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Panspermia
Explores whether life came from another planet or not
Abiogenises
Life originated spontaneously from simple atoms and molecules combining under high temperature in the presence of water
Reducing Environment
Favor the adding of electrons and may have helped to form complex molecules from simple molecules. The energy to form complex molecules may have been provided by high temperatures and UV radiation.
Miller and Urey Experiment
Hydrogen
Substratum
In addition to water and a reducing environment
Protobionts
Simple monomers and macromolecules can aggregate to form simple structures called __
RNA
What molecule can be used to store information and also to catalyze the synthesis of other molecules?
Domains
Eukara
Kingdoms
Protista
Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic
The two types of cells are ___ (without nucleus) and ____ (with nucleus).
Magnification
How big something is in microscopy.
Resolution
How clear something is in microscopy. AKA resolving power
Light Microscope
Light is focused on the specimen through a condenser lens
Transmission Electron Microscope
Electron beams are aimed at a thin section of a specimen stained with metal to absorb electrons and enhance the contrast. Electrons transmitted through the specimen are focused and the image is magnified by electromagnetic lenses. Studies internal ultrastructures and cross-sections of cells or structures.
Scanning Electron Microscope
Electron beams scan the surface of a specimen coated with gold. Scanning beams excite the secondary electrons on the sample surface
Centrifuges
Are used to separate solutes in solution by using centripetal acceleration. Denser things go to bottom
Gel Electrophoresis
Used to fractionate DNA
Bacterial Cells
(prokaryotic) lack nucleus and all other membrane bound structures
Histones
Proteins are attached to DNA
Nucleus
DNA replication
Nucleolus
region within nucleus that serves as organizing center for making ribosomes from ribosomal RNA and ribosomal proteins
Ribosomes
Synthesize proteins with their catalytic ability. Are found freely in cytoplasm (to make soluble proteins) or attached to rough ER (to make membrane proteins) as well as in chloroplasts and mitochondria.
Smooth ER
no ribosomes attached
Rough ER
ribosomes attached for membrane protein synthesis
Golgi Apparatus
Functions as the central receiving and dispatching center where proteins made in the ER arrive
Lysosomes
Membrane bags with hydrolytic enzymes that can break down all four kinds of macromolecules. Only active at certain pH (5.0). Digests food
Peroxisomes
Responsible for lipid degradation and detoxification of active oxygen species.
Glyoxysomes
Are specialized peroxisomes in plants that facilitates breakdown of storage lipids in germinating seeds that store large quantities of oils and lipids.
Large Central Vacuole
Present only in plant cells
Food Vacuole
Helps primitive animals ingest food by endocytosis
Contractile Vacuole
In fresh water protists
Mitochondria
found in all higher eukaryotes
Chloroplasts
plants only
Leucoplast
colorless plastids that perform amino acid biosynthesis
Amyloplast
starch-storing plastids
Chromoplast
contains color pigments and ma perform photosynthesis and amino acid biosynthesis or they simply store color pigments
Cytoskeleton
made up of microfilaments
Dynein
attached to one set of microtubules and help in sliding on another set of microtubules
involved in ciliate and flagellate movement
Kinesin
helps in the movement of vesicles on the tracks of microtubules
Microtubules
hollow tubes containing tubulin protein
Microfilaments
solid rods of intertwined strands of actin
Intermediate Filaments
hollow tubes made up of heterogeneous proteins
Cell Wall
only found in bacteria
Plasmodemsata
Pores in plant cell walls which are important for cell to cell transport and viral movement.
Tight Junction
two cell membranes are fused by integral membrane proteins to prevent movement of any solutes through the space between
Gap Junctions
Connections between two cells through connexons
Desmosomes
Spots where two cells are connected together by keratin like fibrous proteins
not as tightly sealed as tight junctions
some space exists between adjacent celles.
Integral Protein
AKA intrinsic proteins traverse the membrane
Peripheral Proteins
AKA extrinsic proteins are bound to proteins on the surface
Ion Channels
Specific membrane proteins facilitate the transport of charged ions and molecules across the membrane
Uniport
a type of transport protein that moves a single solute in one direction
Symport
a type of transport protein that moves two solutes in one direction
Antiport
a type of transport protein that moves two solutes in opposite directions
Passive Transport
Does not need cellular energy and the transport happens from high to low concentration
Active Transport
Requires energy in form of ATP
Osmosis
Diffusion of water from high concentration to low concentration through a selectively permeable membrane.
Isotonic
same water concentration
Hypertonic
high water concentration in cell
HypERtonic
low water concentration in cell
Facilitated Transport
Is the passive transport of molecules through an integral membrane protein specific for each type of solute.
Coupled Transport
(Cotransport) a form of active transport where a primary active transport system is coupled with another transport secondary active transport that does not use ATP but depends on the primary active transport.
Exocytosis
Vesicles from the ER or Golgi bodies carrying macromolecules and other materials to be secreted fuse with the plasma membrane and open outside to secrete materials.
Phagocytosis
Macrophages engulfing bacteria that is identified for destruction.
Pinocytosis
Refer to cells gulping droplets of extracellular fluid.
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
Specific receptor proteins recognize large molecules
Intracellular Communication
communication that occurs within the cell itself
Intercellular Communication
communication that occurs between cells located close to or far from each other
Paracrine Signaling
(local signaling) communicated by the cell surface proteins on the plasma membrane of the signaling cell to the receptors on another cell located close by
Endocrine Signaling
(hormonal signaling) signaling from endocrine cells to cells located far away
Synaptic Signaling
signaling between nerve cells
First Messengers
Signaling molecules such as hormones
Signal Reception
Step 1: First messenger can be recognized by specific receptors. The signal activates the receptor which activates the signaling pathway inside the cell.
Signal Transduction
Step 2: Inside the cell
Cell Communication
Three steps: signal reception
Second Messengers
compounds that can be generated during signal transduction
Cellular Response
Step 3: once the signaling pathway is activated
Phosphorylation Cascade
The binding of the first messenger to the receptor results in the phosphorylation of the receptor itself or the proteins/enzymes associated with the receptors. This is a common mode of activating several enzymes in a phosphorylation cascade for a rapid response to a signal.