Honors Biology Test Review Sheet: Chapter 5 Plasma Membrane Structure and Types of Transport across the Plasma Membrane
Tests will usually be given in a 55 minute period. During that time you will be asked to answer multiple choice, matching, and/or diagram analysis questions whose answers will be placed on a Scantron sheet. This is one of two parts to each test. The second part is a Short Answer part which requires you to write complete sentence answers to a variety of questions. The questions may be for you to explain, analyze or formulate an answer to an essay type question.
For each test, you will be required to bring a pencil and a pen. All scan-tron is completed in pencil and the short answer can be done in either pen or pencil.
Test topics that will be covered on the Chapter 5 Test will come from sections 1-9. You should be able to answer all these questions below.
- Study a diagram of a plasma membrane. Know the type of proteins.
- Describe what the plasma membrane looks like. Review Fluid Mosaic Model.
- Which part of the phospholipid molecule is hydrophobic? Hydrophilic?
- Explain why the heads of the phospholipid molecule face towards the inside and the outside of the cell.
- State the function of the plasma membrane.
- What is the role of cholesterol in the plasma membrane?
- What is the role of transport proteins in the plasma membrane?
- Define diffusion.
- Why can oxygen and carbon dioxide diffusion easily “through” the membrane?
- What is meant by moving “with the concentration gradient” and “against the concentration gradient”?
- Define osmosis. Is this an example of active or passive transport?
- What is a solute molecule?
- What determines the direction of water movement across the plasma membrane?
- Define hypertonic, hypotonic, and isotonic solutions.
- Study Figure 5.5 on page 77. How does a plant cell respond to a hypotonic solution, isotonic solution? hypertonic solution?
- What does turgid, flaccid and plasmolyzed mean as it relates to plant cells?
- What prevents a plant cell from bursting when too much water enters it?
- Why is it best for an animal cell to be in an isotonic environment?
- Be able to predict in which direction water molecules will move.
- Be able to state whether a solution is hypertonic, hypotonic or isotonic.
- Describe facilitated diffusion.
- What is an aquaporin? What is it used for?
- Define active transport.
- Describe how the Sodium-Potassium Pump protein works to move sodium and potassium ions across the plasma membrane.
- Why does the sodium-potassium pump require ATP?
- What happens to ATP when it transfers energy to be used for work? Think about the sodium-potassium pump.
- Draw a diagram of a resting cell membrane. Be able to draw in all channel proteins, pump proteins. See notebook.
- What makes the inside of the cell more negative than positive?
- Define exocytosis, endocytosis, phagocytosis and pinocytosis.