AP Biology Study Guide
Matter: anything that takes up space and has mass
Elements: a substance that cannot be broken down into other substances by chemical reactions
92 elements occur naturally in nature
Compounds: a substance consisting of two or more different elements combined in a fixed ratio
H2O
NaCl
CHOPN: Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorous, Nitrogen; makes up 92% of living matter
Essential Elements: of the 92 naturally occurring elements, 20-25% are essential to survive and reproduce
Trace Elements: of the 92 naturally occurring elements, these are required by an organism in very small quantities
Atomic Number: number of protons (and electrons)
Atomic Mass: sum of protons and neutrons averaged over all isotopes
Group: vertical columns on Periodic Table; elements in the same group have the same amount of valence electrons
Period: horizontal rows on Periodic Table; elements in the same period have the same total number of shells
Bohr Model: shows electrons orbiting the nucleus of an atom
Electrons are placed on shells outside the nucleus
Each shell has a different energy level and can hold up to a certain number of electrons (formula to find e- on each shell is 2n^2, where n is the shell number)
1st shell: 2 e- (electrons); ex. 2(1)^2
2nd shell: 8 e- (electrons); ex. 2(2)^2
3rd shell: 18 e- (electrons); ex. 2(3)^2
Lewis Dot Model: simplified Bohr’s diagram
Does not show energy levels
Only shows electrons in the valence shell (outermost shell)
Electrons as dots are placed around the element symbol in N/S/E/W directions
First time around the element symbol is single dots then the second time around you pair the dots
Elements want to be stable
achieve this by forming chemical bonds with other elements
Octet rule: elements will gain, lose, or share electrons to complete their valence shell (8 electrons) and become stable (like a noble gas)
Chemical Bonds: an attraction between two atoms, resulting from the sharing or transferring of valence electrons
Electronegativity: the measure of an atom’s ability to attract electrons to itself
electronegativity decreases as you go down the Periodic Table
electronegativity increases as you go to the right of the Periodic Table
Covalent Bonds: when two or more atoms share electrons (usually between two nonmetals)
forms molecules and compounds
Single bond: 1 pair of shared e-
Double bond: 2 pairs of shared e-
Triple bond: 3 pairs of shared e-
There are two types of covalent bonds…
Nonpolar covalent: electrons are shared equally between two atoms (e.g. O2)
Polar covalent: electrons are not shared equally between two atoms (e.g. H2O)
unequal sharing of electrons results in partial charges on oxygen and hydrogen
Ionic Bonds: the attraction between oppositely charged atoms (ions)
usually between nonmetal and metal (metal transfers electrons (e-) to nonmetal)
forms ionic compounds and salts
NaCl (Sodium Chloride)
LiF (Lithium Chloride)
occurs when there is a transfer of electrons from one atom to another atom forming ions
cation: positively charged ion
anion: negatively charged ion
Hydrogen Bonds: the partially positive hydrogen atom in one polar covalent molecule will be attracted to an electronegative atom in another polar covalent molecule
Intermolecular Bond: bond that forms between molecules
Why does this happen?
when a hydrogen atom is bonded to an Oxygen or Nitrogen, the electrons are drawn mostly away from the Hydrogen and toward the electronegative atom (Don’t forget that this is a polar covalent bond)
this causes the hydrogen to have a partial positive charge and the electronegative atom (N or O) to have a partial negative charge
Polarity: unequal sharing of the electrons makes water a polar molecule
Cohesion: attraction of molecules for other molecules of the same kind (H2O molecules stick to each other)
hydrogen bonds between H2O molecules hold them together and increase cohesive forces
allows for the transport of H2O and nutrients against gravity in plants
responsible for surface tension (property of allowing liquid to resist external force)
Adhesion: the clinging of one molecule to a different molecule (H2O molecules stick to something else—like a cell wall)
because of the polarity of H2O
in plants, this allows water to cling to the cell walls to resist the downward pull of gravity
Capillary Action: the upward movement of water due to the forces of cohesion, adhesion, and surface tension (moves water upwards)
occurs when adhesion is greater than cohesion
important for the transport of water and nutrients in plants
Temperature Control:
High specific heat: H2O resists changes in temp. by…
hydrogen bonds
heat must be absorbed to break hydrogen bonds, but heat is released when hydrogen bonds are formed
Importance of High Specific Heat:
moderates air temp
large bodies of water can absorb heat in the daytime and release heat at night
stabilizes ocean temp
benefits marine life
organisms can resist change in their own internal temp
Evaporative Cooling: water has a high heat of vaporization
the molecules with the highest kinetic energy leave as a gas
Importance of Evaporative Cooling:
Moderates Earth’s climate
Stabilizes temp in lakes and ponds
Prevents terrestrial organisms from overheating (e.g. sweating in humans)
Prevents leaves from becoming too hot in the sun
Density (floating ice): as water solidifies it expands and becomes less dense
due to the hydrogen bonds:
when cooled, H2O molecules move too slowly to break the bonds
allows marine life to survive under floating ice sheets
with lower temps, hydrogen bonds cause water molecules to form a crystalline structure
Solvent: dissolving agent in a solution
water is a versatile solvent (could also be referred to as a universal solvent)
the polar molecules are attracted to ions and other polar molecules water can form hydrogen bonds with
water can interact with sugars or proteins containing many oxygens and hydrogens
water will form hydrogen bonds with the sugars or proteins to dissolve it
Ionic Compounds: dissolves ions
partially negative oxygen in water will interact with a positive atom
partially positive hydrogen in water will interact with a negative atom
Organic Chemistry: the study of compounds with covalently bonded carbon
Organic Compounds: compounds that contain carbon and hydrogen
a single carbon can form up to 4 covalent bonds
can form long chains
most commonly formed with hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen
the type and number of covalent bonds carbon forms with other atoms affects the length of the carbon shape and the shape of the molecule
Carbon Chains: carbon can use its valence electrons to form covalent bonds to other carbons
this links the carbons into a chain
Hydrocarbons: organic molecules consisting of only hydrogen and carbon (simple framework for more complex organic molecules)
Carbon chains form the skeletons of most organic molecules
skeletons can vary in length, branching, double bond position, and presence of rings
many regions of a cell’s organic molecules contain hydrocarbons
Functional Groups: chemical groups attached to the carbon skeleton that participate in chemical reactions
Hydroxyl group: -OH
Carbonyl group: -C=O
Carboxyl group: —COOH
Amino group: -NH2
Sulfhydryl group: -SH
H
Methyl group: -C-H
H
Phosphate group: -OPO²-3 (2 of the 3 Oxygens are negative)
Molecular Diversity due to Carbon
variations in carbon skeletons allow for molecular diversity
carbon can form large molecules known as macromolecules
four classes of macromolecules (molecules made of smaller subunits)
Carbohydrates (Polymer): CHO; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen
Proteins (Polymer): CHONS; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Sulfur
Nucleic acids (Polymer): CHOPN; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, Nitrogen
