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Characteristics of Living Organisms
Living organisms grow, reproduce, respond to stimuli, maintain homeostasis, metabolize energy, and are made of cells.
Prokaryotic vs Eukaryotic Cells
Both have a plasma membrane, cytoplasm, and genetic material. Prokaryotes lack a nucleus and organelles; eukaryotes have them.
Differences between Plant and Animal Cells
Plant cells have a cell wall, chloroplasts, and large central vacuoles. Animal cells do not.
Major Organelles and Their Functions
Nucleus (DNA storage), mitochondria (energy production), ribosomes (protein synthesis), ER (protein/lipid processing), Golgi apparatus (packaging), chloroplasts (photosynthesis, in plants), vacuoles (storage).
Types of Moving Appendages in Cells
Cilia (e.g., respiratory cells), flagella (e.g., sperm cells).
Basic Structure of Atoms
Atoms have a nucleus (protons, neutrons) and electrons. They form bonds to create molecules needed for life.
Hydrolysis vs Dehydration Synthesis
Hydrolysis breaks bonds by adding water; dehydration synthesis forms bonds by removing water.
Classes of Biological Macromolecules
Carbohydrates (energy), lipids (storage/insulation), proteins (structure/enzymes), nucleic acids (genetic info).
Digestive System Organs and Food Processing Stages
Alimentary canal: mouth, esophagus, stomach, intestines. Accessory organs: liver, pancreas, gallbladder. Stages: ingestion, digestion, absorption, elimination.
Energy Transport Systems in the Body
Digestive system breaks down food; circulatory system transports nutrients; respiratory system provides oxygen for cellular respiration.
Cellular Respiration Process
Glycolysis (cytoplasm), Krebs cycle (mitochondrial matrix), and ETC (mitochondrial membrane) produce ATP.
Aerobic vs Anaerobic Cellular Respiration
Aerobic uses oxygen; anaerobic does not and produces less ATP.
Structural Hierarchy of Human Body Systems
Cells → Tissues (epithelial, connective, muscle, nervous) → Organs → Systems.
Components of the Immune System
Components: white blood cells, lymph nodes, spleen, antibodies. Autoimmune attacks can destroy insulin-producing cells, causing diabetes.
Main Organs of the Endocrine System
Organs: pituitary, thyroid, pancreas, adrenal glands. Hormones regulate growth, metabolism, and homeostasis.
Regulation of Blood Glucose Levels
Insulin lowers glucose; glucagon raises it. Diabetes occurs when insulin production or response fails.
Types of Diabetes
Type 1: autoimmune, no insulin. Type 2: insulin resistance. Gestational: during pregnancy.
Main Organs of the Respiratory System
Organs: nose, trachea, lungs, alveoli. Oxygen is absorbed, CO₂ is expelled in alveoli.
Circulatory System Function
Heart pumps blood through arteries, veins, and capillaries, delivering oxygen/nutrients and removing waste.
Circulatory System Issues
Issues: heart attacks, strokes, hypertension, atherosclerosis.
Importance of Fats and Lipids
Fats store energy, insulate, and are vital for cell membranes and hormone production.
Cholesterol Types
Cholesterol: fat-like substance. LDL (bad) clogs arteries; HDL (good) removes excess.
Saturated vs Unsaturated Fats
Saturated: solid, raises LDL. Unsaturated: liquid, improves heart health.
Reasons for Cell Division
Growth, repair, reproduction.
Sexual vs Asexual Reproduction
Sexual: two parents, genetic diversity. Asexual: one parent, identical offspring.
Structure and Function of Chromosomes
Chromosomes: DNA-protein structures, carry genetic information.
Cell Cycle Phases
Interphase: growth/DNA replication. Mitosis: prophase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase. Cytokinesis: cell splits.
Cancer Origin from Normal Cells
Mutations disrupt cell cycle regulation, leading to uncontrolled division.
Lymphocytes and Their Functions
Lymphocytes: white blood cells. B cells make antibodies; T cells destroy infected cells.
How Antibiotics Work
Antibiotics target bacterial structures like cell walls or ribosomes.
Natural Selection Process
Favorable traits increase survival/reproduction, spreading over generations.
Evidence for Evolution by Natural Selection
Examples: antibiotic resistance, finch beaks. Evidence: fossils, genetic similarities.
Artificial Selection
Artificial selection: humans breed for traits, e.g., dog breeds.
Genetic Material Transfer in Bacteria
Transformation, transduction, conjugation.
Bacterial Resistance to Antibiotics
Mutations or acquiring resistance genes via horizontal gene transfer.
Viruses and Life
Viruses cannot reproduce or metabolize without a host.
Basic Structures of a Virus
Viruses consist of genetic material (DNA or RNA), a protein coat (capsid), and sometimes a lipid envelope.
Lytic vs Lysogenic Cycles of Viruses
In the lytic cycle, viruses replicate inside the host cell and cause it to burst, releasing new viruses. In the lysogenic cycle, the viral DNA integrates into the host genome and replicates with it without causing immediate harm.
Defensive Elements of the Immune System
1. Physical barriers (e.g., skin, mucous membranes). 2. Innate immunity (e.g., inflammation, phagocytes). 3. Adaptive immunity (e.g., B cells, T cells). 4. Support systems (e.g., lymphatic system).
External Barriers Protecting from Pathogens
Skin, mucous membranes, saliva, tears, and stomach acid.
Inflammatory response
It increases blood flow, brings immune cells to the infection site, and helps isolate and destroy pathogens.
