Study Guide for Final Exam: BIOL 1020/1027: Fall 2021
Unit 1
Chapter 1: Evolution, Themes of Biology, Scientific Inquiry
1.1 The study of life reveals common themes
-Review commonalities of all living organisms: evolution,
order/organization, reproduction, growth and development, energy
processing, internal regulation, response to the environment.
-Biosphere → molecule (and all levels in between)
-Domain → species (and all taxa in between)
1.2 Evolution accounts for the unity and diversity of life
-The central theory of biology is evolution by means of natural selection
-It explains why cilia are the same in lungs and paramecia, for example
-It explains the nested hierarchy of organismal groups (tigers are cats,
carnivores, mammals, vertebrates, animals, and eukaryotes)
1.3 Scientists make observations and form and test hypotheses
-Scientific method: observation, hypothesis, experiment, and analysis
Chapter 2: Chemical context of life
2.1 Matter consists of chemical elements in pure form and in combinations
called compounds
-Notation of elements (C, N, Na), the periodic table, elements most
important for life
2.2 An element’s properties depend on the structure of its atoms
-Subatomic particles (p+, n0,e-): their mass and charge
2.3 Chemical bonds
-interactions between electrons: covalent, polar covalent, ionic,
hydrogen bonds, van der Waals interactions
2.4 Chemical reactions
-making and breaking chemical bonds, dynamic equilibrium
Chapter 3: Water and life
3.1 Polar covalent bonds àhydrogen bonding
3.2 Four emergent properties of water contribute to Earth’s suitability for life
-ice floats, surface tension, specific heat, solvent
3.3 Acids and bases
-Water dissociates into H+ and OH-, pH scale: 0-14, pH=-log10[H+],
acids and bases, buffers, effects of acid precipitation
Chapter 4: Introduction to Organic Chemistry
4.1 Carbon compounds
-“organic” compounds because of role in living organisms, but not
restricted to living organisms (mechanism vs. vitalism)
4.2 Diversity of carbon compounds because of four bonds
-hydrocarbon chains (just carbon and hydrogen) can vary in length of
chain, branching, placement of double bonds, etc.
-types of isomers, structural, cis-trans, enantiomers
4.3 Functional groups
- molecules that change chemistry of organic molecules,
- frequently found in living organisms
-OH, COOH, C=O, -SH, -NH2, -PO42- ,CH3
Chapter 5: Structure and function of large biological molecules
5.1 Macromolecules are polymers, built from monomers
- Repeating units make life possible
- Formed by dehydration synthesis, broken down by hydrolysis
5.2 Carbohydrates are fuel and building material
-Monomers: simple sugars, mono- and disaccharides. (CH2O)n is basic
formula, all have carbonyl group (aldoses, ketoses) and carbon
backbone (triose, pentose, hexose)
-Polysaccharides: cellulose (most abundant, used for structure in plants),
glycogen (used for storage in animals) and starch (AKA amylose, used
for storage in plants), chitin (used for structure in fungi and arthropods)
-linkages between monomers may vary, alpha and beta forms
5.3 Lipids are diverse and hydrophobic
-fatty acids (FA) are primarily long hydrocarbon chains with COOH
group.
-FA may have double bonds in cis- or trans- (unsaturated)
-saturated FAs, longer chains, trans-unsaturated more likely to be solid at
room temperature
-Steroids are four-ring lipids, fats are triacylglycerol
-Functions: insulation, long-term energy storage, membranes
(phospholipids), steroids
-not true polymers
5.4 Proteins are diverse and have many functions
-subunits are amino acids (AAs), amine group (NH2) + alpha carbon +
carboxyl group (-COOH) + R-group (substitution on alpha carbon)
-AAs are grouped by chemistry of R-group (polar, nonpolar, charged)
-LOTS of functions! Enzymes, structure, hormones, storage of AAs, etc.
