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Chapter 5 - Endosymbiosis and Cellular transport
Dr. Bob Harms STLCC Intro to biology
47
Biology
Undergraduate 1
09/20/2010

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Term
What is endosymbiosis?
Definition
It's the theory on the origin of Eukaryotic cells - the theory says that cells ate other cells, but kept them alive, and they eventually evolved into organelles
Term
What does the prefix "Endo-" mean?
Definition
It means living inside of; "endoparasite" lives inside it's host.
Term
What does "symbiosis" mean?
Definition
Like "symbiotic", it means depending on each other, in a way which both organisms benefit. ("win/win" situation)
Term
What is mutualism?
Definition
A type of symbiosis where two organisms have a "win-win" situation going where they both benefit
Term
Does endosymbiosis still occur today?
Definition
Yes, it is common in protists
Term
What evidence of endosymbiosis is there?
Definition
1) The mitochondria and chloroplasts look a lot like (and are similarly shaped as) free, living, bacteria.
2) Most DNA is in the cell's nucleus, but DNA can be found in organelles as well. That DNA found in organelles is circular, just as DNA in free, living, bacteria.
3. The ribosomes (protein building organelles) in mitochondria and chloroplasts have bacterial-type ribosome.
4. Both these organelles have double membrane, evidence of being eaten.
Term
How do we explain other cellular evolutions if not by endosymbiosis?
Definition
Thought to be results of foldings of the membrane which started to fold and mix into the cell.
Term
Which two organelles do scientists believe to be products of endosymbiosis?
Definition
THe Chloroplasts and Mitochondria
Term
What are the two major (common) ways chemicals can get into or out of cells?
Definition
1) they can pass through the fatty, phospholipid bylayer, or (2) go through the transport proteins.
Term
What are the 4 mechanisms a chemical can use to cross the cell membrane?
Definition
1) Diffussion
2) osmosis
3) facilitated diffusion
4) active transport
Term
What does diffusion mean?
Definition
Chemicals move from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration.
Term
How do cells make diffusion happen?
Definition
They don't; it's a natural force like gravity and will occur on it's own.
Term
What does "moving with the concentration gradient" mean?
Definition
It means moving from areas of high concentration to low concentration.
Term
What kind of chemicals diffuse into and out of cells?
Definition
Often small chemicals, water, oxygen, carbon dioxide.
Term
What is an example of diffusion?
Definition
When blood cells get to your lungs, they are high in carbon dioxide and low in oxygen. The air you breathe in is high in oxygen and low in carbon dioxide, and so oxygen diffuses from high to low, and your blood cells get recharged with oxygen by diffusion and carbon dioxide will diffuse out of your blood and into your lungs.
Term
What functions of the human body are directly related to diffusion?
Definition
Gas movement and circulation
Term
What is osmosis?
Definition
Osmosis is a type of diffusion, where water passes through selectively permeable membranes. All of the things true for diffusion is true for osmosis as well.
Term
What does "isotonic" mean?
Definition
Equal concentrations of solute (disolved stuff)AND equal concentrations of water
Term
What is the theory on the origin of Eurkaryotic cells called?
Definition
Endosymbiosis
Term
What is the term for when two organisms have a co-dependant "win-win" relationship?
Definition
Mutualism
Term
Hypertonic means...
Definition
the higher concentration of solute (stuff disolved in)
Term
Hypotonic means...
Definition
The lower concentration of solute (disolved stuff)
Term
Something with a lower solute is called...
Definition
hypotonic
Term
Something with a higher solute is called...
Definition
hypertonic
Term
Which way does water always diffuse? Why?
Definition
From Hypo- to Hyper-, because it's always moving from the bigger concentration of water to the smaller. The side with less solute by definiton has more water.
Term
Why is it that often times the solute does not move?
Definition
It 'should', but membranes are selectively permeable and therefore may not allow the solute to do so.
Term
Is blood plasma isotonic, hypertonic, or hypotonic?
Definition
Isotonic, meaning it has equal ammounts of water to disolved things.