along with carbon, nitrogen is an important element for building proteins and nucleic acids
Lipids (doesn’t include true polymers and are hydrophobic molecules): CHONP; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorus
phosphorus is important for building nucleic acids and some lipids
Monomers: the repeating units that make up a polymer
Polymers: chain-like macromolecules of similar or identical repeating units that are covalently bonded together (multiple monomers covalently bonded together)
Dehydration reaction: bonds 2 monomers with the loss of H2O
the -OH of one monomer bonds to the -H of another monomer forming H2O, which is then released
Ex. glucose and sucrose lose an H2O molecule and then bind together to form sucrose (a polymer, polysaccharide)
Hydrolysis: breaks the bonds in a polymer by adding H2O
One of the -H of the H2O bonds to one monomer and the remaining -OH of the H2O attaches to the other monomer
Ex. adding water to sucrose splits it into glucose (a monomer, monosaccharide) and fructose (a monomer, monosaccharide)
Carbohydrates: includes sugars and polymers of sugars (CHO)
contains a carbonyl group (-C=O) and many hydroxyl groups (-OH)
Monosaccharides: simple sugars
molecular formulas with multiples of the unit CH2O
most common is glucose
nutrients and fuel for cells
used in cellular respiration
can serve as building blocks for amino acids, or as monomers for disaccharides and polysaccharides
Disaccharides: 2 monosaccharides joined together by covalent bonds
most common is sucrose
monomers of sucrose: glucose and fructose
plants transfer carbohydrates from leaves to other parts of the plant in the form of sucrose
Polysaccharides: polymer with many sugars joined via dehydration reactions
storage polysaccharides
plants store starch (polymer of glucose monomers)
allows plants to store excess glucose
animals store glycogen (polymer of glucose)
stored in liver and muscle cells
structural polysaccharides:
cellulose: tough substance that forms plant cell walls
chitin: forms exoskeleton of arthropods
Protein: molecule consisting of polypeptides (polymer of amino acids) folded into a 3D shape (CHONS)
Formation: amino acids→peptide→polypeptide→protein
shape determines function
Amino Acids: molecules that have an amino group and a carboxyl group (—COOH)
20 different amino acids
general structure: amino group on the left side, R group (variable side chain) in the middle, and carboxyl group on the right side
each amino acid (AA) has a unique side chain
unique aspects of the AA are based on the side chain’s physical and chemical properties
side chains can be grouped as
nonpolar (hydrophobic)
polar (hydrophobic)
charged/ionic (hydrophilic)
side chains interact, which determines the shape and function of the protein
Formation of peptide bonds: to form a peptide bond, the carboxyl group of one AA must be positioned next to the amino group of another AA
Polypeptides: many AA linked by peptide bonds
each polypeptide has a unique sequence of AAs and directionality
each end is chemically unique
one end is a free amino group (N-terminus)
one end is a free carboxyl group (C-terminus)
the sequence of AAs determines the 3D shape (shape determines function)
when a polypeptide twists and folds (b/c of R group interaction) it forms a protein
Functions of Proteins:
Antibody: help protect the body from disease
Enzyme: carry out chemical reactions or assist in creating new molecules
Messenger: transmit signals (ie hormones)
Structural: provide structure and support
Transport/storage: bind to and carry small atoms and molecules through the body
Levels of Protein Structure:
Primary: linear chain of AA
determined via genes
dictates secondary and tertiary forms
Secondary: coils and folds due to hydrogen bonding within the polypeptide backbone
pleated sheet: hydrogen bonds between polypeptide chains lying side by side
helix: hydrogen bonding between every 4th AA
Tertiary: 3D folding due to interactions between the side chains of the AAs
reinforced by hydrophobic interactions and disulfide bridges of the side chains
the covalent bond formed between sulfur atoms and two cysteine monomers
Quaternary: association of 2+ polypeptides
found in only some proteins
Nucleic Acids: polymers made of nucleotide monomers (CHONP)
Function to: store, transmit, and express hereditary information
2 forms:
DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid
RNA: ribonucleic acid
Components: nucleotides→polynucleotides→nucleic acids
Nucleotide: each nucleotide is comprised of a…
Nitrogenous base: 2 types…
pyrimidines: one ring with 6 atoms
cytosine
thymine (only found in DNA)
uracil (only found in RNA)
purines: one ring with 6 atoms bonded to one ring with 5 atoms
adenine and guanine
Five Carbon Sugar: a sugar is bonded to the base
DNA: sugar is deoxyribose (b/c one less OH in the base)
RNA: sugar is ribose (b/c one more OH than DNA in the base)
they both differ in structure and function
Phosphate Group: added to the 5’ carbon of the sugar (which is attached to the base) to form a nucleotide
nucleoside: portion w/o phosphate group
Polynucleotides: phosphate groups link adjacent nucleotides
phosphodiester linkage
directionality: 5’ phosphate end to 3’ hydroxyl (-OH) end (nucleotides get added to 3’)
sequence of bases along the DNA or mRNA is unique for each gene
dictates AA sequence
dictates primary structure of protein
dictates 3D structure of a protein
DNA: consists of 2 polynucleotides
forms a double helix
strands are antiparallel (5’ to 3’ and 3’ to 5’)
held together by hydrogen bonds between bases (adenine to thymine, cytosine to guanine)
RNA: single-stranded polynucleotide
variable in shape
due to base pairing within RNA
adenine bonds to uracil
cytosine bonds to guanine
Lipids: class of molecules that do not include true polymers (CHOP)
generally small in size
often not considered to be a macromolecule
lipids are nonpolar-hydrophobic
types of lipids:
fats: composed of glycerol (alcohol, hydroxyl groups) and fatty acids (long carbon chains, carboxyl groups at one end)
3 fatty acids join to a glycerol via ester linkage
bond between a hydroxyl and carboxyl group
classified as either a:
saturated fatty acid: no double bonds between carbons in the carbon chain = more hydrogen (saturated w/ hydrogen)
an unsaturated fatty acid: contains one or more double bonds
phospholipids major component of cell membranes
2 fatty acids attached to a glycerol and a phosphate
assembles as a bilayer in H2O
tails (fatty acids) are hydrophobic
head (phosphate and glycerol) is hydrophilic
steroids: lipids that have four fused rings
unique groups attached to the ring determine the type of steroid
the basic structural and functional units of every organism
all cells:
are bound by a plasma membrane
contain cytosol
contain chromosomes
contain ribosomes
2 types of cells:
Prokaryotes:
domains bacteria and archaea
DNA is in the nucleoid region
generally smaller in size than eukaryotes
Eukaryotes:
protists, fungi, plants, animals
DNA is in the nucleus
contains membrane-bound organelles
Organelles: membrane-bound structures in eukaryotes; there are 2 categories
Endomembrane organelles:
nuclear envelope
endoplasmic reticulum
golgi complex
lysosomes
vesicles/vacuoles
plasma membrane
Energy organelles:
mitochondria
chloroplasts
Other features: not membrane-bound but critically important in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes
ribosomes: distinct differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
cytoskeleton:
microtubules
microfilaments
intermediate filaments
Compartmentalization: in organelles allows for different metabolic reactions to occur in different locations
increases surface area for reactions to occur
prevents interfering reactions from occurring in the same locations
