Utilisateur
The building block that all living things are made from.
Nucleus, cytoplasm, cell membrane, mitochondria, ribosomes.
Chloroplast, cell wall, large vacuole.
To control the activities of the cell and contain genetic information.
Controls which substances can go in and out of the cell.
It is where chemical reactions happen.
Carry out photosynthesis.
Gives the cell shape and support.
To synthesise proteins.
Cells that are adapted (have particular characteristics) to perform a particular job.
To fertilise an egg cell.
Tail for movement, acrosome contains enzymes to break down egg cell membrane, lots of mitochondria to release energy to swim to egg.
To carry electrical impulses.
Many dendrites make connections to other nerve cells, and the fat -covered axon speeds up electrical impulses.
To contract for movement.
Many mitochondria to release energy for muscle contraction.
To absorb water and mineral ions.
Large surface area to maximise absorption of minerals and water, lots of mitochondria to release energy for active transport.
To transport water and dissolved ions.
No top and bottom walls between cells to form continuous hollow tubes through which water is drawn up. Cells are dead, without organelles or cytoplasm, to allow free passage of water. Outer walls are thickened with lignin.
To transport dissolved sugars.
Made of living cells which are joined end-to-end and contain holes in the end cell walls (sieve plates) forming tubes which allow sugars and amino acids to flow easily through.
A group of similar cells which do a job.
A group of different tissues working together to do a job.
A group of organs which work together to do a job.
Eyepiece magnification x objective lens magnification
Image size = actual size x magnification
The ability to distinguish between two separate points that are very close together.
Electron microscope.
To see structures more clearly.
Lowest power objective lens.
Coarse focus knob.
Fine focus knob.
Prokaryotes have no nucleus.
In the cytoplasm.
Animal cells and plant cells.
Bacteria.
Small rings of DNA (often containing genes for antibiotic resistance) that are found in some prokaryotes.
Movement.
Movement of particles from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.
Replacement of old or damaged cells, growth of tissue.
Chromosomes (DNA) and cell organelles replicate.
Mitosis: 1 set of chromosomes move to each end of the cell
Cytoplasm divides to form 2 identical daughter cells.
An undifferentiated cell.
In embryos and in adult bone marrow.
Meristem tissue is found at the tips of shoots and roots.
They can differentiate into many different specialised cells so can be used to treat diseases.
Concentration gradient, temperature and surface area.
At higher temperature particles have more kinetic energy, so move around more - rate of diffusion increases.
The bigger the size, the small the SA:V
Large surface area, thin walls, good blood supply.
Movement of water from a dilute solution to a concentrated solution.
The potato will gain mass as water moves by osmosis from the dilute solution to the more concentrated solution inside the cells of the potato.
The potato will lose mass as water moves by osmosis from the more dilute solution inside the cells to the more concentrated solution of salt/sugar.
Movement of particles from an area of low concentration to an area of high concentration.
Osmosis and diffusion are passive processes whereas active transport requires energy.
Root hair cells use active transport to transport mineral ions from low concentration in the soil to a high concentration inside the cell.
Cells in the small intestine use active transport to move glucose from a low concentration in the gut to a high concentration in cells and the bloodstream.
They contain many mitochondria to release energy needed for active transport.