Topic One: Chemistry of Living Things

  1. All living things must maintain ______in order to stay alive.

A)Homeostasis: A ______state in the body.

B)Failure to maintain homeostasis results in ______or death.

C)Homeostasis is often maintained using ______mechanisms.

  1. Feedback mechanisms are ______in which the product of one reaction causes another to start or stop.

D)While organisms are balanced, they are not unchanging. The term used to describe the balanced state is______.

  1. Dynamic Equilibrium: A balanced state created by many small, ______changes.

Word Bank: feedbackopposing dynamic-equilibrium cyclesdiseasebalanced homeostasis

  1. Life Processes: All living things carry out the same basic chemical______. Taken together, these process make up an organism’s______.

A)Metabolism: All chemical processes used to maintain______.

  1. ______: Using nutrients for growth, synthesis, repair and energy.
  2. ______: Converts energy in food into a usable form (ATP).
  3. ______: Making complex chemicals from simple substances.
  4. ______: Absorbing and distributing materials throughout the body.
  5. ______: The control and coordination of life processes.
  6. ______: Removing of wastes produced by metabolic activities.
  7. ______: Passes on genes to offspring.

Word Bank: homeostasisprocessesmetabolismreproductionexcretionregulation transport synthesis respiration nutrition

  1. Inorganic Chemicals: ______compounds

A)______( H2O) : Most common substance in all living things (about 60% of body mass)

  • Needed for chemical ______(won’t happen in “dry” conditions)
  • Dissolves other molecules into______, allowing them to be transported through the body.

B)______(O2): Needed by most (not all) organisms for cellular respiration.

  • Released by plants and algae as a waste product of______.
  • Aerobic respiration: Process that uses oxygen to extract ______from glucose (sugar). Used by most organisms.
  • Anaerobic respiration: Process that extracts energy from glucose ______using oxygen. Gives ______energy, so only used by some simple organisms (some bacteria, yeast). These organisms do not need to ______in oxygen.

Word Bank: solutionreactionswatersimplebreathewithout less energy oxygen photosynthesis

C)Carbon Dioxide (CO2): With water, used by plants to make glucose (photosynthesis).

  • Waste product of______.

D)Nitrogen (N2): Most common gas in air (70%)

  • Needed to make______.
  • Converted into ______by soil bacteria. Nitrates are ______by plants and then eaten by animals.
  • Excreted as waste in ammonia or ______.

E)Acids and Bases: Used for different functions in body (such as digestion).

  • Measured by the ______scale
  • Very high and very low pHs are usually______.
  • pH can affect rates of chemical reactions; for example, digestive ______work fastest in acidic environments, which is why we make stomach ______(hydrochloric acid, or HCl).

Word Bank: ureaabsorbednitratesproteinacidenzymes lethal pH aerobic-respiration.

  1. ______Compounds: Larger, more complex chemicals. Always contain the elements like carbon (C)and hydrogen (H). Synthesized from simpler substances (building blocks).

A)Carbohydrates: Sugars and______.

  1. Building blocks: simple______.
  2. Functions:
  3. ______energy.
  4. ______energy (starch in plants).

B)Lipids: fats, ______and waxes.

  1. Functions:
  2. Store energy.
  3. Cell membrane.
  4. Water______.
  5. ______.

Word Bank: storeprovidesugarsstarchesorganicoils proofing insulation

C)______: Complex compounds that carry out all the body’s activities.

  1. Building blocks: ______.
  2. After water, proteins are the most ______substances in the body.
  3. Have many different functions as determined by their______.
  4. Lock and ______Model: Proteins must have the right shape to “___” with other molecules.
  5. Changing the shape of a protein will change what it can interact with its______.
  1. Important types of proteins:
  2. Hormones and neurotransmitters – carry ______through the body.
  3. Cell receptors – in cell membrane; ______hormones and neurotransmitters.
  4. Antibodies –______foreign pathogens
  5. Enzymes- act as catalysts, ______all chemical reactions in the body.
  6. High temperatures will cause enzymes to denature (lose their shape) and stop______. This is why high fevers are______.

