Basic Components of Living Systems Key Terms and Processes Flashcards

1
Q

Describe how to prepare a slide

A
  • place a drop of the sample in the middle of a clean slide and lower a cover slip gently over the drop at an angle, with one edge touching the slide first
  • allow the liquid to spread out between the two pieces of glass without applying pressure
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2
Q

Differential staining

A

differential staining can be used to distinguish between two types of organisms that would otherwise be hard to identify; it can also be used to differentiate between different organelles of a single organism within a tissue sample

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3
Q

Gram Stain Technique

A
  • used to separate bacteria into two groups; gram +ve and gram -ve
  • crystal violet is first applied to bacterial specimen on a slide, then iodine, which fixes the dye
  • slide is then washed with alcohol, gram +ve bacteria retain the violet dye and appear blue under the microscope
  • the gram -ve lose the dye
  • they are then stained with a safranin dye; a counter stain
  • ## these bacteria will then appear red
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4
Q

Magnification =

A

actual size

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5
Q

Transmission Electron Microscope

A

a beam of electrons is transmitted through a specimen and focused to produce an image
resolution : 0.5nm

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6
Q

Scanning Electron Microscope

A

a beam of electrons is sent across the surface of a specimen and the reflected electrons are collected

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7
Q

Laser Scanning Confocal Microscope

A
  • an LSC moves a single spot of focussed light across a specimen, which causes the fluorescence from the components labelled with a dye.
  • the emitted light from the specimen is filtered through a pinhole aperture, only light radiated very close to the focal plane is detected
  • as very thin sections of specimen are examin ed and light from elsewhere is removed, very high resolution images can be obtained
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8
Q

Parts of the cell only available to see via an electron microscope

A
  • secretary vesicles
  • microfilaments
  • mitochondria
  • ribosomes on RER
  • microvillus
  • pinocytotic vescicle
  • SER
  • lysosome
  • nuclear pore
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9
Q

Cell Fractionation

A

a technique used to separate the different parts of cells

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10
Q

Order of organelles that separate out when spun with a centrifuge

A
1  ) nuclei
2 ) mitochondria
3 ) lysosomes
4 ) rough endoplasmic reticulum 
5 ) plasma membranes 
6 ) smooth endoplasmic reticulum 
7 ) free ribosomes
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11
Q

Iodine solution stains…

A

carbohydrates in plant/animal specimens blue/black

it also stains glycogen red

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12
Q

Methylene blue stains…

A

acidic cell parts (like the nucleus) blue

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13
Q

Gram stain…

A

stains gram-positive bacteria blue, and gram-negative bacteria red

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14
Q

Toluidine blue stains…

A

acidic cell parts dark blue

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15
Q

Crystal violet stains…

A

bacteria purple

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16
Q

In the cytoskeleton, what is the role of intermediate filaments?

A

whole cell support; mechanical support

17
Q

In the cytoskeleton, what is the role of microfilaments?

A

movement of cell/contractile protein action; changing the shape of the cell of eg, phagocytosis/cytokinesis

18
Q

In the cytoskeleton, what is the role of microtubules?

A

movement of organelles using ATP

19
Q

What is the role of cilia/flagella?

A
  • cilia waft substances on the outside of the cell

- flagella move whole cells

20
Q

Describe the structure of cilia/flagella

A

4 + 2 arrangement of pairs of microtubules

21
Q

Endocytosis is the …

A

uptake into the cell using vesicles; transport using cytoskeleton

22
Q

Pinocytosis is the…

A

uptake of H2O into a vesicle (not osmosis)