AP Bio Exam Review [in progress!!]
Unit 1 - Chemistry of Life 🧪
INTRO TO MACROMOLECULES
monomers are the building blocks of polymers
in dehydration synthesis, one monomer forms a covalent bond to another monomer & releases a water molecule
carbs, nucleic acids, & proteins all contain multiple types of monomers
composition & sequence important to function
hydrolysis - bond is broken by adding a water molecule
one molecule gains "H", the other gains "OH"
generally releases energy
CARBOHYDRATES
made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
monosaccharides - simple sugars, contain 3-7 carbon atoms (ex: glucose, fructose, galactose)
isomers of each other - differ in organization of their atoms
disaccharides - form when two monosaccharides bond via dehydration synthesis (ex : lactose, maltose, sucrose)
polysaccharides - long chains of monosaccharides linked by glycosidic bonds (ex : starch, glycogen, cellulose, chitin)
chain may be branched or unbranched
starch - stored form of sugars in plants
glycogen - storage form of glucose in humans
PROTEIN STRUCTURE
primary structure - sequence of amino acids
secondary - due to interactions of the peptide backbone
beta-pleated sheets - hydrogen bonding
parallel - backbones interact & sequence match
anti parallel - opposite sequences & backbones interact
alpha helix - hydrogen bonds between different layers of the helix
tertiary - due to interactions of side chains
hydrophobic & hydrophilic retract each other
hydrogen bonds might form
quaternary (more than 1 polypeptide) - arrangement of multiple chains together
TRIGLYCERIDES (FATS)
fatty acids - carbon chains (HYDROPHOBIC) & an acidic carboxyl group
glycerol can bond with 3 other fatty acids through dehydration synthesis
results in a triglyceride
ester bonds
saturated fat - saturated by hydrogen
solid at room temp
unhealthy - butter
dense
no double bonds
unsaturated - less hydrogens
liquid at room temp
Kinks formed - less dense - healthier
ex : oils
NUCLEIC ACIDS
DNA is found in the nucleus in eukaryotes
chromosomes - DNA is broken up into long linear pieces
chromosomes contain tens of thousands of genes
located in the nucleoid of prokaryotes
chromosomes are smaller & often ring-shaped
monomers=nucleotides
when combined the resulting chain is called a polynucleotide
made up of: nitrogen - containing ring (NITROGENOUS BASE), five-carbon sugar, at least one phosphate group
purine: adenine & guanine - two rings
pyrimidine: thymine, uracil, & cytosine - single ring
DNA's sugar: deoxyribose - 2nd carbon has a hydrogen
RNA's sugar: ribose - 2nd carbon has a hydroxyl group
polynucleotide chain has directionality
5' - phosphate group
3 ' - hydroxyl of the last nucleotide
DNA sequences written in 5' to 3' direction
DNA chains found in a double helix - two complementary chains stuck together
sugar - phosphate backbone
bases interior - bound to each other by hydrogen bonds
two strands have opposite directionality - anti parallel orientation
RNA is single-stranded
mRNA - an intermediate between a protein coding gene & its protein product
rRNA - help accelerate chemical reactions, helps mRNA bind to the right spot
tRNA - bring amino acids to the ribosome
RNA is involved in protein synthesis & gene regulation
Unit 2 - Cell Structure and Function 🦠
EUKARYOTIC CELLS
Lysosomes maintain acidic pH for waste disposal.
Peroxisomes carry out oxidation reactions and produce hydrogen peroxide.
Eukaryotic cells have a membrane-bound nucleus, multiple organelles, and linear chromosomes.
ENDOMEMBRANE SYSTEM
Includes endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, lysosomes, and plasma membrane.
Rough ER has ribosomes for protein synthesis, while smooth ER synthesizes lipids.
Golgi apparatus tags, packages, and distributes lipids and proteins.
Lysosomes act as recycling facilities and digest foreign particles.
MITOCHONDRIA AND CHLOROPLASTS
Mitochondria break down molecules for energy.
Chloroplasts use photosynthesis to build sugars.
PLASMA MEMBRANE STRUCTURE
Phospholipid bilayer with cholesterol in the core.
Integral membrane proteins anchor to the core, while peripheral proteins are on the surface.
Carbohydrates form cell markers for recognition.
PROKARYOTE AND EUKARYOTE DIFFERENCES
Eukaryotes have linear DNA, membrane-bound organelles, and are larger.
Prokaryotes have circular DNA, no nucleus, and are smaller.
ENDOSYMBIOSIS THEORY
Scientific concept where one organism lives inside another.
EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX (ECM) AND CELL WALL
Animal cells release materials into the extracellular space forming ECM.
ECM consists of proteins and carbohydrates, with collagen being a major component.
Collagen provides strength and structural integrity to tissues.
Fibronectin acts as a bridge between integrins and collagen.
Cell wall surrounds and protects the cell, with cellulose being a major component.
Other polysaccharides found in the cell wall include hemicellulose and pectin.
