True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. |
| 1. | During diffusion, molecules diffuse from a region where their concentration is low to a region where their concentration is higher, until the particles are evenly dispersed. |
| 2. | When the concentration of dissolved particles outside a cell is equal to the concentration of dissolved particles inside the cell, the cell solution is isotonic. |
| 3. | Membranes are selectively permeable if they allow only certain substances to move across them. |
| 4. | A cell placed in a strong salt solution would probably burst because of osmosis. |
| 5. | Water will diffuse out of a cell when the cell is placed in a hypertonic solution. |
| 6. | Osmosis is the diffusion of starch molecules through a selectively permeable membrane. |
| 7. | The binding of specific molecules to ion channels controls the ability of particular ions to cross the cell membrane. |
| 8. | To pass through a cell membrane, water requires carrier proteins. |
| 9. | In facilitated diffusion, carrier proteins require energy to transport substances across the cell membrane. |
| 10. | The transport of specific particles down their concentration gradient through a membrane by carrier proteins is known as facilitated diffusion. |
| 11. | Diffusion is an active process that requires a cell to expend a great deal of energy. |
| 12. | Diffusion through ion channels is a form of active transport. |
| 13. | Facilitated diffusion moves molecules and ions against their concentration gradient, while active transport moves molecules and ions down their concentration gradient. |
| 14. | Passive transport uses ATP to move molecules against their concentration gradient. |
| 15. | In active transport, energy is required to move a substance across a cell membrane. |
| 16. | The sodium-potassium pump requires energy to move ions across the cell membrane. |
| 17. | The sodium-potassium pump moves sodium ions and potassium ions against their concentration gradient. |
| 18. | The sodium-potassium pump transports sodium ions out of a cell while causing potassium ions to move into the cell. |
| 19. | The sodium-potassium pump uses ATP. |
| 20. | Exocytosis is a process that uses vesicles to capture substances and bring them into a cell. |
| 21. | Exocytosis helps the cell rid itself of wastes. |
| 22. | During the process of exocytosis, the cell membrane extends to engulf substances that are too big to pass through the cell membrane. |
| 23. | Exocytosis does not use energy to expel proteins from the cell. |
| 24. | Receptor proteins pump sodium ions into a cell. |
| 25. | Receptor proteins may cause the formation of a second messenger molecule inside a cell. |
| 26. | A receptor protein sends signals into a cell by transporting a specific molecule through the cell membrane. |
Modified True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. If false, change the identified word or phrase to make the statement true. |
| 27. | One way that cells maintain homeostasis is by controlling the movement of substances across the cell membrane. _________________________
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| 28. | The cell membrane is made up of a double layer called the DNA bilayer. _________________________
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| 29. | A phospholipid is made up of a lipid “head” and two fatty acid “tails.” _________________________
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| 30. | The nonpolar tails of a phospholipid are attracted to water. _________________________
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| 31. | Cell-surface markers face the inside of the cell. _________________________
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| 32. | A concentration gradient exists when one area has a higher concentration of a substance than another area does. _________________________
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| 33. | The movement down a concentration gradient is called diffusion. _________________________
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| 34. | When the solute concentration outside a cell is equal to the solute concentration inside the cell, the cell’s environment is hypotonic. _________________________
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| 35. | A cell placed in a high salt solution would swell because of osmosis. _________________________
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| 36. | Osmosis is the diffusion of starch molecules through a selectively permeable membrane. _________________________
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| 37. | To pass through a cell membrane, water requires carrier proteins. _________________________
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| 38. | Facilitated diffusion is an active process that requires a cell to expend a great deal of energy. _________________________
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| 39. | Passive transport uses ATP to move molecules against their concentration gradient. _________________________
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| 40. | Exocytosis is a process that uses vesicles to capture substances and bring them into a cell. _________________________
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| 41. | Cells use exocytosis to export proteins modified by the Golgi apparatus. _________________________
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| 42. | Cells communicate by sending chemical signals that carry information to other cells. _________________________
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| 43. | Receptor proteins bind only to signals that match the specific color of the binding site. _________________________
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| 44. | Receptor proteins may cause the formation of a second messenger molecule inside the cell. _________________________
