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AP Biology (Campbell) Chapter 7 Flashcards

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5703463524plasma membranecreates compartments within cells and barrier between intra- & extracellular0
5703463525selectively permeablerules of chemistry determine movement across membrane.1
5703463526phospholipidsmembrane lipid structure2
5703463527lipids and proteinsmain macromolecules in membranes3
5703463528amphipatic moleculeshave hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions4
5703463529fluid mosaic modelThe arrangement of phospholipids and proteins in biological membranes is described by the...5
5703463530freeze-fracturepreparation technique that splits a membrane along the middle of the phospholipid bilayer6
5703463531transmembrane proteinsthe integral protein completely spans the membrane as...7
5703463532integral proteinsproteins that penetrate the hydrophobic interior of the lipid bilayer8
5703463533peripheral proteinsproteins that are not embedded in the lipid bilayer9
5703463534cell-cell recognitionthe ability of a cell to disitnguish one type of neighboring cell from another.10
5703463535transport proteinsproteins that control movement of molecules across plasma membrane11
5703463536channel proteinstransport proteins that have a hydrophilic channel that certain molecules or ions use as a tunnel though the membrane.12
5703463537aquaporinschannel proteins that facilitate the passage of water13
5703463538carrier proteinstransport proteins that bind to molecules and change shape to shuttle them across the membrane.14
5703463539diffusionmovement of molecules of any substance to spread out in available space15
5703463540concentration gradientdifference in concentration within or between 2 areas16
5703463541passive transporttransport that requires hydrolysis of ATP to take place17
5703463542osmosisthe diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane18
5703463544isotonic (animal cell)if a cell with no cell wall is immersed in an enviroment where there is no net movement of water across the plasma membrane. Stays the same.19
5703463545hypertonic (animal cell)when the cell is immersed in a solution where it loses water to its environment, shrivels and probably dies.20
5703463546hypotonic (animal cell)when a cell is immersed in a solution, water enters the cell faster than it leaves, it swells and lyses (explodes) like an overfilled water balloon.21
5703463547osmoregulationadaptations that control of water balance across plasma membranes22
5703463548parameciumis a protist that is hypertonic to the pond water in which it lives.23
5703463549turgidwhen the plant cell is very firm, which is a healthy state for most plant cells.24
5703463550hypotonic (plant cell)when a plant cell is immersed in a __________ solution the cell contents swell due to osmosis until the elastic cell wall exerts turgor pressure on the cell that opposes further water outake.25
5703463551isotonic (plant cell)when a plant cell is immersed in a _______ solution; there is no net movement. The cell becomes flaccid and the plant may wilt.26
5703463552flaccidlimp, not firm or strong (If a plant is not watered enough, its leaves become droopy and flaccid.)27
5703463553hypertonic (plant cells)the plant cell loses water, its volume shrinks. The plasma membrane pulls away from the wall, this is plasmolysis. It is lethal to the cell.28
5703463554plasmolysisThis happens when a cell shrinks inside its cell wall while the cell wall remains intact. The plasma membrane pulls away from the wall.29
5703463555facilitated diffusionthe passive movement of molecules down their concentration gradient with the help of transport proteins.30
5703463556ion channels (gated channels)Channels that open or close depending on the presence or abscence of an electrical, chemical, or physical stimulus.31
5703463557active transporttransport that requires the cell to expend metabolic energy and enables a cell to maintain internal concentrations of small molecules. Requires ATP hydrolysis.32
5703463558ATPsupplies energy for most active transport33
5703463559sodium-potassium pumptransport protein that, translocating the bound solute across the membrane. Exchanges sodium ions (Na) for potassium ions (K) across the plasma membrane of animal cells.34
5703463560membrane potentialvoltage across a membrane. Ranges form -50 to -200 millivolts. The inside of the cell is negative to the outside.35
5703463561electrochemical gradient2 combined forces drive the diffusion of ions across the membrane.36
5703463562electrogenic pumpsspecial transport proteins that generate the voltage gradient across a membrane. Ex. sodium potassium pump and proton pumps.37
5703463563sodium-potassium pumpmajor electrogenic pump in animals. Restores the electrochemical gradient by setting up a concentration gradient. It pumps 2 K ions for every 3 Na ions that it moves out, it generates a voltage.38
5703463564proton pumpsthe major electrogenic pump. Transports protons out of the cell and transfers positive charge form the cytoplasm to the extracellular solution.39
5703463565exocytosistransport vesicle budded from the Golgi apparatus is moved by the cytoskeleton to the plasma membrane. When the 2 membranes come in contact, the bilayers fuse spill the contents.40
5703463566endocytosisa cell brings in biological molecules and particulate matter by forming new vesicles from the plasma membrane. 3 types: phagocytosis, pinocytosis and receptor-mediated endocytosis.41
5703463567phagocytosisa cell engulfs a particle in a vacuole. The vacuole fuses with a lysosome to digest the particle.42
5703463568pinocytosismolecules are taken up when extracellular fluid is "gulped" into tiny vesicles.43
5703463569receptor-mediated endocytosisendocytosis that enables a cell to acquire bulk quantities of specific materials that may be in low concentrations in the environment.44

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