Unique cell components: plant cells and animal cells have certain organelles that only belong to either the plant or animal cell
Plants:
chloroplasts
central vacuole
cell wall plasmodesmata (or plasmodesma)
Animals:
lysosomes
centrosomes
flagella
Endomembrane Organelles:
Nucleus: contains chromosomes (genetic information)
enclosed by the nuclear envelope
double membrane
has pores
pores regulate entry and exit of materials from the cell
contains a nucleolus
dense region of the nucleus where ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is synthesized
rRNA is combined with proteins to form large and small subunits of ribosomes
subunits exit via nuclear pores
assembles into ribosomes
ribosomes translate messages found on mRNA (messenger RNA) into the primary structure of polypeptides
Ribosomes: compromised of ribosomal RNA and protein (some texts don’t classify them as organelles because they are not membrane-bound)
functions: synthesize proteins
can be found in 2 locations:
cytosol
proteins produced here generally function only within the cytosol (ex. enzymes)
known as free ribosomes (not bound to anything)
bound to the endoplasmic reticulum or nuclear envelope
proteins produced here can be secreted from the cell
leave via transport vesicles
Endoplasmic Reticulum: a network of membranous sacs and tubes
Functions:
synthesizes membranes
compartmentalize the cell to keep proteins formed in the rough ER separate from those of free ribosomes
2 types:
rough ER:
contains ribosomes bound to the ER membrane
smooth ER:
contains no ribosomes
synthesizes lipids, metabolizes carbohydrates, and detoxifies the cell
Golgi Complex: contains flattened membranous sacs called cisternae
separate the sacs from the cytosol
each cisternae is not connected
has directionality
cis face: receives vesicles from the ER
trans face: sends vesicles back out into the cytosol to other locations or to the plasma membrane for secretion
Functions:
receives transport vesicles with materials from the ER
modifies the materials
ensures newly formed proteins are folded correctly or modified correctly
sorts the materials
adds molecular tags
packages materials into new transport vesicles that exit the membrane via exocytosis
Lysosomes: membranous sacs with hydrolytic enzymes
functions:
hydrolyzes macromolecules in animal cells
Autophagy: lysosomes can recycle their own cell’s organic material
allows the cell to renew itself
Peroxisomes: similar to lysosomes
membrane-bound metabolic compartment
catalyze reactions that produce H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide)
enzymes in peroxisomes then break down H2O2 into water
Vacuoles: large vesicles that stem from the ER and Golgi
selective in transport
Types:
Food vacuole: form via phagocytosis (cell eating) and then are digested by lysosomes
Contractile vacuole: maintains water levels in cells
Central vacuole: found in plants
contains inorganic ions and water
important for turgor pressure
Endosymbiont theory: the theory that explains the similarities mitochondria and chloroplasts have to a prokaryote
theory states that an early eukaryotic cell engulfed a prokaryotic cell
prokaryotic cell became an endosymbiont (cell that lives in another cell)
became one functional organism
evidence:
double membrane
ribosomes
circular DNA
capable of functioning on their own (they still can’t survive on their own)
Mitochondria: site of cellular respiration
structure of the double membrane:
outer membrane is smooth
inner membrane has folds called cristae
divides the mitochondria into two internal compartments and increases the surface area
Intermembrane: space between inner and outer membrane
Mitochondrial matrix: enclosed by inner membrane
location for the Krebs cycle
contains:
enzymes that catalyze cellular respiration and produce ATP
mitochondrial DNA
ribosomes
the number of mitochondria in a cell correlates with metabolic activity
cells with high metabolic activity have more mitochondria
ex. cells that move/contract
Chloroplasts:
specialized organelles in photosynthetic organisms
site of photosynthesis
contains the green pigment chlorophyll
inside of its double membrane:
thylakoids
membranous sacs that can organize into stacks called grana
light-dependent reactions occur in grana
Stroma: fluid around thylakoids
locations for the Calvin cycle
contains
chloroplast DNA
ribosomes
enzymes
network of fibers throughout the cytoplasm
gives structural support (especially for animal cells) and mechanical support
anchor organelles
allow for movement of vesicles and organelles and/or the whole cell
movement occurs when the cytoskeleton interacts with motor proteins
3 types of fibers in cytoskeleton:
microfilaments: thin solid rods made of the protein actin
Functions: maintain cell shape
bear tension
assist in muscle contraction and cell motility
actin works with another protein called myosin to cause a contraction
division of animal cells
contractile ring of the cleavage furrow
microtubules: hollow rod-like structures made of the protein tubulin
grows from the centrosome
assist in microtubule assembly
functions:
serve as structural support for the movement of organelles that are interacting with motor proteins
assist in the separation of chromosomes during cell division
cell motility (ex. cilia and flagella)
intermediate filaments:
fibrous proteins made up of varying subunits
permanent structural elements of cells
Functions:
maintain cell shape
anchor nucleus and organelles
form the nuclear lamina
lines the nuclear envelope
Plasma Membrane: separates internal cell environment from external environment
compromised primarily of phospholipids
phospholipids are amphipathic
hydrophobic tails and hydrophilic head
forms a bilayer
Selective Permeability: the ability of membranes to regulate the substances that enter and exit
Hydrophilic head oriented towards aqueous environment
Hydrophobic tails are facing inwards away from aqueous environment
Fluid Mosaic Model:
a model to describe the structure of cell membranes
Fluid: membrane is held together by weak hydrophobic interactions and can therefore move and shift
temperature affects fluidity
unsaturated hydrocarbon tails help maintain fluidity at low temps
kinked tails prevent tight packing of phospholipids
cholesterol helps maintain fluidity at high and low temps
high temp: reduces movement
low temp: reduces tight packing of phospholipids
Mosaic: compromised of many macromolecules
Membrane Proteins:
2 major categories of proteins in the membrane:
integral proteins: proteins that are embedded into the lipid bilayer
aka transmembrane proteins
amphipathic
peripheral proteins: proteins that are not embedded into the lipid bilayer
loosely bonded to the surface
Membrane Carbohydrates:
important for cell-to-cell recognition
glycolipids: carbohydrates bonded to lipids
glycoproteins: carbohydrates bonded to proteins; most abundant
Plant Cells:
plants have a cell wall that covers their plasma membranes
extracellular structure (not found in animal cells)
provides:
shape/structure
protection
regulation of water intake
cell wall is composed of cellulose
thicker than plasma membranes
contain plasmodesmata
hole-like structures in the cell wall filled with cytosol that connect adjacent cells
Selective Permeability:
some substances can cross the membrane more easily than others
easy passage across the membrane:
small nonpolar, hydrophobic molecules
ex. hydrocarbons, CO2, O2, N2
difficult passage or protein assisted passage:
hydrophilic, polar molecules, large molecules, ions:
ex. sugars, water
Transport across the membrane:
there are two main types of transport across a membrane: passive and active
Passive transport: Transport of a molecule that does not require energy from the cell because a solute is moving with its concentration/electrochemical gradient
involved in import of materials and export of waste
ex.