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Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. |
| 45. | As a result of diffusion, the concentration of many types of substances a. | always remains greater inside a membrane. | b. | eventually becomes balanced on both sides of a membrane. | c. | always remains greater outside of a membrane. | d. | becomes imbalanced on both sides of a membrane. |
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| 46. | Refer to the illustration above. The process shown is called a. | osmosis. | c. | active transport. | b. | facilitated diffusion. | d. | diffusion. |
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| 47. | Refer to the illustration above. The process shown is called a. | osmosis. | c. | active transport. | b. | facilitated diffusion. | d. | diffusion. |
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| 48. | Diffusion is the movement of a substance a. | only through a lipid bilayer membrane. | b. | from an area of low concentration to an area of higher concentration. | c. | only in liquids. | d. | from an area of high concentration to an area of lower concentration. |
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| 49. | The dispersal of ink in a beaker of water is an example of a. | diffusion. | c. | active transport. | b. | osmosis. | d. | endocytosis. |
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| 50. | The diffusion of water into or out of a cell is called a. | solubility. | c. | selective transport. | b. | osmosis. | d. | endocytosis. |
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| 51. | Osmosis is a type of a. | active transport. | c. | facilitated diffusion. | b. | passive transport. | d. | endocytosis. |
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| 52. | A cell will swell when it is placed in a(n) a. | hypotonic solution. | c. | isotonic solution. | b. | hypertonic solution. | d. | None of the above |
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| 53. | The interior portion of a cell membrane forms a nonpolar zone that a. | allows polar molecules to pass through the membrane. | b. | allows food to pass through the membrane. | c. | prevents ions and most large molecules from passing through the membrane. | d. | None of the above |
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| 54. | Ions move through ion channels by a. | endocytosis. | c. | passive transport. | b. | diffusion. | d. | active transport. |
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| 55. | Ion channel gates close the pores of some ion channels in response to a. | stretching of the cell membrane. | b. | a change in electrical charge. | c. | the binding of specific molecules to the channel. | d. | All of the above |
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| 56. | Proteins that act like selective passageways in the cell membrane are known as a. | marker proteins. | c. | receptor proteins. | b. | channel proteins. | d. | None of the above |
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| 57. | Transport proteins that allow ions to pass through the cell membrane are called a. | receptor proteins. | c. | ion channels. | b. | marker proteins. | d. | None of the above |
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| 58. | Sugar molecules cross the cell membrane by a. | active transport. | c. | osmosis. | b. | facilitated diffusion. | d. | gated channels. |
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| 59. | Proteins involved in facilitated diffusion are a. | carrier proteins. | c. | Both (a) and (b) | b. | receptor proteins. | d. | None of the above |
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| 60. | Sugar molecules can enter cells through the process of a. | exocytosis. | c. | osmosis. | b. | facilitated diffusion. | d. | ion pumps. |
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| 61. | Which of the following does not require energy? a. | diffusion | c. | active transport | b. | endocytosis | d. | sodium-potassium pump |
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| 62. | Unlike passive transport, active transport a. | requires energy. | b. | moves substances down their concentration gradient. | c. | does not involve carrier proteins. | d. | All of the above |
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| 63. | Both active transport and facilitated diffusion involve a. | ATP. | b. | movement against a concentration gradient. | c. | carrier proteins. | d. | All of the above |
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| 64. | Which of the following is a form of active transport? a. | osmosis | c. | facilitated diffusion | b. | diffusion | d. | sodium-potassium pump |
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| 65. | The sodium-potassium pump a. | is a carrier protein | c. | is located in the cytoplasm of a cell. | b. | uses passive transport. | d. | transports sugar molecules. |
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| 66. | The sodium-potassium pump usually pumps a. | potassium ions out of the cell. | b. | sodium ions into the cell. | c. | potassium ions into the cell. | d. | only potassium ions and sugar molecules. |
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| 67. | The sodium-potassium pump a. | increases the concentration of sodium ions inside a cell. | b. | decreases the concentration of sodium ions inside a cell. | c. | increases the concentration of potassium ions inside a cell. | d. | Both (b) and (c) |
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| 68. | Proteins and polysaccharides that are too large to move into a cell through diffusion or active transport move in by a. | exocytosis. | c. | the sodium-potassium pump. | b. | endocytosis. | d. | None of the above |