PASSIVE TRANSPORT
Does not require energy.
Involves diffusion from high to low concentration.
Small, uncharged substances can easily diffuse across the cell membrane.
Charged ions or large molecules require different transport mechanisms.
ACTIVE TRANSPORT
Requires energy input, usually from ATP.
Involves moving substances against the concentration gradient.
Carrier proteins assist in the process.
BULK TRANSPORT
Involves enclosing substances in membrane-bound vesicles.
Endocytosis moves particles into the cell, while exocytosis moves materials out.
CELL SIZE
Cells have a limitation on how small they can get due to the need for complex materials and organelles
Surface area needs to process inputs and outputs efficiently
Larger surface area to volume ratio (or larger surface area) is more efficient
FACILITATED DIFFUSION
Involves channel proteins or carrier proteins
Allows charged or polar molecules to pass through hydrophobic regions
OSMOSIS AND TONICITY
Osmosis is the movement of water across a semipermeable membrane
Osmolarity refers to the total concentration of solutes in a solution
Hyperosmotic, hypoosmotic, and isosmotic solutions have different solute concentrations
if a cell is placed in a hypotonic solution, there will be a net flow of water
into the cell - cell will GAIN VOLUME
if a cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, there will be a net flow of water
out of the cell - cell will LOSE VOLUME
if a cell is placed in an isotonic solution,
there will be no net flow of water into
or out of the cell - volume will remain stable
Unit 3 - Cellular Energetics ⚡️
ACTIVATION ENERGY
Reactions with negative ∆G require activation energy (Ea) to proceed.
Bonds must be contorted into an unstable shape to reach a high-energy state.
Ea always has a positive value.
Heat is a common source of activation energy.
Higher Ea leads to slower reactions.
ENZYMES
Enzymes bind to reactants to facilitate bond-breaking and bond-forming.
Enzymes do not change whether a reaction is energy-releasing or energy-absorbing.
Enzymes lower the energy of the transition state.
EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND PH
Higher temperature leads to a higher rate of reaction.
Extreme temperatures can denature enzymes.
pH affects the ability of substrates to bind to enzymes.
ENZYME REGULATION
Cofactors and compartmentalization are important for enzyme function.
Feedback inhibition controls key metabolic enzymes.
TYPES OF INHIBITION
Competitive inhibition reduces reaction rate with fewer substrates.
Noncompetitive inhibition prevents the reaction from reaching maximum rate.
METABOLISM
Metabolic pathways involve building up (anabolic) and breaking down (catabolic) processes.
PHOTOSYNTHESIS
Carbon fixation incorporates carbon into organic molecules.
Photoautotrophs use light for self-feeding.
Heterotrophs obtain fixed carbon from other organisms.
LIGHT DEPENDENT REACTIONS AND THE CALVIN CYCLE
Light-dependent reactions occur in the thylakoid membrane and produce ATP and NADPH.
The Calvin Cycle takes place in the stroma and uses ATP and NADPH to fix carbon dioxide and produce glucose.
ATP SYNTHESIS
Electron transport chains drive ATP synthesis in photosynthesis.
Photosystems absorb light and transfer energy to produce ATP and NADPH.
CYCLIC PATHWAY
Chloroplasts switch to a cyclic pathway under certain conditions.
The cyclic pathway may play a photoprotective role in cells with high ATP needs.
REDUCTION
ATP & NADPH convert a 3-pod molecule into 3-carbon sugar (G3P).
REGENERATION
Some G3P molecules make glucose, while others are recycled to regenerate the RuBP acceptor.
CELLULAR RESPIRATION AND REDOX
Catabolic reactions break down large molecules to extract energy.
Electron carriers pick up and drop off electrons.
NAD+ & FAD gain hydrogen atoms when picking up electrons.
They go back to their original form when dropping off electrons.
LEO (lose electrons oxidized) GER (gain electrons reduced) principle.
Energy is released as electrons move to a lower energy level during glucose breakdown.
STEPS OF CELLULAR RESPIRATION
Glycolysis: Glucose converted to pyruvate, ATP is made, NADH is converted to NADH.
Pyruvate Oxidation: Pyruvate converted to acetyl CoA, releasing carbon dioxide and generating NADH.
Citric Acid Cycle: Acetyl CoA undergoes a cycle of reactions, producing GTP, NADH, and FADH2.
Oxidative Phosphorylation: NADH & FADH2 deposit electrons in the electron transport chain, generating ATP.
ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN
Series of proteins in the mitochondria where electrons are passed down via redox reactions.
Energy released is captured as a proton gradient to produce ATP in chemiosmosis.
Oxygen accepts electrons at the end to form water.
ULTIMATE ATP YIELD
Direct products at each stage contribute to a total ATP yield of 30-32.
FERMENTATION AND ANAEROBIC RESPIRATION
Some organisms perform anaerobic respiration using alternative electron acceptors.