D)Nucleic Acids (DNA and RNA): Make up ______and chromosomes.

  1. Building blocks: Nucleotides; molecular ______(ATCGU)

Word Bank: functioningdangerouscontrollingattackreceivemessages genes bases function key fit shape plentiful amino-acids proteins enzyme

Topic Two: The Cell

  1. Definition:______.
  1. Cell Theory has three parts:
  2. ______.

Unicellular – single celled organisms (amoeba, paramecium)

Multicellular – have more than 1 cell; may be only a few (vorticella), or many trillions of cells (humans). Almost all structures in multi-celled organisms are made of or by cells.

  1. ______.

Everything you do is the result of the work of your cells – walking, talking, even thinking and feeling. When you get sick, it is because your cells are not working correctly.

  1. ______.

This seems obvious now, but at one time people believed in spontaneous generation, the idea that living things regularly emerged from nonliving things.

B)Exceptions to the Cell Theory

  1. ______are not made of cells. However, they also do not carry out all life processes, so many biologists do not consider them true living things.
  2. ______obviously could not come from another cell.
  1. Organization

______– A cell part

Cell

______– A group of specialized cells

______– Group of tissues that work together

______– Group of organs that work together

Word Bank: virusestissueorganorgan-system organelle The-first-cell

All life functions are the result of the cell activities

All cells come from pre-existing cells.

All organisms are made of one or more cells

basic unit of structure and function in an organism

  1. Cell Organelles: These are the tiny cell parts that make up a cell.
  2. ______
  3. Controls the cell
  4. Contains hereditary material (chromosomes, genes, DNA)
  5. ______
  6. Fluid/liquid in the cell – mostly water
  7. Helps transport material
  8. ______
  9. Carries out cellular respiration.
  10. Gives cell energy (Powerhouse of the cell).
  11. ______
  12. Makes proteins from amino acids.
  13. ______
  14. Stores food, water and waste
  15. Food vacuoles may digest large molecules.
  16. Waste vacuoles may excrete waste out the cell membrane
  17. ______
  18. Carries out photosynthesis
  19. Plant and algae cells only
  20. ______
  21. Gives shape, structure and protection.
  22. NEVER found in animal cells.
  23. ______
  24. Separates cell interior from environment
  25. Controls what enters and leaves the cell using______.
  26. Has ______that pick up signals from other cells.

Has ______which are proteins that identify the cell; prevent the cell from being attacked by the immune system.

Word Bank: antigenstransportchloroplastcell-wallreceptor-proteinscell-membrane vacuole ribosome mitochondrion cytoplasm nucleus

Topic Three: Nutrition, Photosynthesis and Respiration

Reminder: All life processes are chemical activities which make up your______.

  1. Nutrition: Taking in nutrients (______) for various activities including:
  2. Respiration (______)
  3. Growth
  4. Repair
  5. ______

A)Ingestion: ______.

B)Digestion:______.

  1. Nutrients must be broken down into smaller parts so that they can be ______into the blood and cells of organisms.
  2. Starches are digested into______.
  3. Proteins are digested into______.

Word Bank: amino-acidsabsorbedsugarssynthesistaking-in-nutrients

metabolismbreaking down-nutrientsfoodenergy

C)Autotrophic Nutrition: Organisms take ______materials (______,H2O) and convert them into organic nutrients (______).

  1. Auto =______; troph = ______so Autotroph = ______.
  2. ______is most common form of autotrophic nutrition
  3. Ex: plants,______.

D)Heterotrophic Nutrition: Organisms must ______nutrients made by other organisms.

  1. Hetero =______, so Heterotroph =______.
  2. All ______and ______are heterotrophs.
  3. Includes:
  4. ______: consumes animals.
  5. ______: consumes plants.
  6. ______: consumes both.
  7. ______: breaks down dead matter.

Word Bank: otherfungianimalsconsumefeeds-on-othersself photosynthesis self-feeding glucose simple-organic decomposers CO2 omnivore herbivore carnivore other feeding algae

  1. Photosynthesis: Process in which sun’s energy is trapped in the chemical ______of sugar.

A)Requires______, CO2 and H2O.