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| 69. | Molecules that are too large to be moved through the membrane can be transported into the cell by a. | osmosis. | c. | exocytosis. | b. | endocytosis. | d. | diffusion. |
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| 70. | Molecules that are too large to be moved across a cell membrane can be removed from the cell by a. | diffusion. | c. | endocytosis. | b. | exocytosis. | d. | osmosis. |
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| 71. | Ridding the cell of materials by discharging the materials in vesicles is called a. | osmosis. | c. | exocytosis. | b. | diffusion. | d. | endocytosis. |
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| 72. | Refer to the illustration above. What happens when the structure labeled A binds to the structure labeled B? a. | Information is sent into the cell. | c. | The cell begins to undergo mitosis. | b. | Proteins enter the cell. | d. | None of the above |
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| 73. | Refer to the illustration above. What happens when the structure labeled A binds to the structure labeled B? a. | Information is sent into the cell. | c. | The cell begins to swell. | b. | Proteins enter the cell. | d. | Ions enter the cell. |
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| 74. | Refer to the illustration above. The structure labeled B in the diagram is an example of a(n) a. | channel protein. | c. | receptor protein. | b. | signal molecule. | d. | ion pump. |
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| 75. | Signal molecules bind to a. | carbohydrates. | c. | receptor proteins. | b. | marker proteins. | d. | transport proteins. |
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| 76. | When a signal molecule binds to a receptor protein, the receptor protein may a. | change the permeability of the membrane. | b. | cause the formation of a second messenger molecule. | c. | catalyze certain chemical reactions in the cell. | d. | All of the above |
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| 77. | Which of the following transmit information into a cell by binding to signal molecules? a. | channel proteins | c. | marker proteins | b. | receptor proteins | d. | end proteins |
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| 78. | cell membrane : cell :: a. | window : house | c. | door : house | b. | roof : house | d. | wall : house |
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| 79. | Which type of molecule forms the cell membrane? a. | protein | c. | nucleic acid | b. | phospholipid | d. | carbohydrate |
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| 80. | Phospholipids are molecules that have a. | one polar phosphate head and two polar fatty acid tails. | b. | one polar phosphate head and two nonpolar fatty acid tails. | c. | one polar phosphate head and one polar fatty acid tail. | d. | one nonpolar phosphate head and two polar fatty acid tails. |
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| 81. | The interior of the lipid bilayer of a cell membrane forms a nonpolar zone that a. | allows most polar molecules to pass through the membrane. | b. | allows food to pass through the membrane. | c. | repels ions and most polar molecules. | d. | makes the membrane permeable to most molecules. |
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| | |
| 82. | Refer to the illustration above. The structure labeled A is composed of a. | lipids. | c. | proteins. | b. | carbohydrates. | d. | DNA. |
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| 83. | Refer to the illustration above. The structure labeled D is a(n) a. | cell-surface marker. | c. | enzyme. | b. | receptor protein. | d. | transport protein. |
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| 84. | Refer to the illustration above. The structure labeled C is a(n) a. | cell-surface marker. | c. | enzyme. | b. | receptor protein. | d. | transport protein. |
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| 85. | Proteins in the cell membrane that identify the cell are called a. | cell-surface markers. | c. | enzymes. | b. | receptor proteins. | d. | transport proteins. |
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| 86. | As a result of diffusion, the concentration of many types of substances a. | always remains greater inside a membrane. | b. | eventually becomes balanced on both sides of a membrane. | c. | always remains greater outside of a membrane. | d. | becomes imbalanced on both sides of a membrane. |
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| 87. | Diffusion is the movement of a substance a. | only through a lipid bilayer membrane. | b. | from an area of low concentration to an area of higher concentration. | c. | only in liquids. | d. | from an area of high concentration to an area of lower concentration. |
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| 88. | The dispersal of ink in a beaker of water is an example of a. | diffusion. | c. | active transport. | b. | osmosis. | d. | endocytosis. |
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| 89. | Proteins that serve as tunnels for specific substances through the lipid bilayer are a. | cell-surface markers. | c. | receptor proteins. | b. | channel proteins. | d. | enzymes. |
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| 90. | Sugar molecules cross the cell membrane by a. | active transport. | c. | osmosis. | b. | facilitated diffusion. | d. | simple diffusion. |
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| 91. | Which of the following does not require energy? a. | diffusion | c. | active transport | b. | endocytosis | d. | sodium-potassium pump |
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| 92. | Ions move through ion channels by a. | endocytosis. | c. | passive transport. | b. | simple diffusion. | d. | active transport. |
