ahhhhhh Flashcards
regulating mucus water content: excess water (5 steps)
- Na+ actively pumped across the basal membrane out of the cell into tissue fluid making a concentration difference between mucus and cell.
- Na+ diffuses through sodium channel (ENaC) in apical membrane into cell down concentration gradient.
- electrical gradient between tissue fluid and mucus. Cl- diffuses down electrical gradient from mucus between cells to tissue fluid
- water is drawn out of cell in tissue fluid by osmosis due to high salt conc. in tissue fluid
- water is drawn out of mucus by osmosis into cell down concentration gradient.
regulating mucus water content: too little water (5 steps)
- Cl- from tissue fluid is pumped into cell across basal membrane
- Cl- diffuses through the open CFTR channel into mucus down concentration gradient.
- Na+ diffuses down electrical gradient from tissue fluid into mucus via gap between cells
- elevated salt concentration in mucus draws water out of the cell by osmosis
- water is drawn into cell by osmosis
regulating mucus water content: CF lungs
- CFTR channel is absent or not functioning
- Na+ channel is permanently open allowing Na+ to diffuse into cell
- Na+ is pumped out of the cell into tissue fluid
- Cl- down electrical gradient into tissue fluid
- water is continually removed from mucus by osmosis
what is the result of water being continually removed from the mucus in CF lungs
mucus is too sticky and cant be moved by cilia
- mucus to build up effecting ventilation of aveoli
- mucus becomes infected with bacteria
- phagocytic cells that kill pathogens are produced
- phagocytes break down releasing DNA which makes the mucus even more sticky
- causing airway inflammation and lung damage
what is the evidence for the fluid mosaic model
- experiments showed types of proteins could dissociated from the membrane and others that could not. this supports fluidity and the fact there are some peripheral proteins and some integrated proteins
- freeze-fracture electron microscopy fractured between the lipid layer to show that the inner surface was a smooth mosaic interspersed with large proteins.
- plant proteins lectins bind to polysaccharides labled and when mixed with membrane lectins only bond to the outer surface membrane showing polysacharides where on outside.
- fusing mouse and human cells after 40 mins protein completely intermixed showing components are fluid
the experiment to prove DNA replication is semi conservative
- DNA either replicates fragmentary, semi conservatively or conservatively.
- melso and stah grow escherichia coli DNA bacterium in medium contain heavy isotope N15 alll nucleotides contain heavy nitrogen making DNA more dense.
bacteria then moved to medium containing normal N14 all new nucleotides light.
bacteria allowed to divide once. DNA then extracted and centrifuged producing a bond of medium density DNA so DNA did not replicate conservatively
if allowed to undergo a second division producing a strand of medium DNA and one light band of DNA proving DNA did not replicate fragmentary
how to test for CF in fetuses and embryos
amniocentesis: inserting needle into amniotic fluid to collect fetal cells. 15 -17 weeks. 1% risk of miss carriage
chorionic villus sampling: sample of precental tissue removed through wall of abdomen or vagina. 8-12 weeks 1- 2% risk of miss carriage
non invases prenatal diagnosis NIPD: analysing DNA fragments in mother’s blood plasma 10-20% embryo cell free fetal DNA. 7-9 weeks. no risk of misscarrige
testing before implantation PGD: first undergo IVF them embryo at around 8 cells and 1 cell removed DNA tested . the healthy embryos are then implanted. low live birth rate. expensive but no need for abortion
stages in atherosclerosis
- endothelium becomes damaged and dysfunctional
edothelium becomes damaged and dysfunctional. resulting in high blood pressure. putting extra strain on cells. - inflamatory response
white blood cells move into artery wall. they accumalate chemicals such as cholesterol. a fatty deposit builds up called an atheroma - plaque is formed
calcium salts and fibrous tissue build up at the site resulting in hard swelling called plaque. artery wall loses elasticity and hardens. - lumen becomes narrower
making it more difficult to pump blood
and leads to a rise in blood pressure - feedback
plaque –> rise in blood pressure —> damage to edothelium —> plaque
what are the stages in the blood clotting cascade
- plaque reptures exposing collagen to the blood
- platelets and damage tissue release a protein called thromboplastin
- thromboplastin activates enzyme that catalyses convertion of protein prothrombin into enzyme called thrombin. protein, vitamin k and calcium must be present
- thrombin then catalyses conversion of soluble plasma protein, fibrinogen insoluble fibrin.
