Topic 2 - Cells and Controls Flashcards
SB2a - How are tumors formed?
- When cells mutate, they can become cancer cells.
- This means that they will divide even when they don’t require to divide.
SB2a - How many types of chromosones are in a human cell and what is it called when these are alone or paired up?
- 23 types of chromosomes.
- When they are paired up to have 46 chromosomes this is a diploid cell and a haploid cell only has 23 chromosomes.
- Gametes are haploid cells while all other cells in a human are diploid.
SB2a - Describe stages of mitosis
Mitosis
- Interphase - Copies of the chromosomes are formed in the nucleus
- Prophase - The nucleus starts to break up and spindle fibres appear.
- Metaphase - The chromosomes are lined up on the spindle fibre across the middle of the cell
- Anaphase - The chromosome copies are separated and moved to either side of the cell
- Telophase - A membrane forms around each set of chromosomes to from a nuclei
- Cytokeniesis - Cell surface membrane forms separating the two cells (In plants, a cell wall is also formed)
SB2a - What are the products of mitosis called?
Daughter Cells
SB2a - What type of organisms do not require mitosis to occur?
Unicellular organisms
SB2a - Why does asexual reproduction require mitosis?
- As asexual reproduction only needs one parent, the offspring will have the same DNA as the parent.
- As the offspring are clones and their chromosomes are identical, their cells are formed by mitosis.
SB2a - Why is mitosis important in organisms?
- Asexual Reproduction
- Growth
- Repairing damage
- Cell Replacement
SB2b - Define growth.
The increase in size as a result of an increase in size of or numbers (due to cell division) of cells.
SB2b - How are red blood cells specialised for their purpose?
- Biconcave shape means more surface area for oxygen diffusion.
- No nucleus means more space for red haemoglobin molecules and carry more oxygen
SB2b - How is the growth of a baby monitored and how does this work?
SB2b - How is the growth of a baby monitored and how does this work?
A
Using a percentile growth curve:
- This graph has many lines showing you how a babies conditions compare to the average.
- The healthiest position would be at 50% as half of the population is above or below you.
- Being above 98% or below 2% is reason for concern as only 2% of the population is above or below you.
SB2b - What is cell differentiation?
When a less specialised cell is changed to become a specialised one.
SB2c - How are root hair cells specialised for their function?
- large vacuole - stores absorbed water
- long projection - increases area for absorption
- thin cell - allows minerals to pass easily into the cell by reducing the area they have to transport
SB2c - What are the meristems?
- A group of cells near the end of each shoot that allow plants to continue growing throughout their lives.
- They divide rapidly and the cells are elongated and differentiated.
SB2c - How are xylem cells specialised for their function?
- They have thick walls containing lignin, giving the xylem a rigid and strong structure
- The cells rae dead - so all water carried is transported and not used up by the xylem itself
- They have no internal structure at all (nucleus, chloroplasts etc.) this makes it easier to transport water and minerals.
SB2c - What are the zones of differentiation elongation and cell division?
- D: Where cells are specialised
- E: Where cells are elongated (vertically extended)
- CD: Where rapid mitosis occurs (Meristems)
SB2d - How can stem cells be used to treat leukemia?
A patient’s bone marrow is destroyed using radiation
Adult stem cells are inserted into the patient
The stem cells will differentiate specialise and divide to form new blood cells and bone marrow
SB2d - What are the problems with using stem cells in medicine? (6)
- If stem cells continue to divide, it can cause a cancerous tumour to form
- Stem cells of one person can be rejected by the immune system of another
- Embryonic stem cells pose an ethical issue
- Potential long-term side effects are unknown
- Stem cells could be contaminated during the operation, so when transferred into the patient it only makes them sicker
SB2d - What is an embryonic stem cell?
A cell in an early stage embryo that is not specialised and can differentiate to form any type of specialised cell.