diffusion: spontaneous process resulting from constant motion of molecules; substances move from high to low concentration (down the concentration gradient)
occurs directly across membrane; different rates of diffusion for different molecules
osmosis: diffusion of water down its concentration gradient across a selectively permeable membrane (diffusion of water from low solute concentration to high solute concentration)
facilitated diffusion: diffusion of molecules through the membrane via transport proteins (down gradient)
increases rate of diffusion for small ions, water, and carbohydrates
2 types of transport proteins (each is specific for their substances)
channel: channel for molecules and ions to pass; hydrophilic; many are gated channels, that only allow passage when there’s a stimulus
Aquaporins: specific channel protein for water
carrier: undergo conformational changes for substances to pass
Active transport: transport of a molecule that requires energy (ATP); usually energy’s required b/c it moves a solute against concentration gradient
types of active transport:
pumps: moves substances against concentration gradient and use ATP for the energy to do so; aka “primary active transport”; involved in membrane potential (unequal concentrations of ions across membrane that results in an electrical charge (electrochemical gradient)
sodium potassium pumps: animal cells will regulate their relative concentration of Na+ and K+ (3 NA+ get pumped out of cell, 2 K+ gets pumped into cell—> +1 net charge to extracellular fluid)
proton pump: integral membrane protein; builds up proton gradient across membrane; aka hydrogen ion gradient/hydrogen ion pump
cotransport: coupling of a favorable movement of one substance with an unfavorable movement of another substance; favorable movement (downhill diffusion), unfavorable movement (uphill diffusion)
exocytosis: secretion of molecules via vesicles that fuse to the plasma membrane; once fused, contents of vesicle are released to the extracellular fluid
endocytosis: the uptake of molecules from vesicles fused from the plasma membrane
phagocytosis: when a cell engulfs particles to be later digested by lysosomes
pinocytosis: nonspecific uptake of extracellular fluid containing dissolved molecules
receptor mediated endocytosis: specific uptake of molecules via solute binding to receptors on the plasma membrane
metabolism: all of the chemical reactions in an organism
Metabolic pathways: series of chemical reactions that either build or break down complex molecules; two types of pathways
Catabolic pathways: pathways that release energy by breaking down complex molecules into simpler compounds
Anabolic pathways: pathways that consume energy to build complicated molecules from simpler compounds
Energy: the ability to do work
organisms need energy to survive and function
a loss in energy flow results in death
Kinetic energy: energy associated with motion
thermal energy: energy associated with the movement of atoms or molecules
Potential energy: stored energy
Chemical energy: potential energy available for release in a chemical reaction
The study of energy transformations in matter is called thermodynamics; the laws apply to the universe as a whole
1st Law:
energy cannot be created or destroyed
energy can be transferred or transformed
2nd Law:
energy transformation increases the entropy (disorder) of the universe
during energy transfers or transformations, some energy is unusable and often lost as heat
Free Energy: scientists use this concept to determine the likelihood of reactions in organisms, or determine if the reactions are energetically favorable
ΔG = ΔH - TΔS
ΔG (delta G): change in free energy
ΔH: total change in energy
T: absolute temp. (K)
ΔS: change in entropy
free energy change reactions determine whether or not the reaction occurs spontaneously (no outside input of energy is required)
based on free energy changes, chemical reactions can be classified as exergonic or endergonic
exergonic reactions: reactions that release energy; ΔG<0
ex. cellular respiration
endergonic reactions: reactions that absorb energy; ΔG>0
ex. photosynthesis; reaction is not spontaneous, absorbs free energy
Cells and Energy:
living cells have a constant flow of materials in and out of the membrane
cells are not at equilibrium
cells perform 3 kinds of work:
mechanical: movement; ex, beating cilia, movement of chromosomes, contraction of muscles)
transport: pumping substances across membranes against spontaneous movement
chemical: synthesis of molecules; ex, building polymers from monomers
ATP:
Adenosine triphosphate: molecule that organisms use as a source of energy to perform work
ATP couples exergonic reactions to endergonic reactions to power cellular work
exergonic process drives the endergonic process
organisms obtain energy by breaking the bond between the 2nd and 3rd phosphate in a hydrolysis reactions
ATP —> ADP
phosphorylation: the released phosphate moves to another molecule to give energy
hydrolysis of ATP: water + ATP = ADP + Pi
ADP can be regenerated to ATP via the ATP cycle:
ATP +H2O +energy from cellular work —> ADP + Pi
ADP + Pi + energy from exergonic process —> ATP + H2O
Rate of Metabolic Reactions:
laws of thermodynamics tells us if a reaction is spontaneous, but it doesn’t describe the rate of the reaction
Enzymes:
macromolecules that catalyze (speed up) reactions by lowering the activation energy
aren’t consumed by the reaction
type of protein
all enzyme names end in -ase
Enzyme Structure:
the enzyme acts on a reactant called a substrate
active site: area substrate binds to
Enzyme Function:
Induced Fit: enzymes change shape of their active site to allow the substrate to bind better
enzyme catabolism: helps break down complex molecules
enzyme anabolism: helps build complex molecules
Effects on Enzymes:
Efficiency can be affected by different factors such as (change in shape = change in function):
temperature: rate of enzyme activity increases with temperature up to a certain point, after that point, the enzyme will denature
pH levels: enzymes function best a specific pH; varies upon location; pH level outside or normal level can cause hydrogen bonds to break (changing the shape of enzyme)
chemicals
Enzyme Cofactors:
Cofactors: non protein molecules that assist enzyme function
inorganic cofactors: metals
Holoenzyme: an enzyme with a the cofactor attached
Coenzyme: organic cofactors, such as vitamins
Enzyme Inhibitors:
Competitive Inhibitors: reduce enzyme activity by blocking substrates from binding to active site
can be reversed with increased substrate concentration
Noncompetitive inhibitors: bind to allosteric site, which changes shape of active site, preventing substrates from binding
type of allosteric inhibition
Regulation of Chemical Reactions:
cells must be able to regulate its metabolic pathways
control where and when enzymes are active
switch gene that code enzymes on or off
Allosteric Regulation:
Allosteric enzymes have 2 binding sites:
1 active site
1 allosteric site (regulatory site/other than the active site)
Molecules bind (noncovalent interactions) to an allosteric site which changes shape and function of active site
can result in inhibition (by inhibitor) or stimulation (by activator) of enzymes activity
Allosteric Regulation: Activator;
Allosteric activator: it binds to allosteric site and stabilizes shape of enzyme so the active sites remain open
Allosteric Regulation: Inhibitor;
Allosteric inhibitor: binds to allosteric site and stabilizes enzyme shape so the active sites are closed (inactive form)
Allosteric Regulation: Cooperativity;
cooperativity: substrate binds to one active site (on an enzyme with >1 active site) which stabilizes active form
Cells harvest chemical energy stored in organic molecules and use it to generate ATP;
chemical equation: organic molecules + O2 —> CO2 + H2O + energy
Glycogen is the major source of fuel for animals (starch for plants)
breaks down into glucose
catabolic breakdown: C6H12O6 + 6O2 —> 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy (ATP and Heat)
C6H12O6 is oxidized to 6CO2
oxidation: loss of electrons; becomes more positive
6O2 is reduced to 6H2O
reduction: gain of electrons; becomes more negative
oxidation of glucose transfers e- ‘s to a lower energy state, releasing energy to be used in ATP synthesis
Path of Electrons in Energy Harvest:
Most electrons will follow this downhill exergonic path (for cellular respiration):