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| 93. | The diffusion of water into or out of a cell is called a. | solubility. | c. | selective transport. | b. | osmosis. | d. | endocytosis. |
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| 94. | Osmosis is a type of a. | active transport. | c. | simple diffusion. | b. | passive transport. | d. | endocytosis. |
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| 95. | How does water pass through the cell membrane? a. | directly through the lipid bilayer | b. | through a water ion pump | c. | through water carrier proteins | d. | through channel proteins just for water |
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| 96. | Which of the following statements about an isotonic solution and a cell is correct? a. | The solution has the same solute concentration that the cytoplasm does. | b. | The solution has a higher solute concentration than the cytoplasm does. | c. | A cell in the solution will lose water. | d. | A cell in the solution will gain water. |
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| 97. | Unlike passive transport, active transport a. | requires energy. | b. | moves substances down their concentration gradient. | c. | does not involve carrier proteins. | d. | moves water across the cell membrane. |
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| 98. | Both active transport and facilitated diffusion involve a. | ATP. | b. | movement against a concentration gradient. | c. | carrier proteins. | d. | channel proteins. |
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| 99. | Which of the following is a form of active transport? a. | osmosis | c. | facilitated diffusion | b. | simple diffusion | d. | sodium-potassium pump |
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| 100. | The sodium-potassium pump a. | is a carrier protein. | c. | is located in the cytoplasm of a cell. | b. | uses passive transport. | d. | transports sugar molecules. |
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| 101. | The sodium-potassium pump usually pumps a. | potassium ions out of the cell. | b. | sodium ions into the cell. | c. | potassium ions into the cell. | d. | only potassium ions and sugar molecules. |
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| 102. | How many potassium ions does the sodium-potassium pump move into a cell if it moves six sodium ions out of the cell? |
| 103. | Proteins and polysaccharides that are too large to move into a cell through diffusion or active transport move in by a. | exocytosis. | c. | the sodium-potassium pump. | b. | endocytosis. | d. | channel proteins. |
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| 104. | Molecules that are too large to be moved across a cell membrane can be removed from the cell by a. | diffusion. | c. | endocytosis. | b. | exocytosis. | d. | osmosis. |
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| 105. | Removing materials from a cell in vesicles is called a. | osmosis. | c. | exocytosis. | b. | diffusion. | d. | endocytosis. |
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| 106. | Which of the following descriptions of hormones is correct? a. | signal molecules distributed throughout the body | b. | signal molecules that affect all cells in the body | c. | target molecules that communicate through direct contact | d. | target molecules that originate outside the body |
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| 107. | Signal molecules bind to a. | carbohydrates. | c. | receptor proteins. | b. | marker proteins. | d. | transport proteins. |
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| 108. | Which of the following transmit information into a cell by binding to signal molecules? a. | channel proteins | c. | marker proteins | b. | receptor proteins | d. | signal proteins |
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| 109. | What change takes place in the cell membrane if a signal molecule causes a transport protein to open? a. | permeability change | c. | formation of a second messenger | b. | activation of an enzyme | d. | change in chemical reactions |
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Completion Complete each statement. |
| 110. | The random motion of particles of a substance that causes the substance to move from an area of high concentration to an area of lower concentration is called ____________________. |
| 111. | The diffusion of ____________________ through cell membranes is called osmosis. |
| 112. | Substances always flow from an area of high concentration to an area of ____________________ concentration. |
| 113. | When the concentration of free water molecules is higher outside a cell than inside the cell, water will diffuse ____________________ the cell. |
| 114. | If a cell is placed in a(n) ____________________ solution, water will flow out of the cell. |
| 115. | If a cell is placed in a(n) ____________________ solution, water will flow into the cell. |
| 116. | If a cell is placed in a(n) ____________________ solution, water flows into the cell at a rate that is equal to the rate at which water flows out of the cell. |
| 117. | Diffusion of ions through ion channels is a form of ____________________ transport. |
| 118. | If the interior of a typical cell is negatively charged, ____________________ charged ions will not require energy to diffuse into the cell using an ion channel. |
| 119. | In facilitated diffusion, ____________________ proteins are used to transport substances down their concentration gradient. |
| 120. | In ____________________ ____________________, carrier proteins do not require energy to transport amino acids into a cell. |
| 121. | Carrier proteins ____________________ shape to transport sugars to the interior of cells. |
| 122. | A cell does not expend ____________________ when diffusion takes place. |
| 123. | Active transport requires the use of ____________________ by a cell. |