Fermentation involves glycolysis and regenerates NAD+ from NADH.
Lactic acid fermentation and alcohol fermentation are two types.
Facultative anaerobes can switch between aerobic and anaerobic pathways, while obligate anaerobes only grow in the absence of oxygen.
Unit 4 - Cell Communication and the Cell Cycle 🔄
CELL SIGNALING
Cells produce proteins (chemical signals) that are secreted into the extracellular space.
Target cell must have the right receptor for the signal molecule to bind.
Ligands are molecules that bind specifically to receptors.
Signaling can occur through paracrine, synaptic, autocrine, and endocrine mechanisms.
Quorum sensing in bacteria involves monitoring population density through chemical signals.
CELL JUNCTIONS
Plasmodesmata in plant cells allow direct cytoplasmic exchange between cells.
Gap junctions in animal cells allow transport of ions and water.
Tight junctions create a watertight seal between adjacent animal cells.
Desmosomes act like spot welds between epithelial cells.
LIGANDS AND RECEPTORS
Intracellular receptors regulate gene activity.
Cell-surface receptors have extracellular, hydrophobic, and intracellular domains.
Ligand-gated ion channels and G-protein coupled receptors are common types of receptors.
SIGNAL RELAY PATHWAYS
Phosphorylation alters protein activity by adding a phosphate group.
Second messengers like calcium ions relay signals within the cell.
GPCRs involve G-proteins and second messengers like cAMP.
Response to signals can lead to changes in gene expression, cell growth, or apoptosis.
HOMEOSTASIS
The body maintains stable internal conditions through negative feedback loops.
Examples include temperature regulation through blood vessel constriction/dilation and sweat gland activity.
Diabetes is caused by a disrupted feedback loop involving insulin and glucose regulation.
Positive feedback loops amplify the starting signal in processes like childbirth and fruit ripening.
Negative feedback loops maintain homeostasis
CELL CYCLE
The cell cycle in eukaryotic cells consists of interphase and mitotic phase.
Interphase includes G1 phase, S phase, and G2 phase where the cell grows, makes copies of organelles and DNA, and prepares for division.
Mitotic phase involves mitosis where chromosomes are separated and cytokinesis where the cytoplasm divides.
During prophase, chromosomes condense and the mitotic spindle forms.
In metaphase, chromosomes align at the metaphase plate and spindle checkpoint ensures correct alignment.
Anaphase involves sister chromatids separating and being pulled towards opposite ends of the cell.
Telophase sees the formation of two new nuclei and decondensation of chromosomes.
The cell cycle is regulated by checkpoints including cell size, nutrients, growth factors, DNA damage, and spindle checkpoint.
Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK’s) drive cell cycle transitions by activating or inactivating target proteins.
CANCER
Cancer is a disease of uncontrolled cell division with characteristics like replicative immortality, metastasis, and angiogenesis.
Most cancers arise from mutations that allow cells to divide quickly, escape controls on division, and avoid programmed cell death.
Benign tumors do not invade other tissues, while malignant tumors can invade other tissues and metastasize.
Cancer development is promoted by overactivation of proto-oncogenes and inactivation of tumor suppressor genes.
Unit 5 - Heredity 👨👩👶
MEIOSIS
Meiosis is the process of cell division for the production of gametes (sex cells)
Daughter cells have half the number of chromosomes as parent cells.
Sperm and egg join to form a complete diploid set.
Homologous chromosomes are similar but not identical chromosome pairs.
Meiosis 1 and meiosis 2 involve separation of homologue pairs and sister chromatids respectively.
Meiosis results in four gametes
Genes are found at specific locations on chromosomes.
Law of independent assortment states that chromosome pairs are sorted into gametes independently.
crossing over is in prophase 1
X-linked inheritance involves genes present on the X chromosome.
Genetic linkage and mapping involve estimating the relative distance apart of genes on a chromosome.
Recombination frequency is used to measure the linkage quantitatively.
PEDIGREES
Pedigree charts show the presence or absence of a trait within a family across generations.
They can be used to determine dominant or recessive traits.
Autosomal and sex-linked traits can be determined using pedigrees.
Inheritance of mitochondrial and chloroplast DNA is also shown in pedigrees.
Differences between nucleus DNA and mitochondrial DNA include high copy number and random segregation
Single-parent inheritance and the impact of mutations in mother's mitochondria on genetic disorders are also discussed.
Polygenic inheritance, environmental effects, variable expressivity, incomplete penetrance, and phenotype plasticity are all factors related to genetic traits and inheritance.
Aneuploidy, euploidy, and polyploidy are also covered.
Chromosomal rearrangements such as duplication, deletion, inversion, and translocation are explained.
