Lecture: Plasma Membrane and Transport I. Structure of the Plasma Membrane A. plasma membrane - the surface encapsulating a cell B. Fluid Mosaic Model 1. bilayer of phospholipids a. hydrophilic heads - P04 end "water" "loving" attracted to water on inner/outer parts of cell b. hydrophobic tails - fatty acids "water" "fearing" attracted to each other on inside of bilayer c
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p.92\ a.1 Eukaryotic Cell vs Prokaryotic Cell All cells can be classfied into prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Prokaryotes were the only form of life on Earth for millions of years until more complicated eukaryotic cells came into being through the process of evolution. Comparison chart All attributes Differences Similarities | Eukaryotic Cell | Prokaryotic Cell | Nucleus: | Present | Absent | Number of chromosomes: | More than one | One--but not true chromosome: Plasmids | Cell Type: | Multicellular
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Cell Respiration Respiration is the process by which organisms burn food to produce energy. The starting material of cellular respiration is the sugar glucose‚ which has energy stored in its chemical bonds. You can think of glucose as a kind of cellular piece of coal: chock-full of energy‚ but useless when you want to power a stereo. Just as burning coal produces heat and energy in the form of electricity‚ the chemical processes of respiration convert the energy in glucose into usable form. Adenosine
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Nmap LAB EXERCISE CSEC 640 LAB-1 University of Maryland University College B-McDerm February 16‚ 2014 ASSIGNMENT PART A-NMAP 3.3 Lab Questions: Part A 1. What are the services that are running on each host? Some of the hosts include the following services below‚ but not all “3” include the same services. Domain: Host “3” only FTP: All Host’s HTTP: All Host’s Microsoft-DS: All Host’s Microsoft-RDP: All Host’s MSRPC: All Host’s MYSQL: All Host’s Netbios-SSN:
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Active and passive transport are biological processes that move oxygen‚ water and nutrients into cells and remove waste products. Active transport requires chemical energy because it is the movement of biochemicals from areas of lower concentration to areas of higher concentration. On the other hand‚ passive trasport moves biochemicals from areas of high concentration to areas of low concentration; so it does not require energy. Comparison chart Active Transport Passive Transport Definition Active
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“Exercise 11 - Using Statistics to Describe a Study Sample” “Name:” _Kris Bailey______________________________ “1. What demographic variables were measured at least at the interval level of measurement?” “2. What statistics were used to describe the length of labor in this study? Were these appropriate?” “3. What other statistic could have been used to describe the length of labor? Provide a rationale for your answer.” “4. Were the distributions of scores
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TASK 3 COMPONENTS OF BLOOD AND TRANSPORT OF OXYGEN Blood components are red cells‚ white cells‚ platelets and plasma. These can be put to different uses. RED BLOOD CELLS Red blood cell also known as erythrocytes make up 45% of blood volume lacks nucleus and contains the oxygen-carrying protein haemoglobin‚ which is a pigment that gives whole blood its red colour. Erythrocytes are produced inside of red bone marrow. Its main function is to distribute oxygen to body tissue‚ and carry waste
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GOOGLE ’S DRIVERLESS CAR PRESENTED BY: Mandeep Wadia Atul Sharma Himangshu Talukdar 1/10/2013 ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS We express our deepest gratitude to Dr. Piyush Verma (Assistant Professor‚ L M Thapar School of Management‚ Thapar University‚ Patiala) who provided us this opportunity to work on the latest innovations and technologies in industry and without whom‚ it
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Transport for London (TfL) aims to keep London moving and to continuously improve the standard of living in the city. The constant growth in population however is making this aim increasingly challenging. It is crucial for Transport for London to continue to improve their service if the city’s success is to continue. (Transport for London‚ 2015) In 2014 TfL identified their main priorities for the foreseeable future‚ safety and reliability‚ maximising capacity from the existing network and meeting
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Case Study: Newsflash! Transport Proteins on Strike! 1. What is the meaning behind the PHOSPHOLIPIDS’ chant? Phospholipids make up most of the cell membrane‚ in a phospholipid bilayer. Phospholipid molecules form two layers‚ with the hydrophilic (water loving) head facing the extracellular fluid and the cytosol (intracellular) fluid‚ and the hydrophobic (not water loving) tails facing one another. The cell membrane is constructed in such a way that it is semipermeable‚ and allows oxygen
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