glucose (typical starting point) —> NADH (high energy electron carrier) —> ETC (Electron Transport Chain) —> oxygen (final electron acceptor)
glucose is broken down in steps to harvest energy
electrons are removed from glucose at different steps
each e- removed also has a H+ removed with it
e- must be taken up by specific acceptors (oxidizing agents) such as NAD+ (turns into NADH) and FAD (turns into FADH2)
example:
2e- and 1 proton are transferred to coenzyme NAD+, reducing it to NADH (stores the energy)
other proton is released into surrounding solution as H+ (hydrogen ion)
NADH carries and transfers the 2 high energy e- ‘s to the ETC and releases another proton
Electron Transport Chain (ETC): sequence of membrane proteins that shuttle electrons down a series of oxidation-reduction reactions (redox reactions)
releases energy used to make ATP
ETC transfers e-’s to oxygen (final electron acceptor) to make H2O
releases energy
3 Stages of Cellular Respiration:
Stage 1: Glycolysis; starting point of cellular respiration (in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes)
occurs in the cytosol (in both types of cells)
splits glucose (6C) into 2 pyruvates (3C)
glycolysis is an aerobic process (requires no oxygen)
2 stage process:
Energy investment stage: cell uses 2 ATPs to phosphorylate compounds of glucose
Energy payoff stage: energy is produced by substrate level phosphorylation & makes 4 ATPs (however 2 are used, so net yield of 2)and 2 NADHs
net energy yield per 1 glucose:
2 ATP
2 NADH
Summary:
Energy Investment: 2 ATP —> 2 ADP + Pi
Energy Payoff: 4 ADP + Pi —> 4 ATP
2 NAD+ + 4 e- + 4H+ —> 2 NADH + 2 H+
Net: 2 ATP, 2 NADH + 2 H+, 2 Pyruvates
Stage 2a: Pyruvate Oxidation; when oxygen is present, pyruvate enters the mitochondria (eukaryotes) (this stage in prokaryotes still occurs in the cytosol)
pyruvate is oxidized into Acetyl CoA
Acetyl CoA is used to make citrate in the citric acid cyle (next stage)
Matter: anything that takes up space and has mass
Elements: a substance that cannot be broken down into other substances by chemical reactions
92 elements occur naturally in nature
Compounds: a substance consisting of two or more different elements combined in a fixed ratio
H2O
NaCl
CHOPN: Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorous, Nitrogen; makes up 92% of living matter
Essential Elements: of the 92 naturally occurring elements, 20-25% are essential to survive and reproduce
Trace Elements: of the 92 naturally occurring elements, these are required by an organism in very small quantities
Atomic Number: number of protons (and electrons)
Atomic Mass: sum of protons and neutrons averaged over all isotopes
Group: vertical columns on Periodic Table; elements in the same group have the same amount of valence electrons
Period: horizontal rows on Periodic Table; elements in the same period have the same total number of shells
Bohr Model: shows electrons orbiting the nucleus of an atom
Electrons are placed on shells outside the nucleus
Each shell has a different energy level and can hold up to a certain number of electrons (formula to find e- on each shell is 2n^2, where n is the shell number)
1st shell: 2 e- (electrons); ex. 2(1)^2
2nd shell: 8 e- (electrons); ex. 2(2)^2
3rd shell: 18 e- (electrons); ex. 2(3)^2
Lewis Dot Model: simplified Bohr’s diagram
Does not show energy levels
Only shows electrons in the valence shell (outermost shell)
Electrons as dots are placed around the element symbol in N/S/E/W directions
First time around the element symbol is single dots then the second time around you pair the dots
Elements want to be stable
achieve this by forming chemical bonds with other elements
Octet rule: elements will gain, lose, or share electrons to complete their valence shell (8 electrons) and become stable (like a noble gas)
Chemical Bonds: an attraction between two atoms, resulting from the sharing or transferring of valence electrons
Electronegativity: the measure of an atom’s ability to attract electrons to itself
electronegativity decreases as you go down the Periodic Table
electronegativity increases as you go to the right of the Periodic Table
Covalent Bonds: when two or more atoms share electrons (usually between two nonmetals)
forms molecules and compounds
Single bond: 1 pair of shared e-
Double bond: 2 pairs of shared e-
Triple bond: 3 pairs of shared e-
There are two types of covalent bonds…
Nonpolar covalent: electrons are shared equally between two atoms (e.g. O2)
Polar covalent: electrons are not shared equally between two atoms (e.g. H2O)
unequal sharing of electrons results in partial charges on oxygen and hydrogen
Ionic Bonds: the attraction between oppositely charged atoms (ions)
usually between nonmetal and metal (metal transfers electrons (e-) to nonmetal)
forms ionic compounds and salts
NaCl (Sodium Chloride)
LiF (Lithium Chloride)
occurs when there is a transfer of electrons from one atom to another atom forming ions
cation: positively charged ion
anion: negatively charged ion
Hydrogen Bonds: the partially positive hydrogen atom in one polar covalent molecule will be attracted to an electronegative atom in another polar covalent molecule
Intermolecular Bond: bond that forms between molecules
Why does this happen?
when a hydrogen atom is bonded to an Oxygen or Nitrogen, the electrons are drawn mostly away from the Hydrogen and toward the electronegative atom (Don’t forget that this is a polar covalent bond)
this causes the hydrogen to have a partial positive charge and the electronegative atom (N or O) to have a partial negative charge
Polarity: unequal sharing of the electrons makes water a polar molecule
Cohesion: attraction of molecules for other molecules of the same kind (H2O molecules stick to each other)
hydrogen bonds between H2O molecules hold them together and increase cohesive forces
allows for the transport of H2O and nutrients against gravity in plants
responsible for surface tension (property of allowing liquid to resist external force)
Adhesion: the clinging of one molecule to a different molecule (H2O molecules stick to something else—like a cell wall)
because of the polarity of H2O
in plants, this allows water to cling to the cell walls to resist the downward pull of gravity
Capillary Action: the upward movement of water due to the forces of cohesion, adhesion, and surface tension (moves water upwards)
occurs when adhesion is greater than cohesion
important for the transport of water and nutrients in plants
Temperature Control:
High specific heat: H2O resists changes in temp. by…
hydrogen bonds
heat must be absorbed to break hydrogen bonds, but heat is released when hydrogen bonds are formed
Importance of High Specific Heat:
moderates air temp
large bodies of water can absorb heat in the daytime and release heat at night
stabilizes ocean temp
benefits marine life
organisms can resist change in their own internal temp
Evaporative Cooling: water has a high heat of vaporization
the molecules with the highest kinetic energy leave as a gas
Importance of Evaporative Cooling:
Moderates Earth’s climate
Stabilizes temp in lakes and ponds
Prevents terrestrial organisms from overheating (e.g. sweating in humans)
Prevents leaves from becoming too hot in the sun
Density (floating ice): as water solidifies it expands and becomes less dense
due to the hydrogen bonds:
when cooled, H2O molecules move too slowly to break the bonds
allows marine life to survive under floating ice sheets
with lower temps, hydrogen bonds cause water molecules to form a crystalline structure
Solvent: dissolving agent in a solution
water is a versatile solvent (could also be referred to as a universal solvent)
the polar molecules are attracted to ions and other polar molecules water can form hydrogen bonds with
water can interact with sugars or proteins containing many oxygens and hydrogens
water will form hydrogen bonds with the sugars or proteins to dissolve it
Ionic Compounds: dissolves ions
partially negative oxygen in water will interact with a positive atom
partially positive hydrogen in water will interact with a negative atom
Organic Chemistry: the study of compounds with covalently bonded carbon
Organic Compounds: compounds that contain carbon and hydrogen
a single carbon can form up to 4 covalent bonds
can form long chains
most commonly formed with hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen
the type and number of covalent bonds carbon forms with other atoms affects the length of the carbon shape and the shape of the molecule