Term
What would happen if your blood plasma was Hypotonic?
Definition
Hypotonic means it has a low solution of solute, so the blood cells would then be hypertonic. Water always moves from hypo to hyper, so the blood cells would swell and eventually burst (lyse)
Term
What is crenation and when does it occur?
Definition
Crenation is the shriveling up of blood cells and occur if the cell becomes hypotonic. The cell tries to get rid of excess water and shrivels, or becomes crenated.
Term
What is facilitated diffusion?
Definition
Facilitated diffusion is diffusion across a membrane with the help of a transport protein
Term
What kind of chemicals use facilitated diffusion to enter cells?
Definition
Chemicals that cannot cross the phospholipid bylayer. Too large (sugar, proteins) or very strongly charged (sodium, chlorine)
Term
How does a cell start the process of facilitated diffusion?
Definition
It doesn't; it is a passive process wherein small chemicals use a transport protein's tunnel through the membrane to get in or out of a cell. (from high to low concentrations)
Term
How is active transport different from other mechanisms a chemical can use to cross a cell's membrane?
Definition
It is the only way which is active, that doesn't "just happen", and the chemical moves from areas of low concentration to areas of high concentration (against the concentration gradient)
Term
Which mechanism is the only to "move against the concentration gradient"?
Definition
Active transport
Term
What is an example of active transport?
Definition
The sodium-potassium pump, one of the first discovered, uses ATP to pump two potassiums in and three sodiums out.
Term
If water is moving via osmosis, how can cells regulate water content?
Definition
Through a combination of osmosis and active transport, cells can alter concentrations to cause osmosis to occur. It could move salt across the cell membrane, thus changing the solute, which, indirectly, changes the water concentration.
Term
If a cell needed to remove excess water, what steps would it take to do so?
Definition
1. The cell would start pumping salts out of the cell, to concentrate the salt.
2. The water would leave the cell through osmosis
Term
What is cystic fibrosis and how does it relate?
Definition
Cystic fibrosis is a genetic disease wherein the transport protein used to get salt out of cells (to regulate water content) is formed incorrectly and thus cannot function. Because of this, sufferers of the condition have excess water in their cells and very thick bodily fluids. Since they can't regulate water, or get water into their fluids, they have the thick bodily fluids. The mucus in the lungs is very thick and heavy, it can't be moved up and out, so if bacteria grows, they get respritory infections. Digestion is a problem too, as is reproduction.
Term
What are the two mechanisms for transport of chemicals without crossing the membrane?
Definition
Exocytosis (chemicals "exiting" the cell) and Endocytosis (chemicals entering the cell).
Term
How does exocytosis work?
Definition
Chemicals leaving the cell are wrapped up in a vacuole or membrane sac, made of phospholipid bylayer. That vacuole gets pushed up to the edge of the cell using the cytoskeleton. When the vacuole and cell membrane touch, they combine. The cytoskeleton will pull and open up the bylayer. The contents inside spill outside the cell, but never went through the membrane.
Term
How does endocytosis work?
Definition
The cell forms a dimple, and when the chemical bounces into the dimple, the cytoskeleton will pinch the dimple closed, and pull the chemical inside.
Term
What is phagocytosis?
Definition
A type of endocytosis, when cells are eating large food sources or even anentire cell.
Term
What is pinocytosis?
Definition
Another type of endocytosis, of chemicals, things smaller than food.
Term
What is a drawback of Pinocytosis?
Definition
If there is not very much of the chemical the cell needs, the dimple may come back "empty"
Term
What is Receptor-mediated endocytosis?
Definition
A specialized type of endocytosis. Receptor proteins stick out of the membrane and will bind to the chemical needed. The cell will make a pit but won't pinch off until all the proteins are full.
Term
Why is receptor-mediated endocytosis so important to humans?
Definition
Receptor-mediated cytosis is a mechanism to remove cholesterol-causing LDL's from our blood. If it doesn't work properly, it's linked to many kinds of heart disease, as well as stroke, heart attacks, etc.
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