B2 Exam Revision Plant cells vs. Animal cells Both types of cell have these: 1) Nucleus This controls the cell 2) Cytoplasm This is the jelly like substance where chemical reaction take place 3) Cell membrane Controls what goes in and out of the cell 4) Mitochondria Energy is released here by respiration Only plant cells have these: 5) Cell wall Gives support to the cell 6) Large vacuole Large space filled with cell sap 7) Chloroplasts Where photosynthesis takes place Complete this definition of Diffusion using the key words: Partially permeable Diffusion Concentration Gradient Random movement Particles Diffusion is the _______ __________ of ______ from where there are lots of particles ( high __________) to where there are less particles. We say the particles diffuse down a concentration _________. In cells, the cell membrane has small holes that allow small particles through, but not large molecules. We call this membrane ________ ________. The bigger the difference in concentration, the faster the rate of ________. Osmosis is diffusion but with … WATER OSMOSIS IS THE MOVEMENT OF WATER PARTICLES FROM WHERE THERE ARE LOTS OF THEM (Dilute solutions) TO WHERE THERE ARE NOT VERY MANY OF THEM (concentrated solutions) THROUGH A SEMI-PERMEABLE MEMBRANE (LIKE A CELL WALL) OSMOSIS Photosynthesis - The equation 1. What factors are needed to make glucose? 2. What products are made by photosynthesis? Limiting factors • If you alter the levels of light, carbon dioxide or change the temperature the rate of photosynthesis will change! What happens to the glucose? Mineral needs Can you fill in this table? Mineral Nitrates Magnesium Needed for Deficiency disease Mineral needs Mineral Needed for Deficiency disease Nitrates Healthy leaves Good all round growth Purple leaves, poor growth Magnesium To make chlorophyll Yellow leaves Food chains A food chain shows where the energy goes in a food chain (in other words, “what gets eaten by what”): Cabbage Rabbit Plants convert the sun’s energy into food Stoat Fox The arrows indicate where the energy is going Pyramids of biomass In this food chain we can see that the mass of organisms in each stage is less than in the previous stage: Cabbage Rabbit Stoat Fox We can draw a “Pyramid of Biomass” to show this pattern: Mass of foxes Mass of stoats Mass of rabbits Mass of cabbages Energy flow in a food chain Consider the energy flow in this food chain: 100% 10% Cabbage Rabbit 1% Stoat 0.1% Fox Clearly, not all of the ___’s energy that becomes stored in the _______ will end up in the fox. Only around ______ is passed on to the next stage in each food chain. Energy is lost at each stage because of a number of reasons: 1) Each organism has to ____, keep warm etc 2) Energy is lost through faeces (______) Words – 10%, move, sun, waste, cabbage Improving the efficiency of a food chain Clearly, food chains aren’t very efficient. How could the efficiency of a food chain be improved? 1) Reduce the number of stages in the chain: Cabbage Rabbit 2) Limit an animal’s movement or keep it warm: 3) Use plant hormones to regulate the ripening of fruit Stoat Fox Energy in food production • Biomass and energy is lost at each stage of a food chain. The efficiency of food production can be improved by reducing the number of stages in our food chains. It would be most efficient if we all ate just plants • If you stop animals moving around and keep them warm they lose a lot less energy which makes food production more efficient Decay • Decay is carried out by microorganisms which work faster in warm, moist conditions with a good supply of oxygen. • The decay process releases substances that plants need to grow. Carbon cycle • The constant cycling of carbon is known as the carbon cycle • Carbon dioxide is removed from the atmosphere by photosynthesis • It is returned to the atmosphere by respiration and combustion • Microbes that decay waste and dead matter respire and produce carbon dioxide Map from memory Enzymes • Enzymes are biological catalysts, they increase the rate of reactions. • Enzymes are protein molecules made up of long chains of amino acids. • When enzymes are denatured the active site changes shape. What happens at the active site? In the same way that a key fits into a lock, so a substrate is thought to fit into an enzyme’s active site. The enzyme is the lock, and the reactant is the key. ↔ + enzyme + reactant ↔ ↔ enzyme-reactant complex + ↔ enzyme + products Factors affecting enzymes If the temperature and pH changes sufficiently beyond an enzyme’s optimum, the shape of the enzyme irreversibly changes. This affects the shape of the active site and means that the enzyme will no longer work. When this happens the enzyme is denatured. heat pH normal denatured Aerobic Respiration Oxygen + Glucose Carbon Dioxide + Water Energy + + Amylase Protease Lipase Bile Hydrochloric acid Where are the enzymes found? Enzymes of digestion Homeostasis • The internal conditions of your body need to be controlled to maintain a constant internal environment • Waste products such as carbon dioxide and urea need to be constantly removed • Urea is produced by your liver as you break down excess amino acids and is removed by your kidneys as urine Five factors we need to keep constant. • • • • • 1. temperature 2. water 3. sugar 4.waste products (need to remove) 5. ions B2 Homeostasis Use these words to complete the notes. receptors brain receptors The thermo-regulatory centre of the ______ monitors and controls the temperature of blood as it passes through. This centre has __________which are sensitive to the temperature of the blood. The skin also has _________ sensitive to temperature. B2 Homeostasis Glucose control • Your blood glucose concentration is monitored and controlled by your pancreas • Insulin and glucagon are the hormones involved in controlling blood sugar. Insulin converts glucose to glycogen and glucagon converts glycogen to glucose • In diabetes the blood glucose may rise to fatally high levels because the pancreas does not produce enough insulin. It can be controlled by injections and diet Chromosomes, Genes and Alleles 3. …………….. 2. ………....... b B 5. ……………. (b) 1. ………….. 4. ……………… Nucleus, Gene, Chromosome, Allele, Cell Gregor Mendel (The Pea Plant Man) Why was his work not spread quickly? • He was not a famous scientist – nobody knew about him at the time. • His job as abbot stopped him giving lectures at universities. • He published his work in an obscure journal that few people read. • Biologists at the time did not think mathematics had anything to do with Biology. Disease • Some disorders are inherited • Huntington’s disease is caused by a dominant allele of a gene and can be inherited from only one parent • Cystic fibrosis is caused by a recessive allele of a gene and so must be inherited from both parents Cystic Fibrosis • The treatment involves chest physiotherapy. • They are very prone to chest infections and malnutrition. • The mucus encourages the growth of pathogenic microbes that cause infection and cause long term lung damage. PHEW! •Good Luck