Carbon Chains: carbon can use its valence electrons to form covalent bonds to other carbons
this links the carbons into a chain
Hydrocarbons: organic molecules consisting of only hydrogen and carbon (simple framework for more complex organic molecules)
Carbon chains form the skeletons of most organic molecules
skeletons can vary in length, branching, double bond position, and presence of rings
many regions of a cell’s organic molecules contain hydrocarbons
Functional Groups: chemical groups attached to the carbon skeleton that participate in chemical reactions
Hydroxyl group: -OH
Carbonyl group: -C=O
Carboxyl group: —COOH
Amino group: -NH2
Sulfhydryl group: -SH
H
Methyl group: -C-H
H
Phosphate group: -OPO²-3 (2 of the 3 Oxygens are negative)
Molecular Diversity due to Carbon
variations in carbon skeletons allow for molecular diversity
carbon can form large molecules known as macromolecules
four classes of macromolecules (molecules made of smaller subunits)
Carbohydrates (Polymer): CHO; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen
Proteins (Polymer): CHONS; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Sulfur
Nucleic acids (Polymer): CHOPN; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, Nitrogen
along with carbon, nitrogen is an important element for building proteins and nucleic acids
Lipids (doesn’t include true polymers and are hydrophobic molecules): CHONP; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorus
phosphorus is important for building nucleic acids and some lipids
Monomers: the repeating units that make up a polymer
Polymers: chain-like macromolecules of similar or identical repeating units that are covalently bonded together (multiple monomers covalently bonded together)
Dehydration reaction: bonds 2 monomers with the loss of H2O
the -OH of one monomer bonds to the -H of another monomer forming H2O, which is then released
Ex. glucose and sucrose lose an H2O molecule and then bind together to form sucrose (a polymer, polysaccharide)
Hydrolysis: breaks the bonds in a polymer by adding H2O
One of the -H of the H2O bonds to one monomer and the remaining -OH of the H2O attaches to the other monomer
Ex. adding water to sucrose splits it into glucose (a monomer, monosaccharide) and fructose (a monomer, monosaccharide)
Carbohydrates: includes sugars and polymers of sugars (CHO)
contains a carbonyl group (-C=O) and many hydroxyl groups (-OH)
Monosaccharides: simple sugars
molecular formulas with multiples of the unit CH2O
most common is glucose
nutrients and fuel for cells
used in cellular respiration
can serve as building blocks for amino acids, or as monomers for disaccharides and polysaccharides
Disaccharides: 2 monosaccharides joined together by covalent bonds
most common is sucrose
monomers of sucrose: glucose and fructose
plants transfer carbohydrates from leaves to other parts of the plant in the form of sucrose
Polysaccharides: polymer with many sugars joined via dehydration reactions
storage polysaccharides
plants store starch (polymer of glucose monomers)
allows plants to store excess glucose
animals store glycogen (polymer of glucose)
stored in liver and muscle cells
structural polysaccharides:
cellulose: tough substance that forms plant cell walls
chitin: forms exoskeleton of arthropods
Protein: molecule consisting of polypeptides (polymer of amino acids) folded into a 3D shape (CHONS)
Formation: amino acids→peptide→polypeptide→protein
shape determines function
Amino Acids: molecules that have an amino group and a carboxyl group (—COOH)
20 different amino acids
general structure: amino group on the left side, R group (variable side chain) in the middle, and carboxyl group on the right side
each amino acid (AA) has a unique side chain
unique aspects of the AA are based on the side chain’s physical and chemical properties
side chains can be grouped as
nonpolar (hydrophobic)
polar (hydrophobic)
charged/ionic (hydrophilic)
side chains interact, which determines the shape and function of the protein
Formation of peptide bonds: to form a peptide bond, the carboxyl group of one AA must be positioned next to the amino group of another AA
Polypeptides: many AA linked by peptide bonds
each polypeptide has a unique sequence of AAs and directionality
each end is chemically unique
one end is a free amino group (N-terminus)
one end is a free carboxyl group (C-terminus)
the sequence of AAs determines the 3D shape (shape determines function)
when a polypeptide twists and folds (b/c of R group interaction) it forms a protein
Functions of Proteins:
Antibody: help protect the body from disease
Enzyme: carry out chemical reactions or assist in creating new molecules
Messenger: transmit signals (ie hormones)
Structural: provide structure and support
Transport/storage: bind to and carry small atoms and molecules through the body
Levels of Protein Structure:
Primary: linear chain of AA
determined via genes
dictates secondary and tertiary forms
Secondary: coils and folds due to hydrogen bonding within the polypeptide backbone
pleated sheet: hydrogen bonds between polypeptide chains lying side by side
helix: hydrogen bonding between every 4th AA
Tertiary: 3D folding due to interactions between the side chains of the AAs
reinforced by hydrophobic interactions and disulfide bridges of the side chains
the covalent bond formed between sulfur atoms and two cysteine monomers
Quaternary: association of 2+ polypeptides
found in only some proteins
Nucleic Acids: polymers made of nucleotide monomers (CHONP)
Function to: store, transmit, and express hereditary information
2 forms:
DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid
RNA: ribonucleic acid
Components: nucleotides→polynucleotides→nucleic acids
Nucleotide: each nucleotide is comprised of a…
Nitrogenous base: 2 types…
pyrimidines: one ring with 6 atoms
cytosine
thymine (only found in DNA)
uracil (only found in RNA)
purines: one ring with 6 atoms bonded to one ring with 5 atoms
adenine and guanine
Five Carbon Sugar: a sugar is bonded to the base
DNA: sugar is deoxyribose (b/c one less OH in the base)
RNA: sugar is ribose (b/c one more OH than DNA in the base)
they both differ in structure and function
Phosphate Group: added to the 5’ carbon of the sugar (which is attached to the base) to form a nucleotide
nucleoside: portion w/o phosphate group
Polynucleotides: phosphate groups link adjacent nucleotides
phosphodiester linkage
directionality: 5’ phosphate end to 3’ hydroxyl (-OH) end (nucleotides get added to 3’)
sequence of bases along the DNA or mRNA is unique for each gene
dictates AA sequence
dictates primary structure of protein
dictates 3D structure of a protein
DNA: consists of 2 polynucleotides
forms a double helix
strands are antiparallel (5’ to 3’ and 3’ to 5’)
held together by hydrogen bonds between bases (adenine to thymine, cytosine to guanine)
RNA: single-stranded polynucleotide
variable in shape
due to base pairing within RNA
adenine bonds to uracil
cytosine bonds to guanine
Lipids: class of molecules that do not include true polymers (CHOP)
generally small in size
often not considered to be a macromolecule
lipids are nonpolar-hydrophobic
types of lipids:
fats: composed of glycerol (alcohol, hydroxyl groups) and fatty acids (long carbon chains, carboxyl groups at one end)
3 fatty acids join to a glycerol via ester linkage
bond between a hydroxyl and carboxyl group
classified as either a:
saturated fatty acid: no double bonds between carbons in the carbon chain = more hydrogen (saturated w/ hydrogen)
an unsaturated fatty acid: contains one or more double bonds
phospholipids major component of cell membranes
2 fatty acids attached to a glycerol and a phosphate
assembles as a bilayer in H2O
tails (fatty acids) are hydrophobic
head (phosphate and glycerol) is hydrophilic
steroids: lipids that have four fused rings
unique groups attached to the ring determine the type of steroid
the basic structural and functional units of every organism
all cells:
are bound by a plasma membrane
contain cytosol
contain chromosomes
contain ribosomes
2 types of cells:
Prokaryotes:
domains bacteria and archaea
DNA is in the nucleoid region
generally smaller in size than eukaryotes
Eukaryotes:
protists, fungi, plants, animals
DNA is in the nucleus
contains membrane-bound organelles
Organelles: membrane-bound structures in eukaryotes; there are 2 categories
Endomembrane organelles:
nuclear envelope
endoplasmic reticulum
