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Flashcards - Topic 3.1-3.8 Cell Structure and Microscopy - Edexcel IAL Biology A-Level

- Cells are the basic units of living organisms and contain genetic material, cytoplasm, and ribosomes. - Groups of cells form tissues, groups of tissues form organs, and groups of organs form organ systems that work together to carry out functions. - The document describes the structures and functions of key cellular organelles like the nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi body, lysosomes, and chloroplasts. It also discusses intracellular and extracellular enzymes.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
72 views

Flashcards - Topic 3.1-3.8 Cell Structure and Microscopy - Edexcel IAL Biology A-Level

- Cells are the basic units of living organisms and contain genetic material, cytoplasm, and ribosomes. - Groups of cells form tissues, groups of tissues form organs, and groups of organs form organ systems that work together to carry out functions. - The document describes the structures and functions of key cellular organelles like the nucleus, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi body, lysosomes, and chloroplasts. It also discusses intracellular and extracellular enzymes.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
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Edexcel IAL Biology A-level

3.1-3.8 - Cell Structure and Microscopy


Flashcards

PMT Education is licensed under https://bit.ly/pmt-cc


This work by https://bit.ly/pmt-edu-cc CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

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What are cells?

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What are cells?

Cells are the basic units of all living


organisms. All cells contain genetic
information in a nucleus or nucleoid, a
cytoplasm and ribosomes
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What is a tissue?

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What is a tissue?

A group of similar cells which work


together to perform a specific function
e.g. muscle tissue, xylem tissue

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What is an organ?

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What is an organ?

A group of tissues which work together to


perform a specific function e.g. brain,
heart, kidney

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What is an organ system?

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What is an organ system?

A group of organs that work together to


perform a particular function e.g. nervous
system, digestive system

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State 8 organelles found in animal cells

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State 8 organelles found in animal cells

- Nucleus
- Mitochondria
- Ribosomes
- Rough endoplasmic reticulum
- Smooth endoplasmic reticulum
- Golgi body
- Centrioles
- Lysosomes

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Label the diagram of the cell below

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Label the diagram of the cell below

A Ribosome B Mitochondrion

C Golgi body D Cytoplasm

E Nucleus F Rough endoplasmic


reticulum

G Centrioles H Smooth endoplasmic


reticulum

I Vesicle/lysosome

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Label this diagram of the nucleus

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Label this diagram of the nucleus

A Nuclear envelope

B Nuclear pore

C Nucleolus

D DNA stored as chromatin

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What is the function of the nucleus?

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What is the function of the nucleus?

To store and transmit genetic material

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What is the function of the nuclear
pores?

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What is the function of the nuclear pores?

To allow substances to enter and exit the


nucleus

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What is chromatin?

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What is chromatin?

DNA wrapped around histone proteins

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Describe the structure and function of
the rough endoplasmic reticulum

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Describe the structure and function of the rough
endoplasmic reticulum
- Studded with ribosomes (shown in red on the diagram)
- Made up of membranes folded into cisternae
- Synthesises proteins destined to be secreted

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Describe the structure and function of
the mitochondria

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Describe the structure and function of the
mitochondria
- Double membrane folded into cristae
- Fluid-filled matrix inside
- Contains its own DNA (mtDNA)
- Site of ATP production through aerobic respiration

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What is the function of lysosomes?

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What is the function of lysosomes?

Lysosomes contain hydrolytic enzymes


that break down waste

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What is the function of vesicles?

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What is the function of vesicles?

To transport substances within cells

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What is the structure and function of
ribosomes?

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What is the structure and function of ribosomes?

- Two units made of protein and rRNA


(ribosomal ribonucleic acid)
- Synthesise proteins

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Describe the structure of the golgi body

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Describe the structure of the golgi body

- It is a membrane-bound organelle
- It is folded into cisternae

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What is the function of the golgi body?

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What is the function of the golgi body?

It modifies and processes lipids and


proteins and packages them into
vesicles

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Describe the structure and function of
lysosomes

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Describe the structure and function of lysosomes

Membrane-bound vesicles that contain


hydrolytic enzymes that break down
waste and toxins

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Describe the structure of centrioles

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Describe the structure of centrioles

- A cylindrical bunch of protein called tubulin


- Often found in pairs which makes up a structure called
a centrosome

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Label this diagram of a chloroplast

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Label this diagram of a chloroplast

A Stroma E Intergranal
lamellae

B Ribosome F Thylakoid

C Inner membrane G Grana

D Outer membrane

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What is an intracellular enzyme?

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What is an intracellular enzyme?

An enzyme that acts within cells e.g.


catalase.

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What is an extracellular enzyme?

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What is an extracellular enzyme?