-peptide bonds between COOH and NH2 form primary structure
-hydrogen bonding between peptide bonds in different parts of chain
form secondary structure
-interactions between R-groups form tertiary structure
-interactions between polypeptide chains form quaternary structure
5.5 Nucleic acids store, transmit and express hereditary information
-two types àRNA and DNA
-Monomers are nucleotides= nitrogenous base + 5-C sugar + PO42-
-RNA has ribose (AUCG), DNA has deoxyribose (ATCG)
-purines = A,G; pyrimidines = C,T,U
-Sugar phosphate backbone, 5’à3’, antiparallel in DNA
UNIT 2
Chapter 6: Tour of the Cell
6.1 Microscopy and other biochemical tools to study cells
-Compound light microscopes, TEM and SEM
-Centrifugation
6.2 Eukaryotic cells have internal membranes to compartmentalize functions
-Prokaryotes: NO membrane bound organelles, smaller (1-room house)
-Eukaryotes: membrane-bound organelles including nucleus (many-room
house)
6.3 Nucleus and ribosomes
-Nuclear envelope = dbl membrane, contains DNA, nucleolus, pores,
nuclear lamina
-Ribosomes: small and large subunits, may be attached to RER. Different
sized subunits in proks and euks
6.4 Endomembrane system
-Rough endoplasmic reticulum and smooth endoplasmic reticulum (RER
and SER) different functions (what are they?)
-Golgi apparatus (=Golgi bodies), shipping and receiving, cis- and trans-faces.
Stack of pancakes
-Vesicles and vacuoles
6.5 Endosymbiont Theory of mitochondria and chloroplasts
- Both have inner and outer membranes, own DNA and ribosomes,
reproduce independently from other organelles/structures
-mitochondria: the powerhouse of the cell. Cristae, matrix,
intermembrane space, home of Krebs cycle and oxidative
phosphorylation in euks
-chloroplasts: the REAL powerhouse of the cell. Runs on solar energy
(photosynthesis), stacks of thylakoids=grana, made of membranes,
6.6 Cytoskeleton
-Three types of members, all made of structural proteins
-Microtubules: made of alpha and beta tubulin, aid in mitosis, power
flagella and cilia, move vesicles on “monorail”, resist compaction
-Microfilaments: made of actin, muscle contraction (with myosin),
contractile, cortical, cleavage furrow,
-Intermediate filaments: in between, may be made of different proteins
but keratin is typical. Make up nuclear lamina and ECM
6.7 Extracellular components
-junctions: desmosomes, tight junctions, gap junctions, plasmodesmata
-ECM=extra cellular matrix, helps with cell communication and cell
signaling
Chapter 7: Membrane structure and function
7.1 Fluid mosaic model of cell membrane structure
-Phospholipid bilayer studded with proteins
-Proteins function as transporters, cell-cell recognition, signal
transduction, anchoring enzymes together, cell-cell joining, and
anchorage to ECM
7.2 Selective permeability
-Small, non-polar molecules (like gasses) can pass through phospholipid
bilayer
- Polar, charged, and large molecules require transport via protein
channels
-Tonicity: hypotonic =lower solute concentration, isotonic = equal solute
concentration, hypertonic = higher solute concentration.
7.3 Passive transport
-Diffusion is movement from an area of high solute concentration to an
area of lower solute concentration
-Osmosis is diffusion of water across a semipermeable membrane with
its concentration gradient, from hypotonic to hypertonic
-Channel proteins and carrier proteins can allow solute molecules to
pass through without investment of energy as long as they flow with their
concentration gradient (hi to lo)
7.4 Active transport
-Solutes that flow against their concentration gradients require input of
energy, typically through ATP hydrolysis
-Active transport can generate concentration gradients than can do
cellular work (like in oxidative phosphorylation)
7.5 Bulk transport
-Large molecules/particles require energy to move into/out of cell even
with concentration gradient
-Exocytosis= moving out
-Phagocytosis, pinocytosis, receptor-mediated endocytosis = moving in.
