell. Palisade cells in plant leaves are packed with chloroplasts to help the plant make food. Nerve cells (neurones) are long so that messages can be carried around the body quickly. A group of cells that are the same, all doing the same job, is called a tissue (e.g. muscle tissue). A group of different tissues working together to do an important job makes an organ. For example the heart is an organ and is made of muscle tissue and nerve tissue. Organs have very important jobs: 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 34 - Organs often work together in organ systems. Some important organ systems: Organ system Organs Job Breathing system Windpipe (trachea), lungs Takes air into the body Circulatory system Heart, blood vessels Carries oxygen and food around the body Digestive system Mouth, gullet, stomach, intestines Breaks down our food Flower Stamen, carpel Used for sexual reproduction in plants Nervous system Brain, spinal cord, nerves Carries messages around the body Sex cells are produced by the reproductive organs. In plants, these are contained inside flowers. Sex cells are used for sexual reproduction which needs two parents. The offspring from sexual reproduction are different from the parents; they are new varieties. 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 35 - 7A – Test Yourself 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 36 - Total 25 marks 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 37 - 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 38 - My mark Total Qu. Level Qu My % Type Traffic light Subject Areas (KN, AP, NM, HSW) 1 2 3 4 5 6 Overall Grade: total Achieved Target 1 Achieved Target 2 KN – Knowledge, AP –Application, NM – Numeracy, HSW – How Science Works 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 39 - Unit 7A Review My target grade is ________ My Grade for this unit was ________ Which parts of this unit do you think you did very well at? Which parts of this unit did you find difficult to understand? Aspect Recalling key facts Understanding keywords Using key words in my written work Using correct conventions for drawing diagrams Actively reading questions Writing clear and concise answers Understanding key concepts Catching up on missed work Reviewing my work between lessons Actively revising Sharing my ideas in group/pair/class work Completing tasks in lesson time Asking for help when I need it Using my checklist to assess my learning Trying my hardest with problems before asking for help My Target for next unit: 7A Cells 2013 (FRO) - 40 -