Unit 6 - Gene Expression and Regulation 🧬
Eukaryotes have DNA found in the nucleus, while prokaryotes have DNA enclosed in a plasma membrane and located in the nucleoid region
Prokaryotic chromosomes are smaller and circular
The central dogma involves the progression from DNA to RNA
DNA consists of nitrogenous bases (adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine) and is written in the 5' to 3' direction
RNA has uracil instead of thymine and is single-stranded
Prokaryotes belong to Bacteria and Archaea, lack a nucleus, organelles, and have a single circular chromosome
DNA replication is semi-conservative and involves leading and lagging strands, DNA polymerase, primer, helicase, topoisomerase, and ligase
Transcription involves initiation, elongation, and termination, and is the process of copying DNA to make an RNA molecule
Translation decodes mRNA to build a protein with a specific sequence of amino acids, involving initiation, elongation, and termination
Gene regulation in bacteria involves operons, repressors, activators, inducers, and corepressors
Gene regulation in eukaryotes involves responding to growth factors, transcription factors, and various processes such as chromatin accessibility, transcription, RNA processing, translation, and protein activity
Biotechnology techniques include DNA cloning, polymerase chain reaction, gel electrophoresis, and DNA sequencing
Unit 7 - Natural Selection 🐀
EVOLUTION AND NATURAL SELECTION
Evolution involves species changing over time, giving rise to new species, and sharing a common ancestor.
Natural selection occurs because resources are limited in nature, where organisms with heritable traits that favor survival and reproduction leave more offspring.
Traits increase in frequency over generations due to natural selection based on observations such as heritable traits, offspring variation, and more offspring being produced than can survive.
ARTIFICIAL SELECTION
Humans select desired traits in animals or plants, such as the domestication of wolves resulting in the loss of aggressive traits.
GENETIC DRIFT
Mechanism of evolution where allele frequencies change in a population due to chance.
Effects are strongest in small populations, especially after a bottleneck event or when a small group splits from the main population.
NATURAL SELECTION IN POPULATIONS
Natural selection acts on phenotype to cause microevolution in a population.
Fitness is a measure of how organisms survive and reproduce, depending on predation and mate preference.
Types of selection include stabilizing, directional, and disruptive selection.
HARDY-WEINBURG EQUILIBRIUM
When a population is in equilibrium for a gene, it is not evolving, and allele frequencies remain the same.
Assumptions include no mutation, random mating, no gene flow, infinite population size, and no selection.
p² + 2pq + q² = 1
EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
Evidence includes shared ancestry, molecular biology, biogeography, anatomy, fossils, and vestigial features.
Phylogenetic trees show the relationship between species based on common ancestors.
SPECIES AND SPECIATION
Speciation is the process by which new species form, with allopatric speciation occurring due to geographical separation and sympatric speciation occurring without separation.
Prezygotic and postzygotic barriers prevent reproduction between different species.
Unit 8 - Ecology 🌳
BEHAVIOR
Innate Behaviors:
Hardwired in an organism's genes and inherited.
Predicted and performed similarly across members of the same species.
Includes reflex actions, kinesis, taxis, and fixed action patterns.
Learned Behaviors:
Developed through experience.
Animals capable of problem-solving and constructing mental maps.
Includes habituation, imprinting, and conditioned behaviors.
Result of associative learning such as classical and operant conditioning.
ANIMAL COMMUNICATION
Transmits information using changes in the receiving animal.
Helps animals find mates, establish dominance, defend territory, care for young, and coordinate group behavior.
Signals include pheromones, auditory cues, visual cues, and tactile cues.
METABOLIC RATE
Metabolism is the total of biochemical reactions in an organism.
Metabolic rate determines how quickly fuels are broken down.
Endotherms generate metabolic heat to maintain internal temperature, while ectotherms rely on the environment.
Strategies for temperature regulation include thermogenesis, vasoconstriction, and vasodilation.
LIFE HISTORY STRATEGIES
Reflects how species distribute resources among offspring.
Short-lived species reproduce earlier, while long-lived species reproduce later.
Influenced by natural selection and survival events.
FOOD CHAINS AND WEBS
Energy transfer between trophic levels is inefficient.
Producers make their own food, consumers eat other organisms, and decomposers break down organic material.
Follows the 10% rule of energy transfer and can exhibit exponential or logistic growth patterns.
POPULATION REGULATION
Influenced by limiting factors such as competition, density-dependent and density-independent factors.
Cyclical oscillations in population size can result from predation, parasites, and food availability.
INTERACTIONS IN COMMUNITIES
Community includes all populations of different species in a particular area.
Interspecific interactions include competition, predation, mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism.
Niche, competition exclusion principle, and resource partitioning play roles in community structure.
COMMUNITY STURCTURE
Species richness and diversity influence community stability.
Foundation species modify the environment to support other organisms.
Keystone species have a large effect on community structure relative to their abundance.
INVASIVE SPECIES AND HUMAN IMPACTS ON ECOSYSTEMS
Invasive species can alter community structure by outcompeting native species.
Human impacts include land-use change, pollution, introduced species, and resource exploitation.