Chapter 8: Intro to metabolism
8.1 Laws of thermodynamics
-Energy is limited, so cells must manage energy resources =bioenergetics
-Energy comes in many forms: e.g. kinetic, chemical, electromagnetic,
potential
-Metabolism = all cellular chemical reactions. Anabolism= building up,
catabolism = breaking down
-1st law of thermodynamics: conservation of energy. “Energy can be
transferred or transformed, but it cannot be created or destroyed”
-2nd law of thermodynamics: “Every transfer or transformation of energy
is <100% efficient, and increases the entropy of the universe”
8.2 Gibbs free energy and spontaneous/non-spontaneous reactions
-Gibbs free energy measures the embodied energy of molecules and can
be used to determine if a chemical reaction will happen
spontaneously/exothermically/releasing energy or nonspontaneously/
endothermically/required input of energy. The net
change in Gibbs free energy (ΔG) is negative for exothermic reactions
8.3 ATP powers cellular work
-ATP hydrolysis (breaking off the third PO4
2- group) is a strongly
exothermic reaction (-7.3 kcal/mole). This energy release can make a
net overall endothermic reaction exothermic by producing a
phosphorylated intermediate.
8.4 Enzymes are cellular catalysts
-Enzymes are able to speed up chemical reactions without being
changed in the reaction =catalyst.
-Enzymes function by lowering activation energy (EA), and cannot
change the ΔG for a reaction (because the G for reactants and products
are physical properties)
-Enzymes bind to substrates (reactant molecules) to form an enzyme substrate
complex. In the active site of an enzyme, conditions that speed
up the reaction occur, e.g. change in pH, straining substrate bonds,
aligning substrates.
-Enzymes can be inhibited by molecules in the active site (competitive
inhibition) or away from the active site (noncompetitive inhibition)
8.5 Enzyme regulation controls cell metabolism
-Multipartite enzymes can be regulated ALLOSTERICALLY, away from
the active site, by activation (all active sites function more efficiently) or
inhibition (all active sites function less efficiently), or by cooperativity
(one active sites makes other active sites more efficient)
-Enzymes can be inhibited by their products, or by products of other
enzymes in the metabolic pathway
-Enzymes can also be anchored together in membranes to make
metabolic pathways more efficient
Chapter 9: Cellular respiration and fermentation
9.1 Redox reactions are the essence of catabolism
-REDOX = oxidation-reduction reactions = moving of electrons.
-Oxidation is Loss of electrons, Reduction is Gain of electrons (OIL RIG)
-NAD+ is an electron shuttling molecule, NADH is the reduced form
9.2 Glycolysis converts glucose to pyruvate
-Glycolysis is universal, all known organisms perform glycolysis.
-Glycolysis is “sugar splitting”
-Glycolysis requires an investment of 2 ATP to yield 4 ATP.
-Glycolysis has two stages, energy investment and energy payoff
-Reactants are glucose, 2ATP, 2 NAD+
-Products are 2 pyruvate, 4 ATP, 2 NADH 2 H+
9.3 Citric acid cycle completes oxidation of pyruvate
-Pyruvate oxidation (PyrOx) also happens after glycolysis
-PyrOx converts pyruvate into acetyl CoA and moves it into
mitochondrion
-1 molecule of CO2 is released/pyruvate in PyrOx, and 1 molecule of
NADH is produced
-Acetyl CoA introduces the remains of glucose into the Citric Acid Cycle
-Citric Acid Cycle has eight steps, produces two more molecules of CO2,
and yields 1 ATP per turn of the cycle. Also, 2 NADH and 1 FADH2
9.4 Oxidative phosphorylation and chemiosmosis
-OxiPhos uses the electrons from NADH and FADH2 to pump H+ into the
mitochondrion’s intermembrane space using the electron transport chain
(ETC). The protons can only return to the mitochondrial matrix via ATP
synthase, which produces about 28 ATP/glucose. This produces the
most ATP
-Oxygen gas accepts the electrons now depleted in potential energy,
and forms water
9.5 Fermentation and anaerobic respiration
-Both of these occur in the absence of oxygen.
