Chapter 2 Review

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Transcript Chapter 2 Review

2
CHAPTER
LOOKING BACK
KEY CONCEPTS SUMMARY
•
All organisms are made up of one or more cells.
– The cell theory states that the cell is the basic unit of life, that all organisms
are made up of one or more cells, and that all cells come from pre-existing
cells.
– Single-celled organisms, such as bacteria, consist of just one cell.
– Every plant and animal, including humans, is a multicellular organism and is
classified as a eukaryote.
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CHAPTER
LOOKING BACK
KEY CONCEPTS SUMMARY
•
Microscopes enable us to examine cells in detail.
– Plant and animal cells have most of the major cell structures in common.
– Materials for cell activity pass through the cell membrane by diffusion and
osmosis.
– Plant cells contain a cell wall, a large central vacuole, and chloroplasts.
– Cells grow and divide to replace worn-out cells, to allow for growth in
organisms, to repair damaged cells, and to reproduce.
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CHAPTER
LOOKING BACK
KEY CONCEPTS SUMMARY
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The cell cycle occurs in distinct stages.
– The cell cycle has three stages: interphase, mitosis, and cytokinesis.
– Interphase is the stage when cells grow, perform their specific functions,
produce more organelles, and replicate their DNA.
– Mitosis is the division of the DNA in a cell’s nucleus.
– Cytokinesis is the division of the entire cell into two new identical daughter
cells.
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CHAPTER
LOOKING BACK
KEY CONCEPTS SUMMARY
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Cell division is important for growth, repair, and reproduction.
– Mitosis and cytokinesis together make up the cell division portion of the cell
cycle.
– Mitosis results in each daughter cell receiving an exact copy of the parent
cell’s DNA.
– Cells go through four phases during mitosis: prophase, metaphase,
anaphase, and telophase (PMAT).
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CHAPTER
LOOKING BACK
KEY CONCEPTS SUMMARY
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LOOKING BACK
Cancer cells generally divide more rapidly than normal cells.
– Cancer is a broad group of diseases in which groups of cells grow and
divide uncontrollably.
– Uncontrolled cell growth and division create a mass of cells that may form a
tumour.
– A benign tumour does not seriously affect nearby cells and does not spread
through the body.
– A malignant tumour is made up of cancer cells; it may invade and damage
surrounding tissues.
– Cancer cells can metastasize to other parts of the body.
– Prevention and screening minimize the risk of cancer.
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CHAPTER
LOOKING BACK
KEY CONCEPTS SUMMARY
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LOOKING BACK
Medical imaging technologies are important in diagnosing and treating
disease.
– Screening sometimes involves imaging technologies
– Medical imaging technologies include endoscopy, X-ray, ultrasound, CT
scanning, and MRI.
– Imaging technologies are widely used diagnostic tools that aid in the
detection of cancer and other diseases.
– Microscopic examination of cells is the only way to confirm a diagnosis of
cancer.
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CHAPTER
QUIZ
MULTIPLE CHOICE
For each question, select the best answer from the four alternatives.
1. Cells must perform certain basic activities to stay alive. Those activities are
performed by
(a)
bacterium
(b)
organelles
(c)
eukaryotes
(d)
diffusion
2. Why do cells divide?
(a)
so that they can reproduce
(b)
so that they can grow
(c)
so that they can repair damage
(d)
all of the above
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CHAPTER
QUIZ
3. When single-cell organisms divide, only one parent is involved. What is the
name of this process?
(a)
osmosis
(b)
sexual reproduction
(c)
diffusion
(d)
asexual reproduction
4. Which one is not a phase of mitosis?
(a)
prophase
(b)
centrophase
(c)
metaphase
(d)
anaphase
2
CHAPTER
QUIZ
FILL IN THE BLANKS
Copy each of the following statements into a notebook. Fill in the blanks with a term from the
box below that correctly completes the sentence.
benign; daughter cells; plant cells;
malignant; mutation; cancer cells
5. ___________ divide more rapidly than normal cells.
6. Only _____________ have chloroplasts.
7. In the cytokinesis phase, the cytoplasm divides and two
identical ______________ are produced.
8. Uncontrolled cell growth may create a mass of cells that form a
lump or tumour. Tumours may be ___________ or ____________.
9. _____________ refers to random changes in a cell’s DNA.
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CHAPTER
QUIZ
SHORT ANSWER
10. In your notebook, write which
of the three stages of the cell
cycle correspond to the letters
in the diagram. Then describe
what occurs during each of
the stages.
B
C
A
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CHAPTER
QUIZ ANSWERS
MULTIPLE CHOICE
1. Cells must perform certain basic activities to stay alive. Those activities are
performed by
(a) bacterium
(b) organelles
(c) eukaryotes
(d) diffusion
2. Why do cells divide?
(a) so that they can reproduce
(b) so that they can grow
(c) so that they can repair damage
(d) all of the above
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CHAPTER
QUIZ ANSWERS
3. When single-cell organisms divide, only one parent is involved. What is the name of
this process?
(a) osmosis
(b) sexual reproduction
(c) diffusion
(d) asexual reproduction
4. Which one is not a phase of mitosis?
(a) prophase
(b) centrophase
(c) metaphase
(d) anaphase
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CHAPTER
QUIZ ANSWERS
FILL IN THE BLANKS
5. Cancer cells divide more rapidly than normal cells.
6. Only plant cells have chloroplasts.
7. In the cytokinesis phase, the cytoplasm divides and two identical daughter cells are
produced.
8. Uncontrolled cell growth may create a mass of cells that form a lump or tumour.
Tumours may be benign or malignant.
9. Mutation is a term that refers to random changes in a cell’s DNA.
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CHAPTER
QUIZ ANSWERS
SHORT ANSWER
10.
(a) Interphase is the stage when the cell carries out all life activities except division.
(b) Mitosis is the stage when the contents of the nucleus divides.
(c) Cytokinesis is the stage when the remainder of the cell—the cytoplasm,
organelles, and cell membrane—divides.