Unit 1 - Chemistry of Life 🧪
INTRO TO MACROMOLECULES
monomers are the building blocks of polymers
in dehydration synthesis, one monomer forms a covalent bond to another monomer & releases a water molecule
carbs, nucleic acids, & proteins all contain multiple types of monomers
composition & sequence important to function
hydrolysis - bond is broken by adding a water molecule
one molecule gains "H", the other gains "OH"
generally releases energy
CARBOHYDRATES
made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen
monosaccharides - simple sugars, contain 3-7 carbon atoms (ex: glucose, fructose, galactose)
isomers of each other - differ in organization of their atoms
disaccharides - form when two monosaccharides bond via dehydration synthesis (ex : lactose, maltose, sucrose)
polysaccharides - long chains of monosaccharides linked by glycosidic bonds (ex : starch, glycogen, cellulose, chitin)
chain may be branched or unbranched
starch - stored form of sugars in plants
glycogen - storage form of glucose in humans
PROTEIN STRUCTURE
primary structure - sequence of amino acids
secondary - due to interactions of the peptide backbone
beta-pleated sheets - hydrogen bonding
parallel - backbones interact & sequence match
anti parallel - opposite sequences & backbones interact
alpha helix - hydrogen bonds between different layers of the helix
tertiary - due to interactions of side chains
hydrophobic & hydrophilic retract each other
hydrogen bonds might form
quaternary (more than 1 polypeptide) - arrangement of multiple chains together
TRIGLYCERIDES (FATS)
fatty acids - carbon chains (HYDROPHOBIC) & an acidic carboxyl group
glycerol can bond with 3 other fatty acids through dehydration synthesis
results in a triglyceride
ester bonds
saturated fat - saturated by hydrogen
solid at room temp
unhealthy - butter
dense
no double bonds
unsaturated - less hydrogens
liquid at room temp
Kinks formed - less dense - healthier
ex : oils
NUCLEIC ACIDS
DNA is found in the nucleus in eukaryotes
chromosomes - DNA is broken up into long linear pieces
chromosomes contain tens of thousands of genes
located in the nucleoid of prokaryotes
chromosomes are smaller & often ring-shaped
monomers=nucleotides
when combined the resulting chain is called a polynucleotide
made up of: nitrogen - containing ring (NITROGENOUS BASE), five-carbon sugar, at least one phosphate group
purine: adenine & guanine - two rings
pyrimidine: thymine, uracil, & cytosine - single ring
DNA's sugar: deoxyribose - 2nd carbon has a hydrogen
RNA's sugar: ribose - 2nd carbon has a hydroxyl group
polynucleotide chain has directionality
5' - phosphate group
3 ' - hydroxyl of the last nucleotide
DNA sequences written in 5' to 3' direction
DNA chains found in a double helix - two complementary chains stuck together
sugar - phosphate backbone
bases interior - bound to each other by hydrogen bonds
two strands have opposite directionality - anti parallel orientation
RNA is single-stranded
mRNA - an intermediate between a protein coding gene & its protein product
rRNA - help accelerate chemical reactions, helps mRNA bind to the right spot
tRNA - bring amino acids to the ribosome
RNA is involved in protein synthesis & gene regulation
Unit 2 - Cell Structure and Function 🦠
EUKARYOTIC CELLS
Lysosomes maintain acidic pH for waste disposal.
Peroxisomes carry out oxidation reactions and produce hydrogen peroxide.
Eukaryotic cells have a membrane-bound nucleus, multiple organelles, and linear chromosomes.
ENDOMEMBRANE SYSTEM
Includes endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, lysosomes, and plasma membrane.
Rough ER has ribosomes for protein synthesis, while smooth ER synthesizes lipids.
Golgi apparatus tags, packages, and distributes lipids and proteins.
Lysosomes act as recycling facilities and digest foreign particles.
MITOCHONDRIA AND CHLOROPLASTS
Mitochondria break down molecules for energy.
Chloroplasts use photosynthesis to build sugars.
PLASMA MEMBRANE STRUCTURE
Phospholipid bilayer with cholesterol in the core.
Integral membrane proteins anchor to the core, while peripheral proteins are on the surface.
Carbohydrates form cell markers for recognition.
PROKARYOTE AND EUKARYOTE DIFFERENCES
Eukaryotes have linear DNA, membrane-bound organelles, and are larger.
Prokaryotes have circular DNA, no nucleus, and are smaller.
ENDOSYMBIOSIS THEORY
Scientific concept where one organism lives inside another.
EXTRACELLULAR MATRIX (ECM) AND CELL WALL
Animal cells release materials into the extracellular space forming ECM.
ECM consists of proteins and carbohydrates, with collagen being a major component.
Collagen provides strength and structural integrity to tissues.
Fibronectin acts as a bridge between integrins and collagen.
Cell wall surrounds and protects the cell, with cellulose being a major component.
Other polysaccharides found in the cell wall include hemicellulose and pectin.
PASSIVE TRANSPORT
Does not require energy.