B)Makes ______(C6H 12O6) as food.

C)______and ______are waste products.

D)Benefits:

  1. Provides ______for all plants, animals and other organisms.
  2. Provides oxygen to______.
  3. Removes ______from atmosphere.

E)Plant adaptations:

  1. Chloroplast: Cell organelle that does______.
  2. Gas exchange:
  3. Stomata : ______under a leaf; let gases in and out
  4. Guard cells: open and close stomata to prevent______.
  5. Transport:
  • Xylem and Phloem: “tubes” ______food and water throughout the plant.

Word Bank: photosynthesistransportdehydrationholesoxygenwater carbon-dioxide bonds glucose sunlight food stomates

  1. Cellular Respiration: Process that takes______from sugar molecules and places it in molecules of______.

A)ATP is the ______all life uses for energy.

  • No organism can get energy from ______or sugar without first putting the energy into ATP.

B)Requires______, oxygen and water.

C)______and ______are waste products.

D)Most organisms carry out aerobic respiration (uses oxygen) in their______.

E)______respiration does not require oxygen, but gives less ATP (energy) for each molecule of sugar.

  • When exercise causes human muscles to run out of______, their cells will do anaerobic respiration. The waste product, ______, causes muscles to “burn” so that you will stop.

Word Bank: ATPmoleculeenergyglucoselactic-acidsunlight carbon-dioxide water mitochondria anaerobic

F)
Photosynthesis and Cellular Respiration are ______reactions! They are also important in ______oxygen, carbon, hydrogen and water through the environment.

______

______+ CO2 + H2O  glucose + O2 + H2O

______

glucose + O2 + H2O  CO2 + H2O + ______

G)Common mistakes:

  • “Plants use photosynthesis, animals use respiration.”

All organisms, including plants, use respiration to get their______.

  • “Respiration is breathing.”

Breathing is not respiration. Breathing ______the gases needed for respiration. Inhaling and exhaling does not give you ATP.

  • “Oxygen is used to breathe.”

This is backwards. Breathing is used to get oxygen which is used for respiration. Without oxygen, you have no______, no ATP, and no energy.

  • “All living things need oxygen/need to breathe.”

Anaerobic organisms do not need oxygen, and do not have to______.

Word Bank: cyclingoppositeexchangesenergyrespirationATPsunlight cellular-respiration photosynthesis breathe

Topic Four: The Human Body

  1. Organization: The human body is made up of______.

A)All humans (and most other organisms) begin life as a ______cell.

  1. This single cell is called a______.
  2. The nucleus of this cell has ______the genes needed to become a complete organism.

B)Humans grow as a result of ______cell division).

  1. This quickly increases the number of cells in the body until there many ______of cells.
  2. Since all new cells come from the same single cell, they all share the same______.

C)As cells divide, they begin to develop into specialized______.

  1. ______or Differentiation: Process in which a cell changes to have a special shape and function.
  2. Cells specialize by ______specific genes on or off.
  3. Ex: A ___blood cell has turned off all genes needed to make skin, bone, or nerves. It still has those genes, but only the genes ______to be a white blood cell remain turned on.

D)As the body continues to develop, tissues will work together to form______.

E)Organs will work together to form______.

F)Org an systems will work together to help a person maintain______.

Word Bank: trillions cells single tissues zygote needed white all mitosis specialization genes homeostasis organs turning organ-systems

  1. Nervous System

A)The nervous system ______your body with electrochemical______.

  1. The chemical portion of a nerve impulses is called a______.
  2. Neurotransmitters released by 1 nerve cell are received by ______in the cell membrane of the next nerve cell.
  3. The ______of the receptor molecule determines which neurotransmitter it can receive.

B)A nerve cell is also called a______.

C)The main organs of the nervous system are the ______and______.

D)The spinal cord controls ______and relays impulses between the brain and body.

Word Bank: shape regulatesreflexes impulsesneurotransmitterreceptor-proteins muscle neuron brain signal spinal-cord

  1. Endocrine System

A)Uses______to regulate thebody.

