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OCR Gateway Biology Paper 1 Higher Tier Summary notes

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OCR Gateway Biology Paper 1 Higher Tier Summary notes written by Grade 9 student

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B1: Cell-level systems

Chapter 1.1: Cell structures
Seven life processes
●​ Movement
●​ Reproduction
●​ Sensitivity
●​ Growth
●​ Respiration
●​ Excretion
●​ Nutrition

Two main types of cells:
●​ Prokaryotes
○​ Do not contain nucleus
○​ Genetic material floats in cytoplasm
○​ Smaller than eukaryotes (1-10μm)
○​ Mostly bacteria cells
●​ Eukaryotes
○​ Contain nucleus
○​ Genetic material in nucleus
○​ Larger than prokaryotes (10-100μm)
○​ Mostly plant and animal cells




Subcellular parts in cells:
●​ Cell membrane
○​ Controls which substances go in and out of cell
○​ Eukaryotes and Prokaryotes
●​ Nucleus
○​ Controls activities of cell
○​ Contains genetic material - instructions to make new cells or organisms
○​ Eukaryotes only
●​ Mitochondrion
○​ Where respiration happens - enzymes allow oxygen and glucose to react with each
other and reaction transfers energy to organism
○​ Eukaryotes only
●​ Cytoplasm
○​ Jellylike substance where chemical reactions happen
○​ Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes
●​ Vacuole
○​ Full of cell sap (sugar and salts solution) - keeps cell rigid and supports plant and cell
○​ Plant cells only
●​ Cell wall

, ○​ Made of cellulose in plants, peptidoglycan in bacteria - makes wall rigid and supports
cell
○​ Plant cells and Prokaryotes
●​ Chloroplast
○​ Contains green chlorophyll - transfers energy from sun to plant as light
(photosynthesis)
○​ Only in green parts of plant - needed by plants to make their own food
○​ Plant cells only
●​ Genetic material
○​ In nucleus for Eukaryotes - floats freely in cytoplasm
○​ One long strand of DNA
○​ Prokaryotes only
●​ Pili
○​ Hairlike structures outside cell wall that allow cell to attach to structures
○​ Can also be used to transfer genetic material between bacteria
○​ Bacteria only
●​ Slime capsule
○​ Outside cell wall
○​ Protects bacteria from drying out and from poisonous substances
○​ Helps bacteria to stick to smooth surfaces
○​ Bacteria only
●​ Plasmid
○​ Circular piece of DNA used to store extra genes
○​ Only needed for situations of stress eg. antibiotic resistance genes
○​ Bacteria only
●​ Flagella
○​ Tail-like structures that allow cell to move through liquids
○​ Bacteria only

Bacteria
●​ Smallest living organisms
●​ Unicellular
●​ Usually 1μm

Light microscopes:
●​ Properties
○​ Cheap to buy and operate
○​ Small and portable
○​ Simple to prepare sample
○​ Natural colour of specimen is seen unless stains are
used
○​ Specimen can be alive or dead
○​ Up to 0.2μm (2x10-7m)
○​ Uses light to make image
●​ How to use
○​ Select objective lens with lowest magnification
○​ Place slide on stage
○​ Move stage to highest position
○​ Turn coarse focus knob slowly until you can see object
○​ Turn fine focus slowly until object comes into clear focus
○​ To see clearer, repeat steps with higher magnification objective lens
●​ Calculating magnification

, ○​ Eyepiece x Objective
●​ Staining cells
○​ Many cells are colourless
○​ Stains make structures easy to see
○​ Common stains:
■​ Methylene blue: easier to see animal cell’s nucleus
■​ Iodine: easier to see plant cell’s nucleus
■​ Crystal violet: stains bacterial cell walls
○​ How to apply
■​ Place cells on glass slide
■​ Add one drop of stain
■​ Place coverslip on top
■​ Press coverslip gently to remove air bubbles

Electron microscopes:
●​ Properties
○​ Expensive to buy and operate
○​ Large and difficult to move
○​ Sample preparation is complex
○​ Black and white images - false colour can be added to
image
○​ Specimens are dead
○​ Up to 0.1nm (1x10-10m)
○​ Uses electrons to make image
○​ Developed in 1930’s
●​ Transmission Electron Microscopes (TEM)
○​ Most magnified
○​ Beam of electrons pass through thin slice of sample
○​ Beam is focused to produce image
●​ Scanning Electron Microscopes (SEM)
○​ 3D image of surface
○​ Send beam of electrons across surface of specimen
○​ Reflected electrons are collected to produce image



Chapter 1.2: What happens in cells?
DNA
●​ Inside nucleus
●​ Long molecule of DNA is chromosome
●​ Most people have 23 pairs of chromosomes
●​ Half of chromosomes come from mother and half from father
●​ DNA is identical only in identical twins and clones
●​ Arranged into sections
●​ Genes: short sections of DNA that code for certain characteristics eg. eye colour
●​ Code inside genes causes certain proteins to be made
●​ Proteins determine cell’s function eg. protein haemoglobin
●​ Combination of genes in an organism controls how it functions and what it looks like

Structure of DNA
●​ 2 strands joined by bases
●​ Strands are twisted together to form a double helix
●​ Made of lots of small units called nucleotides joined together, meaning DNA is a polymer

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