Involves diffusion from high to low concentration.
Small, uncharged substances can easily diffuse across the cell membrane.
Charged ions or large molecules require different transport mechanisms.
ACTIVE TRANSPORT
Requires energy input, usually from ATP.
Involves moving substances against the concentration gradient.
Carrier proteins assist in the process.
BULK TRANSPORT
Involves enclosing substances in membrane-bound vesicles.
Endocytosis moves particles into the cell, while exocytosis moves materials out.
CELL SIZE
Cells have a limitation on how small they can get due to the need for complex materials and organelles
Surface area needs to process inputs and outputs efficiently
Larger surface area to volume ratio (or larger surface area) is more efficient
FACILITATED DIFFUSION
Involves channel proteins or carrier proteins
Allows charged or polar molecules to pass through hydrophobic regions
OSMOSIS AND TONICITY
Osmosis is the movement of water across a semipermeable membrane
Osmolarity refers to the total concentration of solutes in a solution
Hyperosmotic, hypoosmotic, and isosmotic solutions have different solute concentrations
if a cell is placed in a hypotonic solution, there will be a net flow of water
into the cell - cell will GAIN VOLUME
if a cell is placed in a hypertonic solution, there will be a net flow of water
out of the cell - cell will LOSE VOLUME
if a cell is placed in an isotonic solution,
there will be no net flow of water into
or out of the cell - volume will remain stable
Unit 3 - Cellular Energetics ⚡️
ACTIVATION ENERGY
Reactions with negative ∆G require activation energy (Ea) to proceed.
Bonds must be contorted into an unstable shape to reach a high-energy state.
Ea always has a positive value.
Heat is a common source of activation energy.
Higher Ea leads to slower reactions.
ENZYMES
Enzymes bind to reactants to facilitate bond-breaking and bond-forming.
Enzymes do not change whether a reaction is energy-releasing or energy-absorbing.
Enzymes lower the energy of the transition state.
EFFECTS OF TEMPERATURE AND PH
Higher temperature leads to a higher rate of reaction.
Extreme temperatures can denature enzymes.
pH affects the ability of substrates to bind to enzymes.
ENZYME REGULATION
Cofactors and compartmentalization are important for enzyme function.
Feedback inhibition controls key metabolic enzymes.
TYPES OF INHIBITION
Competitive inhibition reduces reaction rate with fewer substrates.
Noncompetitive inhibition prevents the reaction from reaching maximum rate.
METABOLISM
Metabolic pathways involve building up (anabolic) and breaking down (catabolic) processes.
PHOTOSYNTHESIS
Carbon fixation incorporates carbon into organic molecules.
Photoautotrophs use light for self-feeding.
Heterotrophs obtain fixed carbon from other organisms.
LIGHT DEPENDENT REACTIONS AND THE CALVIN CYCLE
Light-dependent reactions occur in the thylakoid membrane and produce ATP and NADPH.
The Calvin Cycle takes place in the stroma and uses ATP and NADPH to fix carbon dioxide and produce glucose.
ATP SYNTHESIS
Electron transport chains drive ATP synthesis in photosynthesis.
Photosystems absorb light and transfer energy to produce ATP and NADPH.
CYCLIC PATHWAY
Chloroplasts switch to a cyclic pathway under certain conditions.
The cyclic pathway may play a photoprotective role in cells with high ATP needs.
REDUCTION
ATP & NADPH convert a 3-pod molecule into 3-carbon sugar (G3P).
REGENERATION
Some G3P molecules make glucose, while others are recycled to regenerate the RuBP acceptor.
CELLULAR RESPIRATION AND REDOX
Catabolic reactions break down large molecules to extract energy.
Electron carriers pick up and drop off electrons.
NAD+ & FAD gain hydrogen atoms when picking up electrons.
They go back to their original form when dropping off electrons.
LEO (lose electrons oxidized) GER (gain electrons reduced) principle.
Energy is released as electrons move to a lower energy level during glucose breakdown.
STEPS OF CELLULAR RESPIRATION
Glycolysis: Glucose converted to pyruvate, ATP is made, NADH is converted to NADH.
Pyruvate Oxidation: Pyruvate converted to acetyl CoA, releasing carbon dioxide and generating NADH.
Citric Acid Cycle: Acetyl CoA undergoes a cycle of reactions, producing GTP, NADH, and FADH2.
Oxidative Phosphorylation: NADH & FADH2 deposit electrons in the electron transport chain, generating ATP.
ELECTRON TRANSPORT CHAIN
Series of proteins in the mitochondria where electrons are passed down via redox reactions.
Energy released is captured as a proton gradient to produce ATP in chemiosmosis.
Oxygen accepts electrons at the end to form water.
ULTIMATE ATP YIELD
Direct products at each stage contribute to a total ATP yield of 30-32.
FERMENTATION AND ANAEROBIC RESPIRATION
Some organisms perform anaerobic respiration using alternative electron acceptors.