An enzyme that is secreted by cells and


functions outside of cells e.g. amylase

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Describe the steps involved in the
production of an extracellular enzyme

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Describe the steps involved in the production of an
extracellular enzyme
1) DNA transcribed to produce mRNA in the nucleus
2) mRNA exits the nucleus and travels to a ribosome on the rough endoplasmic
reticulum (rER)
3) Enzyme synthesised by the ribosomes on the rER in the process of
translation
4) Enzyme is packaged into a vesicle and sent to the golgi apparatus where it is
modified and repackaged.
5) The enzyme then leaves the golgi apparatus enclosed in a vesicle and
undergoes exocytosis to exit the cell
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Label this diagram of a prokaryotic cell

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Label this diagram of a prokaryotic cell

A Cell wall (on the E Pili


outside)

B Cell membrane F Plasmid loop of


(on the inside) DNA

C Cytoplasm G Ribosome

D Flagellum H Nucleoid

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What is the function of the flagellum?

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What is the function of the flagellum?

The flagellum is used to move the cell

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What is the function of the pili?

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What is the function of the pili?

Pili allow the bacteria to adhere to other


cells or to surfaces

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What is the function of plasmid DNA?

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What is the function of plasmid DNA?

To provide beneficial genes which aid in


the survival of the prokaryote. For
example, the genes which provide
antibiotic resistance
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What is the function of the bacterial
capsule?

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What is the function of the bacterial capsule?

- It prevents the cell from dry


environments
- It acts as a virulence factor which
helps it to resist phagocytosis
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What is the magnification of a
microscope a measurement of?

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What is the magnification of a microscope a
measurement of?

How many times bigger an image


appears compared to the original object.

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What is the formula for calculating
magnification?

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What is the formula for calculating magnification?

Image size = Actual size x Magnification

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What is the actual width of this cell in
micrometers (μm) if the width of the
image is 2cm and the magnification used
is 400x?

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What is the actual width of this cell in micrometers
(μm) if the width of the image is 2cm and the
magnification used is 400x?
2cm = 20mm = 20,000 μm

I = A x M rearranges to A = I / M

Image size = 20,000 μm

Magnification = 400x

20,000 / 400 = 50
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What is the purpose of staining
specimens?

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What is the purpose of staining specimens?

- To visually distinguish different parts of


a specimen
- To increase contrast as lots of cellular
components are transparent
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What is differential staining?

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What is differential staining?

A form of staining used to distinguish


between different parts of a specimen
using different types of stains.

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How do light microscopes work?

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How do light microscopes work?

A type of microscope which uses lenses


to magnify visible light passed through
a specimen

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Label this diagram of a light microscope

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Label this diagram of a light microscope

A Eyepiece lens F Stage

Coarse adjustment
B knob
G Slide

Fine adjustment
C knob
H Objective lenses

D Microscope base I Nosepiece

E Light source J Slide clip(s)

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What is resolution?

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What is resolution?

It is a measurement of the clarity of an optical instrument.


Resolution is defined as the minimum distance which
two separate points can be distinguished by an optical
instrument.

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Describe how light microscopes work.
1. Lenses focus rays of light and magnify the
image
2. Different structures absorb different amounts
and wavelengths of light
3. Reflected light is transmitted to the observer
via the objective lens and eyepiece lens
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Describe how a Transmission Electron
Microscope (TEM) works.

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Describe how a Transmission Electron Microscope
(TEM) works.
1. High energy beam of electrons passed through a
thin slice of specimen
2. More dense structures absorb more electrons so
appear darker
3. Image focussed onto a fluorescent screen or
photographic plate using magnetic lenses
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Describe how a Scanning Electron
Microscope (SEM) works

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Describe how a scanning electron microscope
(SEM) works.
1. Beam of electrons focussed onto the surface of
a specimen using electromagnetic lenses
2. Reflected electrons hit a collecting device and
are amplified to produce an image on a
photographic plate
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Why do electron microscopes have a
higher resolution than light
microscopes?

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Why do electron microscopes have a higher
resolution than light microscopes?

Electrons have a much shorter


wavelength than light and so can
distinguish much smaller structures

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What type of microscope typically
produces naturally coloured images?

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What type of microscope typically produces naturally
coloured images?

Light microscopes produce accurately


coloured images as visible light is used
to visualise the specimen

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What type of electron microscope
produces two dimensional images?

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What type of electron microscope produces two
dimensional images?

Transmission electron microscopes


produce 2D images as electrons are
passed through the specimen

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Give 5 advantages of light microscopes

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Give 5 advantages of light microscopes

- They are cheap


- They are easy to use
- They can visualise living cells
- They are portable and do not always require electricity
to operate
- They can visualise whole specimens
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Give 2 advantages of electron
microscopes compared to light
microscopes

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Give 2 advantages of electron microscopes
compared to light microscopes

- They have a much higher resolution


and depth of field
- They have a much higher
magnification
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