Lymphatic system
The lymphatic system transports lymph, filters pathogens, and houses lymphocytes (B and T cells).
Non-specific immunity
General defenses like skin and inflammation.
Specific immunity
Targeted response by B and T cells.
Antigen
A foreign molecule that triggers an immune response.
Lymphocyte
White blood cells (e.g., B and T cells) involved in specific immunity.
B cells
Produce antibodies.
Helper T cells
Activate B and T cells.
Cytotoxic T cells
Destroy infected cells.
Memory cells
Provide long-term immunity by recognizing previously encountered pathogens.
Vaccines
Introduce a harmless form of a pathogen, triggering the immune system to produce memory cells and antibodies.
Virus mutation
Viruses mutate, altering their antigens, which may reduce vaccine effectiveness and require updates to vaccines.
Double-blind design
Ensures neither participants nor researchers know who receives the treatment or placebo, reducing bias.
Coronavirus
Coronaviruses are a family of RNA viruses that cause respiratory illnesses. Examples include SARS-CoV, MERS-CoV, and SARS-CoV-2 (COVID-19).
Moderna/Pfizer vaccines
mRNA vaccines that instruct cells to produce the viral spike protein, triggering immunity.
Johnson & Johnson vaccine
A viral vector vaccine using a modified adenovirus to deliver spike protein instructions.
Meiosis I
Homologous chromosomes separate, reducing the chromosome number by half.
Meiosis II
Sister chromatids separate, producing four haploid gametes.
Genetic variation mechanisms
1. Crossing over during meiosis. 2. Independent assortment of chromosomes. 3. Random fertilization.
Mitosis
Produces two identical diploid cells for growth and repair.
Meiosis
Produces four non-identical haploid cells for reproduction.
Nondisjunction
Occurs when chromosomes fail to separate during meiosis, leading to gametes with abnormal chromosome numbers (e.g., trisomy 21).
Spermatogenesis
Testes produce sperm.
Oogenesis
Ovaries produce eggs.
Human development stages
1. Fertilization: Sperm and egg fuse to form a zygote. 2. Embryonic stage: Organ systems develop. 3. Fetal stage: Growth and maturation. 4. Birth: Delivery of the baby.
Infertility causes
Causes include hormonal imbalances, structural abnormalities, age, lifestyle factors, and genetic conditions.
Assisted reproduction
Techniques that help individuals conceive, such as IVF, artificial insemination, and ICSI.
Artificial insemination
Sperm is directly placed into the uterus.
In vitro fertilization (IVF)
Eggs are fertilized outside the body and implanted.
Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI)
A single sperm is injected into an egg.
Eukaryotic nucleus structure
The nucleus has a double membrane, contains chromatin (DNA + proteins), and organizes into chromosomes during cell division.
Dominant alleles
Expressed if present.
Recessive alleles
Expressed only when no dominant allele is present.
Non-Mendelian inheritance
Examples include incomplete dominance, codominance, and polygenic inheritance.
Sex-linked inheritance
Males have one X chromosome, so they express X-linked traits even if recessive, whereas females require two copies of the recessive allele.
Punnett square
Visualizes allele combinations to predict offspring genotypes and phenotypes.
Genetic pedigree
Tracks inheritance patterns of traits through family generations, showing dominant, recessive, or sex-linked traits.
Protein synthesis
1. Transcription: DNA is transcribed into mRNA in the nucleus. 2. Translation: mRNA is read by ribosomes in the cytoplasm to assemble proteins from amino acids.
Genetic disease categories
1. Single-gene disorders (e.g., cystic fibrosis). 2. Chromosomal disorders (e.g., Down syndrome). 3. Multifactorial disorders (e.g., heart disease). 4. Mitochondrial disorders (e.g., Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy).
Genetic disease diagnosis
Techniques include genetic testing, karyotyping, and biochemical tests.
DNA sequencing
Determines nucleotide order; DNA profiling compares unique DNA patterns for forensics and paternity.
Gene therapy
Aims to replace, inactivate, or introduce genes to treat genetic disorders.
Replication
Copies DNA, with each new molecule having one original and one new strand.
DNA synthesizer
Builds DNA sequences for analysis; DNA profilers use them to create DNA samples for comparison.
PCR
Polymerase Chain Reaction amplifies DNA.
Thermal cycler
Automates temperature changes for PCR.
Electrophoresis
Separates DNA fragments by size, creating a visible pattern for analysis.
Short tandem repeats (STRs)
Repetitive DNA sequences; their unique patterns identify individuals in forensic analysis.
CODIS
A database of DNA profiles used to match crime scene DNA to offenders.
Bioelements
Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen.
Macronutrients
Needed in large quantities (e.g., nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium).
Micronutrients
Needed in small quantities (e.g., iron, zinc, copper).
Essential nutrient
A substance organisms need but cannot synthesize.
Plant examples of essential nutrients
Nitrogen, potassium, phosphorus.
Human examples of essential nutrients
Vitamins (e.g., C, D), amino acids, and minerals (e.g., calcium).
Genetically modified organisms (GMOs)
Created by inserting specific genes into an organism's DNA using biotechnology to improve traits like pest resistance, yield, or nutrition.
Benefits of genetically modified crops
Increased yield, pest resistance, reduced pesticide use, and enhanced nutrition.
Concerns associated with genetically modified crops
Environmental impact, loss of biodiversity, and ethical or health issues.
Biofuel
Renewable energy source made from organic materials.
Production of biofuels
Fermentation of crops (e.g., corn, sugarcane) or processing of algae and waste materials.