Fermentation involves glycolysis and regenerates NAD+ from NADH.
Lactic acid fermentation and alcohol fermentation are two types.
Facultative anaerobes can switch between aerobic and anaerobic pathways, while obligate anaerobes only grow in the absence of oxygen.
Unit 4 - Cell Communication and the Cell Cycle 🔄
CELL SIGNALING
Cells produce proteins (chemical signals) that are secreted into the extracellular space.
Target cell must have the right receptor for the signal molecule to bind.
Ligands are molecules that bind specifically to receptors.
Signaling can occur through paracrine, synaptic, autocrine, and endocrine mechanisms.
Quorum sensing in bacteria involves monitoring population density through chemical signals.
CELL JUNCTIONS
Plasmodesmata in plant cells allow direct cytoplasmic exchange between cells.
Gap junctions in animal cells allow transport of ions and water.
Tight junctions create a watertight seal between adjacent animal cells.
Desmosomes act like spot welds between epithelial cells.
LIGANDS AND RECEPTORS
Intracellular receptors regulate gene activity.
Cell-surface receptors have extracellular, hydrophobic, and intracellular domains.
Ligand-gated ion channels and G-protein coupled receptors are common types of receptors.
SIGNAL RELAY PATHWAYS
Phosphorylation alters protein activity by adding a phosphate group.
Second messengers like calcium ions relay signals within the cell.
GPCRs involve G-proteins and second messengers like cAMP.
Response to signals can lead to changes in gene expression, cell growth, or apoptosis.
HOMEOSTASIS
The body maintains stable internal conditions through negative feedback loops.
Examples include temperature regulation through blood vessel constriction/dilation and sweat gland activity.
Diabetes is caused by a disrupted feedback loop involving insulin and glucose regulation.
Positive feedback loops amplify the starting signal in processes like childbirth and fruit ripening.
Negative feedback loops maintain homeostasis
CELL CYCLE
The cell cycle in eukaryotic cells consists of interphase and mitotic phase.
Interphase includes G1 phase, S phase, and G2 phase where the cell grows, makes copies of organelles and DNA, and prepares for division.
Mitotic phase involves mitosis where chromosomes are separated and cytokinesis where the cytoplasm divides.
During prophase, chromosomes condense and the mitotic spindle forms.
In metaphase, chromosomes align at the metaphase plate and spindle checkpoint ensures correct alignment.
Anaphase involves sister chromatids separating and being pulled towards opposite ends of the cell.
Telophase sees the formation of two new nuclei and decondensation of chromosomes.
The cell cycle is regulated by checkpoints including cell size, nutrients, growth factors, DNA damage, and spindle checkpoint.
Cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK’s) drive cell cycle transitions by activating or inactivating target proteins.
CANCER
Cancer is a disease of uncontrolled cell division with characteristics like replicative immortality, metastasis, and angiogenesis.
Most cancers arise from mutations that allow cells to divide quickly, escape controls on division, and avoid programmed cell death.
Benign tumors do not invade other tissues, while malignant tumors can invade other tissues and metastasize.
Cancer development is promoted by overactivation of proto-oncogenes and inactivation of tumor suppressor genes.
Unit 5 - Heredity 👨👩👶
MEIOSIS
Meiosis is the process of cell division for the production of gametes (sex cells)
Daughter cells have half the number of chromosomes as parent cells.
Sperm and egg join to form a complete diploid set.
Homologous chromosomes are similar but not identical chromosome pairs.
Meiosis 1 and meiosis 2 involve separation of homologue pairs and sister chromatids respectively.
Meiosis results in four gametes
Genes are found at specific locations on chromosomes.
Law of independent assortment states that chromosome pairs are sorted into gametes independently.
crossing over is in prophase 1
X-linked inheritance involves genes present on the X chromosome.
Genetic linkage and mapping involve estimating the relative distance apart of genes on a chromosome.
Recombination frequency is used to measure the linkage quantitatively.
PEDIGREES
Pedigree charts show the presence or absence of a trait within a family across generations.
They can be used to determine dominant or recessive traits.
Autosomal and sex-linked traits can be determined using pedigrees.
Inheritance of mitochondrial and chloroplast DNA is also shown in pedigrees.
Differences between nucleus DNA and mitochondrial DNA include high copy number and random segregation
Single-parent inheritance and the impact of mutations in mother's mitochondria on genetic disorders are also discussed.
Polygenic inheritance, environmental effects, variable expressivity, incomplete penetrance, and phenotype plasticity are all factors related to genetic traits and inheritance.
Aneuploidy, euploidy, and polyploidy are also covered.
Chromosomal rearrangements such as duplication, deletion, inversion, and translocation are explained.