  1. A hormone is a chemical ______secreted by endocrine glands.
  2. Hormones are slower than nerve impulses, but with ______lasting effects.
  3. Hormone levels are controlled by ______mechanisms.
  1. ______molecules on the surface of the cell membrane receive hormones. As with all proteins, it is the ______of the receptor molecule that determines which hormone it can receive.

B)The ______makes ______and glucagon which control blood sugar.

  • Common mistake: “Insulin lowers blood pressure.”

Insulin (and glucagon) directly control blood ______(or glucose) levels, not blood pressure.

C)Adrenal glands make ______when the body is under stress.

D)Testosterone (male), estrogen and progesterone (female) are the sex hormones. These are made in the ______(testes for males, ovaries for females).

Word Bank: longer hormonesfeedbackmessengerreceptorshapepancreas gonads insulin adrenaline sugar molecule


IV.Circulatory System

A)Moves ______through the body to the organs and cells that need them.

B)Transported material includes:

  1. ______and ______from intestines to all cells of body.
  2. ______from lungs to all cells of the body.
  3. ______from glands to target cells
  4. ______from all cells to the excretory organs.

C)Materials usually enter and leave the blood through______.

  1. Diffusion: Process in which material moves from a ___concentration to a low concentration.
  2. Ex: There is a high concentration of oxygen in the lungs, so oxygen will diffuse from the lungs into the______, which has less oxygen.
  3. ______: Microscopic blood vessels where diffusion occurs.

D)The ______is the pump that drives the circulatory system.

E)______carry oxygen and carbon dioxide

  1. Hemoglobin: ______in red blood cells that carries oxygen.

F)______is the fluid of the blood. It transports everything except oxygen.

G)Platelets ______the blood.

H)Common mistakes:

1. “The heart pumps oxygen to the brain.”

Technically true, but the heart pumps blood (which carries the oxygen) ______in your body.

2.“Oxygen diffuses into and out of the heart.”

No materials ______in or out of the blood when it is in the heart. This ______occurs in capillaries.

Word Bank: materialnutrientswaterprotein high diffusionoxygen hormones wastes clot capillaries heart blood red-blood-cells everywhere plasma diffuse only white-blood-cells

V.Respiratory System:

A)Breathing provides ______needed for cellular respiration (which uses energy from sugar to make______).

B)Excretes the waste ______which is produced from cellular respiration.

C)The ______is the muscle that allows breathing to occur.

D)You breathe faster when CO2 builds up in the ______(not when you need oxygen).

E)The ______are microscopic sacs where oxygen enters the blood and CO2 leaves the blood.

1.The alveoli are surrounded by ______which pick up oxygen and drop off CO2.

Word Bank: diaphragm capillariesoxygen ATPalveoliblood CO2

  1. Digestive System:

A)Food is ______down so that it is small enough to enter the body tissues/cells.

  1. Food is broken down mechanically and______.
  2. Nutrients and water are ______into the body in the small and large intestines.

B)The digestive system is a one way ______through the body that includes the mouth, stomach and intestines.

C)Food is moved through the digestive system by muscular contractions (______).

D)Undigested food is ______as solid waste (feces).

E)Common mistakes:

  1. “The digestive system excretes waste.”

The digestive system does not excrete waster (see excretory system).

  1. “The digestive system gives you energy.”

The digestive system gives______. Energy is gained by cellular respiration.

Word Bank: passagechemicallynutrientsabsorbedperistalsisbroken eliminated excretes

VII.Excretory System:

A)Removes waste produced by the ______of your body.

1.These wastes include ______,______,______and______.

B)Lungs excrete ______and______.

C)The skin excretes ______and ______as sweat.

D)The kidneys excrete ______and ______and other substances as urine.

1.______also control the amount of water in your body.

E)The ______filters toxins and dead red blood cells from the blood.

F)Common mistake:

1.“The body excretes feces.”

Feces never enters cells of the body, so technically it is not excreted. The correct term is “______” or “egested.”

Word Bank: cells salt (2)water (4)urea (2)liverCO2(2) kidney eliminated excretory

  1. Immune System

A)The job of the immune system is to protect the body against______.