| 124. | The ____________________-____________________ pump transports ions against their concentration gradients. |
| 125. | The sodium-potassium pump uses energy supplied by ____________________. |
| 126. | The sodium-potassium pump prevents the accumulation of ____________________ ions inside the cell. |
| 127. | The movement of a substance into a cell by a vesicle is called ____________________. |
| | |
| 128. | Refer to the illustration above. The process shown in figure B is called ____________________. |
| 129. | Refer to the illustration above. Cells often engulf extracellular particles and fluid, as shown in figure A. This is called ____________________. |
| 130. | Refer to the illustration above. The process shown in figure B is called ____________________. |
| 131. | Refer to the illustration above. The process shown in figure A is called ____________________. |
| 132. | Receptor proteins can change the ____________________ of the cell membrane. |
| 133. | Receptor proteins may act as ____________________, catalyzing certain chemical reactions inside the cell. |
| 134. | In the cell membrane, proteins that transmit information into the cell by responding to signal molecules are called ____________________. |
| 135. | One way cells maintain homeostasis is by controlling the movement of substances across the cell ____________________. |
| 136. | A(n) ____________________ is a specialized lipid made of a phosphate head and two fatty acid tails. |
| 137. | The phosphate head of a phospholipid is attracted to water because it is ____________________. |
| 138. | The fatty acid tails of a phospholipid are repelled by water because they are ____________________. |
| 139. | The phospholipids form a barrier through which only small, ____________________ substances can pass. |
| 140. | Ions and most polar molecules are repelled by the ____________________ interior of the lipid bilayer. |
| 141. | ____________________ – ____________________ markers are attached to the cell surface and have sugars attached to their protein. |
| 142. | Proteins that aid in moving substances into and out of cells are called ____________________ proteins. |
| 143. | ____________________ are proteins in the cell membrane that help with important biochemical reactions inside the cell. |
| 144. | ____________________ proteins enable a cell to sense its surroundings by binding to certain substances outside the cell. |
| 145. | To reach equilibrium, substances always flow from an area of high concentration to an area of ____________________ concentration. |
| 146. | When one area has a higher concentration than another area does, a concentration ____________________ exists. |
| 147. | Substances diffuse through a cell membrane either through the lipid bilayer or through ____________________ proteins. |
| 148. | Oxygen and carbon dioxide pass through the lipid bilayer by ____________________ diffusion. |
| 149. | Diffusion of ions through ion channels is a form of ____________________ transport. |
| 150. | Carrier proteins change ____________________ to transport substances to the interior of cells. |
| 151. | A cell does not expend ____________________ when diffusion takes place. |
| 152. | The diffusion of ____________________ through cell membranes is called osmosis. |
| 153. | When the concentration of free water molecules is higher outside a cell than inside the cell, water will diffuse ____________________ the cell. |
| 154. | If a cell is placed in a(n) ____________________ solution, water will flow out of the cell. |
| 155. | If a cell is placed in a(n) ____________________ solution, water will flow into the cell. |
| 156. | If a cell is placed in a(n) ____________________ solution, water flows into the cell at a rate that is equal to the rate at which water flows out of the cell. |
| 157. | Active transport requires the use of ____________________ by a cell. |
| 158. | The ____________________ – ____________________ pump transports ions against their concentration gradients. |
| 159. | The sodium-potassium pump uses energy supplied by ____________________. |
| 160. | The sodium-potassium pump prevents the accumulation of ____________________ ions inside the cell. |
| 161. | The movement of a substance into a cell by a vesicle is called ____________________. |
| 162. | A signaling cell produces a signal that is detected by a ____________________ cell. |
| 163. | Light is an environmental ____________________ for the flowering of some plants. |
| 164. | In the cell membrane, proteins that bind to specific signal molecules and respond are called ____________________ proteins. |
| 165. | Receptor proteins can change the ____________________ of the cell membrane. |
| 166. | Receptor proteins may act as ____________________, triggering certain chemical reactions inside the cell. |
Short Answer |
| 167. | |
| 168. | What makes up the lipid bilayer? |
| 169. | In the lipid bilayer, what causes one layer of polar heads to face the cell’s cytoplasm and the other layer of heads to face the cell’s surroundings? |
| 170. | |
| 171. | What are four types of proteins in cell membranes? |
| 172. | What exists across a cell membrane if equilibrium is not reached? |
| 173. | What is the difference between how a molecule crosses the cell membrane in simple diffusion and in facilitated diffusion? |
| 174. | What are two types of transport proteins? |
| 175. | Why are some water molecules not free to move across the cell membrane? |
| 176. | Explain why osmosis is a form of facilitated diffusion. |
| 177. | What specific carrier protein moves sodium ions out of a cell and potassium ions into a cell? |
| 178. | What is the function of the cell membrane during endocytosis? |
| 179. | What are hormones, how are they distributed, and what cells do they affect? |
| 180. | What happens to a receptor protein once it binds to a signal molecule? |
| 181. | How can the cell’s response to a signal cause a permeability change? |