-Fermentation: keeps glycolysis running by putting electrons from NADH
onto pyruvate, producing either lactate, or ethanol and CO2, and
recycling NAD+ back to glycolysis (glycolysis stops, the organism dies)
-Anaerobic respiration includes glycolysis, PyrOx, Krebs cycle, and ETC.
The main difference is the final electron acceptor. It’s not oxygen, but
may be any of a number of different molecules that aren’t as efficient as
oxygen (like sulfate, for example)
Chapter 10: Photosynthesis
10.1 Photosynthesis converts light energy to chemical energy
-Plants, different types of eukaryotic algae (green, red, brown, golden),
cyanobacteria and other types of bacteria are capable of
photosynthesis
-Light energy is part of the spectrum of electromagnetic radiation, which
ranges from high energy, short wavelength (gamma rays) to low
energy, long wavelength (radio waves). Visible light ranges from about
700 nm (violet) to 400 nm (red)
-Photosynthetic pigments include chlorophyll a & b, and carotenoids and
absorb different wavelengths of light, rather than reflecting or
transmitting. Chlorophyll appears green because green light is reflected
and transmitted, not absorbed.
-Red and blue light are the most effective for photosynthesis in plants
10.2 Light reactions convert photons to ATP and NADPH
-Photosynthesis consists of light reactions and Calvin cycle.
-Light reactions occur in thylakoids
-Two photosystems: photosystem II (PSII) and photosystem I (PSI)
-Linear e- flow used both photosystems (II then I). Starts with hydrolysis
(water splitting) to harvest high energy electrons, produces O2 gas
(breathe deeply!) Electrons power ETC to produce proton gradient, to
drive ATP synthase (make ATP), shuttled to PS I, then to ferredoxin (Fd)
and then to NADP+ reductase to NADPH
-Cyclic e- flow only produces ATP, uses PSI. No O2, no NADPH
10.3 Calvin cycle reduces CO2 to sugar
-The Calvin cycle occurs in the stroma
-Rubisco =Ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase-oxygenase, most
abundant enzyme on Earth,
-1. CO2 fixation to ribulose bisphosphate (RuBP, 5 C molecule)
-2. Carbon is reduced by electrons from NADPH (consumes ATP)
-3. 1 molecule of G3P is released and RuBP is regenerated
10.4 Photorespiration happens and plants don’t like it.
-Rubisco evolved in a low O2, high CO2 environment. In high oxygen
concentration (like at present), oxygen competes with carbon dioxide
for the active site of rubisco. Oxygen fixation is a wasteful process:
photorespiration
-C3 plants (typical plants) grow better in cool and humid habitats, but in
hot dry climates, plants need to close stomata, which leads to high O2
concentration inside the leaf
-C4 plants have specialized anatomy that separates O2 and rubisco
spatially.
-CAM plants open stomata at night, fix CO2 into organic acids that
release the CO2 during the daytime: temporal separation of O2 and
rubisco.
UNIT 3: Genetics
Chapter 12: The Cell Cycle
Cell division: know the purposes (reproduction, growth and development,
repair)
Stages of mitosis: the order and what happens in each stage. Prophase,
prometaphase, metaphase, anaphase, telophase (and cytokinesis)
Three parts of interphase: G1, S, G2
Binary fission: cell division in prokaryotes NO MITOSIS IN PROKARYOTES.
Variants of mitosis exist in eukaryotes that aren’t plants or animals that are
somewhere between binary fission and the most derived forms (i.e. in plants
and animals)
Endogenous and exogenous (internal and external) factors in regulating the
cell cycle.
Cytoplasmic factor controls cell cycle, cyclins and cyclin-dependent kinases
(CDKs) form maturation-promoting factor (MPF).