B)Pathogen: ______.

  1. Types of pathogens include viruses, bacteria, and______.

C)______Blood Cells are the main components of the immune system.

  1. Different w.b.c’s have different roles, including:
  2. ______pathogens.
  3. “____” pathogens for destruction by other wbc’s.
  4. Destroy pathogen by ______it.
  5. Destroy pathogen using______.
  6. Make______.

D)Antibodies are ______made by white blood cells to attack pathogens.

  1. Every antibody is specific in its______– it can attack one and only one ______of pathogen. As with all proteins, this is because the shape of the antibody must fit its ______(lock and key model).

Word Bank: parasitesidentify pathogensdisease-causing-organismtag white chemicals proteins eating antibodies action type target

E)Antigensare protein “______” that identify a cell or virus.

  1. Your blood type is determined by your ______(you can have A or B antigens, both or nether (type O).
  2. Any cell of virus with the wrong antigen will be seen as ______by your immune system, attacked, and destroyed. This is why you must match blood types before receiving blood or an organ______.

F)A ______is an injection of a dead or weakened pathogen.

  1. Triggers the body to make antibodies ______that pathogen.
  2. Effective against both ______and bacteria.
  3. Can only ______disease, not cure it.

G)______are drugs used to stop infections by bacteria.

  1. Antibiotics will not ______against viruses.
  2. Unlike vaccines, antibiotics can ______diseases.

H)Common mistake:

  1. “Antibodies are cells that attack pathogens.” Antibodies are______, not cells.

Word Bank: tagsvaccineforeign antibioticsantigenstransplant prevent cure against viruses work proteins

  1. Interactions between body systems

A)The different systems of the body work together to maintain homeostasis.For example:

  1. Nutrients from the ______system are transported to cells by the ______system.
  2. Wastes from the ______system are removed by the ______system.
  3. The ______and ______systems work together to control the body.
  4. The ______system protects the ______system from disease.

Word Bank: respiratory immune nervous (2) endocrine excretory circulatorydigestive

  1. Diseases and Disorders

A)Typically the exam asks you to name a disease, what ______it, its effect on the______, and how to prevent/treat/cure it. The most important diseases and disorders for you to know are:

  1. AIDS
  2. Caused by the ______virus (a pathogen)
  3. Weakens human immune system, leaving body ______to other diseases.
  4. Spread through bodily______, usually sexual contact, intravenous (IV) drug use (sharing needles), or blood______.
  5. Can’t be cured, but spread may be ______by sexual abstinence, “safe” sex (using condoms), not sharing needles, or ______blood before using it for a transfusion.

Word Bank: HIV transfusions causes prevented vulnerable fluids testing body

  1. Cancer
  2. Caused when a cell reproduces (divides) at an______rate, forming a tumor.
  3. Cancer cells do not specialize and take ______from healthy tissue.
  4. May be caused by______, chemicals (such as asbestos or cigarette smoke), and viruses.
  5. Treatments include surgery, radiation therapy, and______.
  1. Diabetes
  2. Affects body’s ability to control blood______.
  3. Some diabetics may be treated using injections of ______made by genetically engineered bacteria.
  1. Allergies
  2. Occur when the immune system ______to a harmless substance (such as pollen)
  3. ______is a form of allergy caused by a reaction to dust particles in the air.

Word Bank: radiation sugar chemotherapy insulinuncontrolledresources reacts asthma

Topic Five: Reproduction

  1. Asexual reproduction:

A)Advantages: ______

B)Disadvantage: ______

  1. Sexual reproduction:

A)Advantage: ______

B)Disadvantage: ______

Word Bank: slower-harder-riskerno-varietyfaster-easier-safervariety

  1. Mitosis

A)Used in all forms of ______reproduction.

B)The number and types of chromosomes in the daughter cells are ______as in the parent cell.

C)Large organisms use mitosis for ______and ______. Simple organisms use it to ______.

D)One division of a cell  two identical, ______(2n) cells.

  1. Diploid: Cell with a ______sets of chromosomes.