A Level Prep Revision Flashcards
1
Q
Describe translocation in plants (5)
A
- Sucrose moves into companion cells from source/leaf cells by facilitated diffusion
- Sucrose cotransported from companion cells into sieve tube elements coupled by H+ ions
- Lowers water potential in sieve tube and water enters by osmosis from xylem
- Creates high hydrostatic pressure causing mass movement of sucrose towards sink/root down hydrostatic gradient
- Where sucrose at sink used for respiration or converted to starch for storage
2
Q
formation of an action potential (8)
A
- Energy of stimulus causes Na+ voltage gated channels to open
- Na+ influx into axoplasm down electrochemical gradient cause reversal in potential difference across membrane
- As Na+ diffuse into axon, more Na+ channels open
- Once +40mV action potential established, voltage gated Na+ channel close
- Voltage gated K+ channels open and K+ diffuse out
- Causes more K+ channels open starting repolarisation of axon
- Outward diffusion of K+ causes temporary overshoot (hyperpolarisation) and voltage gated K+ channels close
- Na-K pump re-establishes resting potential
3
Q
Muscle contraction (7)
A
- Ca2+ diffuse into myofibril (sarcoplasm) from sarcoplasmic reticulum down conc. gradient
- Ca2+ cause tropomyosin to change shape and move away from actin binding sites
- Myosin heads with ADP attached bind to actin binding sites forming cross bridge
- Myosin heads change angle/bend (to low-energy configuration) pulling actin filament (to centre of sarcomere/m-line) and releasing ADP
- ATP attaches to myosin head causing it to detach from actin
- Ca2+ activate ATPase which hydrolyses ATP to ADP + Pi, releasing energy for myosin head to return to ‘high- energy configuration’
- Myosin head with ADP reattaches to binding site further along actin and cycle repeats
4
Q
How is resting potential maintained (4)
A
- Na+ actively transported out of axon and K+ into axon by Na-K pump
- For every 3 Na+ out of axon, 2 K+ move
- Most K+ channels open but Na+ channels closed
- So greater conc. Na+ in surrounding tissue fluid and greater conc. K+ in axon and overall more positive charge surroundings creates electrochemical gradient
5
Q
Transmission across synapse (8)
A
- Depolarisation/arrival of action potential to presynaptic membrane
- Cause Ca2+ channels to open & Ca2+ enters synaptic knob (by facilitated diffusion)
- Ca2+ cause synaptic vesicles to migrate to & fuse with presynaptic membrane
- Releasing acetylcholine that diffuses across synaptic cleft (quickly because diffusion pathway short)
- Ach then binds to receptor sites on Na+ protein channels on postsynaptic membrane causing them to open
- Influx of Na+ generates new action potential in postsynaptic neurone
- Acetylcholinesterase hydrolyses Ach to choline + Ethanoic acid which diffuse back across synaptic cleft into presynaptic neurone (recycled)
(rapid breakdown of Ach also prevents continuously generating action potential so discrete transfer of info across synapse) - ATP from mitochondria recombines choline + ethanoic acid into Ach, stored in synaptic vesicles and Na+ channels close in absence of Ach
6
Q
Ultrafiltration in Bowman’s capsule (4)
A
- Afferent arteriole wider than efferent so build-up of hydrostatic pressure in glomerulus
- Filtrate can pass beneath and between gaps in podocytes and gaps between endothelial cells of capillary (reduce resistance)
- Filtrate passes through (capillary) basement membrane
- Small substances pass (eg. Amino acids, glucose, urea, Na+ ions) but large substances cannot (eg. Proteins, red blood cells)
7
Q
General process of osmoregulation…
A
- Osmoreceptors in hypothalamus detect fall in water potential
- When water potential of blood low, water lost from osmoreceptor cells by osmosis (to blood)
- Osmoreceptor cells shrink causing hypothalamus to produce ADH
- ADH passes to posterior pituitary gland where it is secreted into capillaries
- ADH passes to kidneys where increases permeability to water of cell membrane of cells lining wall of distal convoluted tubule and collecting duct
- More water leaves collecting duct by osmosis down water potential gradient, and re-enters blood, only prevents water potential of blood from getting lower
- Osmoreceptors send nerve impulse to thirst centre of brain