- a mesh of fibrin forms that traps more platelets and red blood cells to form a clot.
name the steps in fertilisation
1.the acrosome reaction
when the front of the sperm touches the zona pellucida of the egg the acrosome bursts and releases enzymes which digest a channel in the zona pellucida
2. membrane fusion
the surface membranes of the sperm and egg fuse together allowing the haploid nucleus from the sperm to enter the cytoplasm of the egg
3. cortical reaction
vesicles inside the egg called cortical granules fuse with the cell membrane and release their contents. these cause changes in the surface layer of the egg preventing other sperm from entering
4. meiosis is restarted
the egg is really a secondary ocyte and the presence of the sperm cell causes the 2nd division and meiosis to now occur
5. fertilisation
the chromosomes from the haploid egg and sperm combine to restore the diploid number
what is the lac operon model
prokaryote escherichia coli.
only produce the enzyme beta- galactosidase to break down carbohydrate lactose when present in surroundings converts disaccharide lactose to monosaccharides glucose and galactose
when lactose is not present a lactose repressor molecule bonds to the DNA to prevent transcription of beta-glaactosidase gene.
RNA polymerase cannot bind to the DNA promoter region.
when lactose is present it binds to the repressor preventing it from binding to the DNA and the gene is transcribed
evolution by natural selection
- introduction of selection pressure caused by change in environment, competition or predators.
- random mutations produce new alleles which is advantageous. this is caused by natural genetic variation
- individuals with the advantageous allele survive and reproduce.
- advantageous allele is passed on.
- there is a increased frequency of the advantageous allele in the population / gene pool.
taxonomic hierarchy
series of taxa which members all share one or more common feature
- kingdom
- phylum
- class
- order
- family
- genus
- species
types of kingdoms
- animali
muticellular eukoryates that are heterotrophs - plantae
muticellular eukoryates that are autotrophs - fungi
muticellular eukoryates that are heterotrophs or absorb nutrients from decaying matter - protoctista
eukaryotes that photosynthesis or feed on organic matter
but not included in other kingdoms - prokyaryotae
prokaryotic organisms - chromista
includes some groups of fungi plantae and protoctista. which all have tinsel like flagella. the shared features between them make them more closely related to each other than any other kingdom
what are plant cell walls made of
cellulose. which is a polymer of alpha and beta glucose.
each chain contains 1000 - 10000 units. straight chain. H bonds form between OH groups of neighbouring chains forming bundles called microfibrils which are about 60 -70 cellulose molecules wound in helical arrangement stuck together with polysacharide glue
hemicellulose and pectins
what are the steps in mass transport
- photosynthetic products are actively loaded into phloem increasing solute concentration. which draws water into sieve tubes by osmosis from adjacent xylem vessels
- this increases hydrostatic pressure at loading end
- at sink, solutes are unloaded lowering hydrostatic pressure. the difference in pressure between loading and unloading site causes mass flow along the sieve tube from high to low pressure
temperature coefficient Q10
Q10 = rate of reaction at temperature T + 10oc / rate of reaction at temp T
the rate of collision and so the rate of reaction approximately doubles for each 10oc rise in temperature this is shown in the Q10 ratio
describes mathematically what happens to the rate of reactions as temperature increases by 10oc
how does allopatric speciation occur
- geographical barrier causes 2 populations to become re-productively isolated.
- the 2 groups are exposed to different selection pressures leading to random advantageous mutations accumulating causing allele frequency in the 2 populations to change
- overtime the allele frequency changes so much that when reintroduced they are not able to interbreed to produce fertile offspring.