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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.

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.

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