BIOL211 Word Scramble
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Term | Definition |
Active transport | Movement of a substance to an area of high []. Requires ATP energy. (ie pushing a ball up a hill) (ex: sodium-potassium pump) |
Cotransport | Coupling of "downhill" diffusion of one substance to the "uphill" transport of another against its own concentration gradient. |
Crenate state | When an animal cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, it shrivels and appears bumpy. |
Diffusion | Movement of a substance from an area of high [] to an area of low []. Requires no energy (passive). |
Electrogenic pump | An ion transport protein that generates a voltage across the membrane. |
Receptor-mediated endocytosis | This type of endocytosis brings in specific molecules via specific proteins located in the membrane. |
Exocytosis | Shipping of large molecules out of the cell. Involves fusion of vesicles containing the large biological molecules with the plasma membrane resulting in release into the extracellular environment. |
Facilitated | This type of diffusion requires the assistance of a transmembrane (integral) protein. |
Flaccid state | When a plant cell is in an isotonic environment, there is no net energy for water to enter the cell (ie lacking turgor). |
Fluid mosaic model | A model of the cell membrane which envisions the membrane as a mosaic of protein molecules drifting laterally in a fluid bilayer of phospholipids. |
Hypertonic/hyperosmotic | High solution []. |
Hypotonic/hypoosmotic | Low solution []. |
Integral | Proteins that penetrate the hydrophobic region of the membrane (ie they span the entire width of the membrane). |
Isotonic/isoosmotic | A solution having the same []. |
Ligands | A molecule that binds specifically to another molecule; usually another one. |
Lysed state | When an animal cell is placed in a hypotonic solution, it bursts. |
OAS (osmotically active substance) | In the diffusion lab, sucrose was the _______. |
Osmolarity | The solute [] expressed as molarity. |
Osmoregulation | The ability of an organism to regulate water balance and solute []. |
Osmosis | The movement of water from an area of high water [] to an area of low water []. Requires no energy (passive). |
Peripheral | Proteins that are loosely bound to the surface of membranes. |
Phagocytosis | A way of bringing large molecules into the cell via cellular eating. |
Pinocytosis | A way of bringing large into the cell via nonspecific cellular drinking. |
Plasmolyzed state | When a plant cell is placed into a hypertonic solution, the plasma membrane pulls away from the cell wall. |
Receptor-mediated endocytosis | This type of endocytosis brings in molecules via specific proteins located in the membrane. |
Selectively permiable | Membranes which allow some materials to move through readily while others must be assisted. |
Sodium-potassium pump (Na+-K+) | A transport protein in the plasma membrane of animal cells that actively transport sodium out of the cell and potassium in. |
Turgid state | When the central vacuole of a plant cell is full of fluid (mostly water). |
Turgor pressure | The force directed against a plant cell wall (1°) after the influx of water and swelling of the cell due to osmosis. |
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