WARM UP: WEEKLY FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT Complete the chart covering viral vs. bacterial pathogens! 5...

Preview:

Citation preview

WARM UP:WEEKLYFORMATIVEASSESSMENTComplete the chart covering viral vs. bacterial pathogens!

5 minutes

WHAT IS ONE CRITICAL THING THESE PEOPLEDO IN ORDER TO “PLANK” ON AN OBJECT?

CHECK THIS OUT!!!THESE PEOPLE ARE CRAZY!

http://youtu.be/tRHnTFesv7c

PLANKING:An act of BALANCING your body on any given object.

*You must keep your arms down to your sides and your head down.

Raise your hand….

Predict what you think HOMEOSTASIS means for a cell.

Look at your notebooks…

Which ORGANELLE is responsible for maintaining homeostasis?!!

(hint: it does this by controlling what enters and leaves the cell)

What if I told you… You are made of mostly water! IN and OUT of your cells is water-based.

The cell membrane has both water-LOVING and water-FEARING properties so it must be shaped a certain way!

Today we are building a cell (plasma) membrane!

Cut and organize the pieces of the cell membrane in the placement you predict.

Put it in the MIDDLE of the notebook, across two pages: 30-31

DON’T GLUE YET!

HINT: THE WATER-FEARING PARTS WILL FACE EACH OTHER!

Fluid surrounds the membrane. Label “INTRACELLULAR” and “EXTRACELLULAR”.

What side of the membrane do you predict the organelles to go?

DRAW and LABEL these organelles where they belong: nucleus, ribosomes, mitochondria

Fluid surrounds the membrane.

If AQUEOUS means made of mostly WATER…

Which part of the cell should be AQUEOUS, inside or outside the cell? Or both?

LABEL “AQUEOUS (WATER-BASED) ENVIRONMENT” where it belongs!

HOW DO THEY GET INTO OUR CELLS?!

Cell transport Every multi-cellular organism is made of specialized

cells (Red blood cells, muscle cells, nerve cells)

Each cell must perform an important life function

The cell membrane is important.

The cell membrane will allow things to enter and leave the cell. This is called CELL TRANSPORT.

Dogs…..

do not have sweat glands SO they pant. Dogs have just a few sweat glands in their

paws, so no matter how much they sweat; sweating could never cool them off.

That's where the tongue-hanging out, mouth-open dog panting comes in.

They are maintaining balance

phospholipid bilayer : the membrane is composed of TWO layers of phospholipids, forming a bilayer. The tails face each other.

semi (selectively) permeable: the membrane only allows certain particles to pass through, not others.

Fluid mosaic model: the membrane looks “fluid-like” because it is flexible.

Cell Membranecharacteristics:

What is a PHOSPHOLIPID? A lipid molecule with a PHOSPHATE

head and TWO FATTY ACID tails. The phosphate heads are

HYDROPHILIC and love water. The fatty acid tails are

HYDROPHOBIC and hate water, so they face each other when forming the layer!

On your membrane, LABEL: THE PHOSPHATE HEADS FATTY ACID TAILS Hydrophilic zone hydrophobic zone

Cell Membrane Structure

Label your cell membrane!

Proteins

Proteinchannel Lipid bilayer

Carbohydratechains

Phospholipids

Recommended