golgi complex
lysosomes
vesicles/vacuoles
plasma membrane
Energy organelles:
mitochondria
chloroplasts
Other features: not membrane-bound but critically important in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes
ribosomes: distinct differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes
cytoskeleton:
microtubules
microfilaments
intermediate filaments
Compartmentalization: in organelles allows for different metabolic reactions to occur in different locations
increases surface area for reactions to occur
prevents interfering reactions from occurring in the same locations
Unique cell components: plant cells and animal cells have certain organelles that only belong to either the plant or animal cell
Plants:
chloroplasts
central vacuole
cell wall plasmodesmata (or plasmodesma)
Animals:
lysosomes
centrosomes
flagella
Endomembrane Organelles:
Nucleus: contains chromosomes (genetic information)
enclosed by the nuclear envelope
double membrane
has pores
pores regulate entry and exit of materials from the cell
contains a nucleolus
dense region of the nucleus where ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is synthesized
rRNA is combined with proteins to form large and small subunits of ribosomes
subunits exit via nuclear pores
assembles into ribosomes
ribosomes translate messages found on mRNA (messenger RNA) into the primary structure of polypeptides
Ribosomes: compromised of ribosomal RNA and protein (some texts don’t classify them as organelles because they are not membrane-bound)
functions: synthesize proteins
can be found in 2 locations:
cytosol
proteins produced here generally function only within the cytosol (ex. enzymes)
known as free ribosomes (not bound to anything)
bound to the endoplasmic reticulum or nuclear envelope
proteins produced here can be secreted from the cell
leave via transport vesicles
Endoplasmic Reticulum: a network of membranous sacs and tubes
Functions:
synthesizes membranes
compartmentalize the cell to keep proteins formed in the rough ER separate from those of free ribosomes
2 types:
rough ER:
contains ribosomes bound to the ER membrane
smooth ER:
contains no ribosomes
synthesizes lipids, metabolizes carbohydrates, and detoxifies the cell
Golgi Complex: contains flattened membranous sacs called cisternae
separate the sacs from the cytosol
each cisternae is not connected
has directionality
cis face: receives vesicles from the ER
trans face: sends vesicles back out into the cytosol to other locations or to the plasma membrane for secretion
Functions:
receives transport vesicles with materials from the ER
modifies the materials
ensures newly formed proteins are folded correctly or modified correctly
sorts the materials
adds molecular tags
packages materials into new transport vesicles that exit the membrane via exocytosis
Lysosomes: membranous sacs with hydrolytic enzymes
functions:
hydrolyzes macromolecules in animal cells
Autophagy: lysosomes can recycle their own cell’s organic material
allows the cell to renew itself
Peroxisomes: similar to lysosomes
membrane-bound metabolic compartment
catalyze reactions that produce H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide)
enzymes in peroxisomes then break down H2O2 into water
Vacuoles: large vesicles that stem from the ER and Golgi
selective in transport
Types:
Food vacuole: form via phagocytosis (cell eating) and then are digested by lysosomes
Contractile vacuole: maintains water levels in cells
Central vacuole: found in plants
contains inorganic ions and water
important for turgor pressure
Endosymbiont theory: the theory that explains the similarities mitochondria and chloroplasts have to a prokaryote
theory states that an early eukaryotic cell engulfed a prokaryotic cell
prokaryotic cell became an endosymbiont (cell that lives in another cell)
became one functional organism
evidence:
double membrane
ribosomes
circular DNA
capable of functioning on their own (they still can’t survive on their own)
Mitochondria: site of cellular respiration
structure of the double membrane:
outer membrane is smooth
inner membrane has folds called cristae
divides the mitochondria into two internal compartments and increases the surface area
Intermembrane: space between inner and outer membrane
Mitochondrial matrix: enclosed by inner membrane
location for the Krebs cycle
contains:
enzymes that catalyze cellular respiration and produce ATP
mitochondrial DNA
ribosomes
the number of mitochondria in a cell correlates with metabolic activity
cells with high metabolic activity have more mitochondria
ex. cells that move/contract
Chloroplasts:
specialized organelles in photosynthetic organisms
site of photosynthesis
contains the green pigment chlorophyll
inside of its double membrane:
thylakoids
membranous sacs that can organize into stacks called grana
light-dependent reactions occur in grana
Stroma: fluid around thylakoids
locations for the Calvin cycle
contains
chloroplast DNA
ribosomes
enzymes
network of fibers throughout the cytoplasm
gives structural support (especially for animal cells) and mechanical support
anchor organelles
allow for movement of vesicles and organelles and/or the whole cell
movement occurs when the cytoskeleton interacts with motor proteins
3 types of fibers in cytoskeleton:
microfilaments: thin solid rods made of the protein actin
Functions: maintain cell shape
bear tension
assist in muscle contraction and cell motility
actin works with another protein called myosin to cause a contraction
division of animal cells
contractile ring of the cleavage furrow
microtubules: hollow rod-like structures made of the protein tubulin
grows from the centrosome
assist in microtubule assembly
functions:
serve as structural support for the movement of organelles that are interacting with motor proteins
assist in the separation of chromosomes during cell division
cell motility (ex. cilia and flagella)
intermediate filaments:
fibrous proteins made up of varying subunits
permanent structural elements of cells
Functions:
maintain cell shape
anchor nucleus and organelles
form the nuclear lamina
lines the nuclear envelope
Plasma Membrane: separates internal cell environment from external environment
compromised primarily of phospholipids
phospholipids are amphipathic
hydrophobic tails and hydrophilic head
forms a bilayer
Selective Permeability: the ability of membranes to regulate the substances that enter and exit
Hydrophilic head oriented towards aqueous environment
Hydrophobic tails are facing inwards away from aqueous environment
Fluid Mosaic Model:
a model to describe the structure of cell membranes
Fluid: membrane is held together by weak hydrophobic interactions and can therefore move and shift
temperature affects fluidity
unsaturated hydrocarbon tails help maintain fluidity at low temps
kinked tails prevent tight packing of phospholipids
cholesterol helps maintain fluidity at high and low temps
high temp: reduces movement
low temp: reduces tight packing of phospholipids
Mosaic: compromised of many macromolecules
Membrane Proteins:
2 major categories of proteins in the membrane:
integral proteins: proteins that are embedded into the lipid bilayer
aka transmembrane proteins
amphipathic
peripheral proteins: proteins that are not embedded into the lipid bilayer
loosely bonded to the surface
Membrane Carbohydrates:
important for cell-to-cell recognition
glycolipids: carbohydrates bonded to lipids
glycoproteins: carbohydrates bonded to proteins; most abundant
Plant Cells:
plants have a cell wall that covers their plasma membranes
extracellular structure (not found in animal cells)
provides:
shape/structure
protection
regulation of water intake
cell wall is composed of cellulose
thicker than plasma membranes
contain plasmodesmata
hole-like structures in the cell wall filled with cytosol that connect adjacent cells
Selective Permeability:
some substances can cross the membrane more easily than others
easy passage across the membrane:
small nonpolar, hydrophobic molecules
ex. hydrocarbons, CO2, O2, N2
difficult passage or protein assisted passage:
hydrophilic, polar molecules, large molecules, ions:
ex. sugars, water
Transport across the membrane:
there are two main types of transport across a membrane: passive and active
Passive transport: Transport of a molecule that does not require energy from the cell because a solute is moving with its concentration/electrochemical gradient
involved in import of materials and export of waste
ex.