Unit 6 - Gene Expression and Regulation 🧬
Eukaryotes have DNA found in the nucleus, while prokaryotes have DNA enclosed in a plasma membrane and located in the nucleoid region
Prokaryotic chromosomes are smaller and circular
The central dogma involves the progression from DNA to RNA
DNA consists of nitrogenous bases (adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine) and is written in the 5' to 3' direction
RNA has uracil instead of thymine and is single-stranded
Prokaryotes belong to Bacteria and Archaea, lack a nucleus, organelles, and have a single circular chromosome
DNA replication is semi-conservative and involves leading and lagging strands, DNA polymerase, primer, helicase, topoisomerase, and ligase
Transcription involves initiation, elongation, and termination, and is the process of copying DNA to make an RNA molecule
Translation decodes mRNA to build a protein with a specific sequence of amino acids, involving initiation, elongation, and termination
Gene regulation in bacteria involves operons, repressors, activators, inducers, and corepressors
Gene regulation in eukaryotes involves responding to growth factors, transcription factors, and various processes such as chromatin accessibility, transcription, RNA processing, translation, and protein activity
Biotechnology techniques include DNA cloning, polymerase chain reaction, gel electrophoresis, and DNA sequencing
Unit 7 - Natural Selection 🐀
EVOLUTION AND NATURAL SELECTION
Evolution involves species changing over time, giving rise to new species, and sharing a common ancestor.
Natural selection occurs because resources are limited in nature, where organisms with heritable traits that favor survival and reproduction leave more offspring.
Traits increase in frequency over generations due to natural selection based on observations such as heritable traits, offspring variation, and more offspring being produced than can survive.
ARTIFICIAL SELECTION
Humans select desired traits in animals or plants, such as the domestication of wolves resulting in the loss of aggressive traits.
GENETIC DRIFT
Mechanism of evolution where allele frequencies change in a population due to chance.
Effects are strongest in small populations, especially after a bottleneck event or when a small group splits from the main population.
NATURAL SELECTION IN POPULATIONS
Natural selection acts on phenotype to cause microevolution in a population.
Fitness is a measure of how organisms survive and reproduce, depending on predation and mate preference.
Types of selection include stabilizing, directional, and disruptive selection.
HARDY-WEINBURG EQUILIBRIUM
When a population is in equilibrium for a gene, it is not evolving, and allele frequencies remain the same.
Assumptions include no mutation, random mating, no gene flow, infinite population size, and no selection.
p² + 2pq + q² = 1
EVIDENCE FOR EVOLUTION
Evidence includes shared ancestry, molecular biology, biogeography, anatomy, fossils, and vestigial features.
Phylogenetic trees show the relationship between species based on common ancestors.
SPECIES AND SPECIATION
Speciation is the process by which new species form, with allopatric speciation occurring due to geographical separation and sympatric speciation occurring without separation.
Prezygotic and postzygotic barriers prevent reproduction between different species.
Unit 8 - Ecology 🌳
BEHAVIOR
Innate Behaviors:
Hardwired in an organism's genes and inherited.
Predicted and performed similarly across members of the same species.
Includes reflex actions, kinesis, taxis, and fixed action patterns.
Learned Behaviors:
Developed through experience.
Animals capable of problem-solving and constructing mental maps.
Includes habituation, imprinting, and conditioned behaviors.
Result of associative learning such as classical and operant conditioning.
ANIMAL COMMUNICATION
Transmits information using changes in the receiving animal.
Helps animals find mates, establish dominance, defend territory, care for young, and coordinate group behavior.
Signals include pheromones, auditory cues, visual cues, and tactile cues.
METABOLIC RATE
Metabolism is the total of biochemical reactions in an organism.
Metabolic rate determines how quickly fuels are broken down.
Endotherms generate metabolic heat to maintain internal temperature, while ectotherms rely on the environment.
Strategies for temperature regulation include thermogenesis, vasoconstriction, and vasodilation.
LIFE HISTORY STRATEGIES
Reflects how species distribute resources among offspring.
Short-lived species reproduce earlier, while long-lived species reproduce later.
Influenced by natural selection and survival events.
FOOD CHAINS AND WEBS
Energy transfer between trophic levels is inefficient.
Producers make their own food, consumers eat other organisms, and decomposers break down organic material.
Follows the 10% rule of energy transfer and can exhibit exponential or logistic growth patterns.
POPULATION REGULATION
Influenced by limiting factors such as competition, density-dependent and density-independent factors.
Cyclical oscillations in population size can result from predation, parasites, and food availability.
INTERACTIONS IN COMMUNITIES
Community includes all populations of different species in a particular area.
Interspecific interactions include competition, predation, mutualism, commensalism, and parasitism.
Niche, competition exclusion principle, and resource partitioning play roles in community structure.
COMMUNITY STURCTURE
Species richness and diversity influence community stability.
Foundation species modify the environment to support other organisms.
Keystone species have a large effect on community structure relative to their abundance.
INVASIVE SPECIES AND HUMAN IMPACTS ON ECOSYSTEMS
Invasive species can alter community structure by outcompeting native species.
Human impacts include land-use change, pollution, introduced species, and resource exploitation.