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1.3 recall the term ‘pathogen’ and know that pathogens may be fungi, bacteria, protoctists or viruses.
Pathogenic cells include fungi, bacteria, protoctists, and viruses
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1.2 describe the common features shared by organisms within the following main groups: plants, animals, fungi, bacteria, protoctists and viruses, and for each group describe examples and their features
Plants:
multicellular
nucleus
contain chloroplasts
autotrophic (photosynthesise)
cellulose cell walls
cell membrane
ribosomes
mitochondria
vacuole
cytoplasm
store carbohydrates as starch or sucrose
e.g. flowering plants like cereal (maize) or peas
Animals:
multicellular
nucleus
no cell walls
ribosomes
mitochondria
cytoplasm
store carbohydrates as glycogen
e.g. humans, mosquito
Fungi:
some are single-celled
body organised into a mycelium (made from thread-like structures called hyphae)
chitin cell walls
saprotrophic nutrition; secrete digestive enzymes onto food material and absorb organic matter
may store carbohydrates as glycogen
e.g. mucor, yeast
Bacteria:
microscopic
single-celled
cell wall
cell membrane
cytoplasm
plasmids
no nucleus
circular chromosome of DNA
most feed off other living/dead organisms
e.g. Lactobacillus bulgaricus used in yoghurt production, Pneumococcus the pathogen that causes pneumonia
Protoctists:
microscopic
single-celled
e.g. Amoeba acts more like an animal cell, Chlorella more like a plant cell, pathogenic example is Plasmodium, which causes malaria
Viruses:
parasitic
can only reproduce in other living living
infect all living organisms
no cellular structure
protein coat
contain one type of nucleic acid (DNA or RNA)
e.g. Tobacco mosaic virus which discolours tobacco leaves, the influenza virus that causes the ‘flu', the HIV virus that causes AIDS
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1.1 Understand that living organisms share the following characteristics
Movement
Respiration
Sensitivity
Nutrition
Excretion
Reproduction
Growth
"MRS NERG"
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