diffusion: spontaneous process resulting from constant motion of molecules; substances move from high to low concentration (down the concentration gradient)
occurs directly across membrane; different rates of diffusion for different molecules
osmosis: diffusion of water down its concentration gradient across a selectively permeable membrane (diffusion of water from low solute concentration to high solute concentration)
facilitated diffusion: diffusion of molecules through the membrane via transport proteins (down gradient)
increases rate of diffusion for small ions, water, and carbohydrates
2 types of transport proteins (each is specific for their substances)
channel: channel for molecules and ions to pass; hydrophilic; many are gated channels, that only allow passage when there’s a stimulus
Aquaporins: specific channel protein for water
carrier: undergo conformational changes for substances to pass
Active transport: transport of a molecule that requires energy (ATP); usually energy’s required b/c it moves a solute against concentration gradient
types of active transport:
pumps: moves substances against concentration gradient and use ATP for the energy to do so; aka “primary active transport”; involved in membrane potential (unequal concentrations of ions across membrane that results in an electrical charge (electrochemical gradient)
sodium potassium pumps: animal cells will regulate their relative concentration of Na+ and K+ (3 NA+ get pumped out of cell, 2 K+ gets pumped into cell—> +1 net charge to extracellular fluid)
proton pump: integral membrane protein; builds up proton gradient across membrane; aka hydrogen ion gradient/hydrogen ion pump
cotransport: coupling of a favorable movement of one substance with an unfavorable movement of another substance; favorable movement (downhill diffusion), unfavorable movement (uphill diffusion)
exocytosis: secretion of molecules via vesicles that fuse to the plasma membrane; once fused, contents of vesicle are released to the extracellular fluid
endocytosis: the uptake of molecules from vesicles fused from the plasma membrane
phagocytosis: when a cell engulfs particles to be later digested by lysosomes
pinocytosis: nonspecific uptake of extracellular fluid containing dissolved molecules
receptor mediated endocytosis: specific uptake of molecules via solute binding to receptors on the plasma membrane
metabolism: all of the chemical reactions in an organism
Metabolic pathways: series of chemical reactions that either build or break down complex molecules; two types of pathways
Catabolic pathways: pathways that release energy by breaking down complex molecules into simpler compounds
Anabolic pathways: pathways that consume energy to build complicated molecules from simpler compounds
Energy: the ability to do work
organisms need energy to survive and function
a loss in energy flow results in death
Kinetic energy: energy associated with motion
thermal energy: energy associated with the movement of atoms or molecules
Potential energy: stored energy
Chemical energy: potential energy available for release in a chemical reaction
The study of energy transformations in matter is called thermodynamics; the laws apply to the universe as a whole
1st Law:
energy cannot be created or destroyed
energy can be transferred or transformed
2nd Law:
energy transformation increases the entropy (disorder) of the universe
during energy transfers or transformations, some energy is unusable and often lost as heat
Free Energy: scientists use this concept to determine the likelihood of reactions in organisms, or determine if the reactions are energetically favorable
ΔG = ΔH - TΔS
ΔG (delta G): change in free energy
ΔH: total change in energy
T: absolute temp. (K)
ΔS: change in entropy
free energy change reactions determine whether or not the reaction occurs spontaneously (no outside input of energy is required)
based on free energy changes, chemical reactions can be classified as exergonic or endergonic
exergonic reactions: reactions that release energy; ΔG<0
ex. cellular respiration
endergonic reactions: reactions that absorb energy; ΔG>0
ex. photosynthesis; reaction is not spontaneous, absorbs free energy
Cells and Energy:
living cells have a constant flow of materials in and out of the membrane
cells are not at equilibrium
cells perform 3 kinds of work:
mechanical: movement; ex, beating cilia, movement of chromosomes, contraction of muscles)
transport: pumping substances across membranes against spontaneous movement
chemical: synthesis of molecules; ex, building polymers from monomers
ATP:
Adenosine triphosphate: molecule that organisms use as a source of energy to perform work
ATP couples exergonic reactions to endergonic reactions to power cellular work
exergonic process drives the endergonic process
organisms obtain energy by breaking the bond between the 2nd and 3rd phosphate in a hydrolysis reactions
ATP —> ADP
phosphorylation: the released phosphate moves to another molecule to give energy
hydrolysis of ATP: water + ATP = ADP + Pi
ADP can be regenerated to ATP via the ATP cycle:
ATP +H2O +energy from cellular work —> ADP + Pi
ADP + Pi + energy from exergonic process —> ATP + H2O
Rate of Metabolic Reactions:
laws of thermodynamics tells us if a reaction is spontaneous, but it doesn’t describe the rate of the reaction
Enzymes:
macromolecules that catalyze (speed up) reactions by lowering the activation energy
aren’t consumed by the reaction
type of protein
all enzyme names end in -ase
Enzyme Structure:
the enzyme acts on a reactant called a substrate
active site: area substrate binds to
Enzyme Function:
Induced Fit: enzymes change shape of their active site to allow the substrate to bind better
enzyme catabolism: helps break down complex molecules
enzyme anabolism: helps build complex molecules
Effects on Enzymes:
Efficiency can be affected by different factors such as (change in shape = change in function):
temperature: rate of enzyme activity increases with temperature up to a certain point, after that point, the enzyme will denature
pH levels: enzymes function best a specific pH; varies upon location; pH level outside or normal level can cause hydrogen bonds to break (changing the shape of enzyme)
chemicals
Enzyme Cofactors:
Cofactors: non protein molecules that assist enzyme function
inorganic cofactors: metals
Holoenzyme: an enzyme with a the cofactor attached
Coenzyme: organic cofactors, such as vitamins
Enzyme Inhibitors:
Competitive Inhibitors: reduce enzyme activity by blocking substrates from binding to active site
can be reversed with increased substrate concentration
Noncompetitive inhibitors: bind to allosteric site, which changes shape of active site, preventing substrates from binding
type of allosteric inhibition
Regulation of Chemical Reactions:
cells must be able to regulate its metabolic pathways
control where and when enzymes are active
switch gene that code enzymes on or off
Allosteric Regulation:
Allosteric enzymes have 2 binding sites:
1 active site
1 allosteric site (regulatory site/other than the active site)
Molecules bind (noncovalent interactions) to an allosteric site which changes shape and function of active site
can result in inhibition (by inhibitor) or stimulation (by activator) of enzymes activity
Allosteric Regulation: Activator;
Allosteric activator: it binds to allosteric site and stabilizes shape of enzyme so the active sites remain open
Allosteric Regulation: Inhibitor;
Allosteric inhibitor: binds to allosteric site and stabilizes enzyme shape so the active sites are closed (inactive form)
Allosteric Regulation: Cooperativity;
cooperativity: substrate binds to one active site (on an enzyme with >1 active site) which stabilizes active form
Cells harvest chemical energy stored in organic molecules and use it to generate ATP;
chemical equation: organic molecules + O2 —> CO2 + H2O + energy
Glycogen is the major source of fuel for animals (starch for plants)
breaks down into glucose
catabolic breakdown: C6H12O6 + 6O2 —> 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy (ATP and Heat)
C6H12O6 is oxidized to 6CO2
oxidation: loss of electrons; becomes more positive
6O2 is reduced to 6H2O
reduction: gain of electrons; becomes more negative
oxidation of glucose transfers e- ‘s to a lower energy state, releasing energy to be used in ATP synthesis
Path of Electrons in Energy Harvest:
Most electrons will follow this downhill exergonic path (for cellular respiration):
glucose (typical starting point) —> NADH (high energy electron carrier) —> ETC (Electron Transport Chain) —> oxygen (final electron acceptor)
glucose is broken down in steps to harvest energy
electrons are removed from glucose at different steps
each e- removed also has a H+ removed with it
e- must be taken up by specific acceptors (oxidizing agents) such as NAD+ (turns into NADH) and FAD (turns into FADH2)
example:
2e- and 1 proton are transferred to coenzyme NAD+, reducing it to NADH (stores the energy)
other proton is released into surrounding solution as H+ (hydrogen ion)
NADH carries and transfers the 2 high energy e- ‘s to the ETC and releases another proton
Electron Transport Chain (ETC): sequence of membrane proteins that shuttle electrons down a series of oxidation-reduction reactions (redox reactions)
releases energy used to make ATP
ETC transfers e-’s to oxygen (final electron acceptor) to make H2O
releases energy
3 Stages of Cellular Respiration:
Stage 1: Glycolysis; starting point of cellular respiration (in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes)
occurs in the cytosol (in both types of cells)
splits glucose (6C) into 2 pyruvates (3C)
glycolysis is an aerobic process (requires no oxygen)
2 stage process:
Energy investment stage: cell uses 2 ATPs to phosphorylate compounds of glucose
Energy payoff stage: energy is produced by substrate level phosphorylation & makes 4 ATPs (however 2 are used, so net yield of 2)and 2 NADHs
net energy yield per 1 glucose:
2 ATP
2 NADH
Summary:
Energy Investment: 2 ATP —> 2 ADP + Pi
Energy Payoff: 4 ADP + Pi —> 4 ATP
2 NAD+ + 4 e- + 4H+ —> 2 NADH + 2 H+
Net: 2 ATP, 2 NADH + 2 H+, 2 Pyruvates
Stage 2a: Pyruvate Oxidation; when oxygen is present, pyruvate enters the mitochondria (eukaryotes) (this stage in prokaryotes still occurs in the cytosol)
pyruvate is oxidized into Acetyl CoA
Acetyl CoA is used to make citrate in the citric acid cyle (next stage)