Transport of substances, osmosis
TASK 1: Simple plasmolysis (plant cell in hypertonic solution)
NP: onion, 1 % neutral red; 1M KNO3
Put the inner epidermis of an onion onto the slide and stain it with 1 % neutral red. Add 1M KNO3 and observe the plasmolysis. Draw your observation and write a conclusion.
TASK 2: Deplasmolysis
Add distilled water to the specimen from the previous task and observe the reverse process (cytoplasm and vacuoles increase their volume). Some cells are irreversibly damaged.
Fig.: Osmosis in epidermis of onion – simple plasmolysis
TASK 3: Spasm plasmolysis (plant cell in hypertonic solution)
NP: onion, 1 % neutral red; 1 % CaCl2, 1M KNO3
Stain the epidermis of an onion with 1 % of neutral red; add 1 % CaCl2 and 1M KNO3. Observe the unequal separation of the cytoplasmic membrane from the cell wall caused by the increased cohesion of cytoplasmic membrane.
Fig.: Osmosis in epidermis of onion – spasm plasmolysis
TASK 4: Turgor (plant cell in hypotonic solution)
NP: pollen grains, H2O
Put pollen grains on the slide and observe them using microscope. Then add water, cover with a cover glass and observe again. Write your observation.
Fig.: Osmosis: A – pollen grain in isotonic solution, B – pollen grain in hypotonic solution.
TASK 5: Macroscopic observation of osmotic haemolysis (blood in hypotonic solution)
NP: blood, H2O, physiological solution
Take two tubes and add 1 ml of blood into each of them. Then add 3 ml of physiological solution into one of them and 3 ml of water into the second one. Gently mix and compare both tubes. Perform the "reading test". Write down the result of your observation.
TASK 6: Microscopic observation of osmotic haemolysis
NP: blood, H2O
Put a small drop of blood on the slide and cover with a cover glass. Add water to one edge of the cover glass and let it suck in the part of the specimen. Then immediately suck the water off using a filter paper. Water causes haemolysis (rupture of erythrocytes) observed on interface of water and blood.
TASK 7: Plasmorhisis (animal cell in hypertonic solution)
NP: blood, KNO3
Put a drop of blood on the slide, add 1M KNO3 and cover with a cover glass. You can observe shrunk erythrocytes (star-shaped) because of water escaping from them. Draw them and write a conclusion.
Fig.: Osmosis. A – haemolysis of erythrocytes, B – plasmorhisis of erythrocytes.
TASK 8: Phagocytosis
PP: phagocyting leucocytes stained by Pappenheim method
Find and draw leucocytes with phagocyted particles. You can count phagocytic activity (PA): PA = number of phagocytic cells / total number of cells.
Fig.: Leucocytes with phagocyted particles.
Content
- Biology
- Chemical composition
- Non-cellular life
- Prokaryotes and immersion microscopy
- Eukaryotes
- Movement and irritation
- Transport of substances, osmosis
- Mitosis
- Reproduction and development
- Influence of surroundings onto the bioplasm
- Research methods in biology
- Genetics
- Cytogenetics
- Model organism
- Monohybridism
- Polyhybridism
- Polymorphic genes
- Gene interactions
- Inheritance and sex
- Genetic linkage
- Population genetics
- Quantitative genetics
- Nonmendelian inheritance