Platelet derived growth factor (PDGF) can stimulate cell division exogenously.
Cells display anchorage dependence and density dependence
Cancer cells may lose anchorage dependence and density dependence. They
can produce their own growth factors or produce growth factors that trigger
other cells to divide (metastasis).
Definitions: Genome, chromosome, chromatin, sister chromatid, somatic cell,
gamete, zygote, centromere, mitosis, cytokinesis, cleavage furrow, cell plate,
kinetochore and nonkinetochore microtubules, CDK, cyclin, MPF, PDGF,
anchorage dependence, density dependence, cancer, transformation, benign,
malignant tumor, metastasis.
Chapter 13. Meiosis and Sexual life cycles
Understand the stages and purposes of meiosis
Understand the different life cycles of eukaryotes (gametic meiosis, zygotic
meiosis, alternation of generations)
Crossing over (synapsis), occurs only during prophase I, anaphase I:
separation of homologous chromosomes. Anaphase II: separation of sister
chromatids.
Understand similarities and differences between mitosis and meiosis.
Crossing over, independent assortment, random fertilization all contribute to
genetic variability
Definitions: Genetics, variation, heredity, meiosis, homologous chromosomes,
genes, gametes, locus (pl. loci), asexual reproduction, clone, sexual
reproduction, somatic cell, karyotype, autosomes, sex chromosomes, haploid,
diploid, zygote, recombinant chromosome
Chapter 14. Mendel and the gene idea.
Particulate vs. blending hypotheses for inheritance.
Gregor Mendel: monk who experimented with garden peas in the mid 1800s.
Why were peas a good model organism?
Law of segregation: two forms of a character (alleles) separate during gamete
formation and are distributed to the gametes. (purple and white flowers)
Law of independent assortment: genes for different traits are not always
inherited together. (round yellow peas and green wrinkled peas)
Know the difference between complete dominance, incomplete dominance,
and codominance. What are pleiotropy and epistasis?
Pedigree analysis can be used to track inheritance patterns in humans. Know
how to interpret a pedigree.
Definitions: trait, character, true-breeding, homozygous, heterozygous,
hybridization, P-generation, F1-generation, F2-generation, alleles, dominant,
recessive, Punnett square, phenotype, genotype, testcross, monohybrid,
dihybrid, complete dominance, incomplete dominance, codominance, multiple
alleles, pleiotropy, epistasis, quantitative characteristics, polygenic inheritance,
multifactorial, pedigree, carrier, sickle-cell allele.
Chapter 15: The chromosomal basis of inheritance.
Thomas Hunt Morgan: geneticist of the early 20th century. Worked with fruit
flies (Drosophila melanogaster) (Why were fruit flies a good model organism?)
Morgan produced many mutant forms of D. melanogaster. The “normal” fruit
flies he called “wild-type”. When he crossed white-eye mutants with red-eyed
wild type flies, he got all red eyed progeny in the F1 generation. The progeny
from the crosses in the F2 generation were 3 red:1 white, but only the males
had white eyes. This suggested that the white-eye gene was located on the X-chromosome.
Fruit flies, like humans, have and XY sex determination schema, but other
organisms do not (what are examples?)
For an X-linked, recessive characteristic, males will express the recessive
phenotype much, much more frequently than females. Examples in humans
include red-green colorblindness and hemophilia.
In females, one copy of the X chromosome is shut off, inactivated, and forms a
Barr body. During development, certain cell lineages in the same organism
will express different phenotypes if she is heterozygous for a locus on the X
chromosomes. This is how we get the calico phenotype in cats and lobsters.
Gene linkage: In a dihybrid cross, Morgan observed ratios of progeny that
differed from Mendel’s expectations.
When he crossed grey-bodied, normal winged flies with black-bodied, vestigial
winged flies, he obtained all grey-bodied, normal winged flies (as predicted by
Mendel for the F1 generation). When he crossed these progeny, he got a very
different ratio of offspring. He concluded that the genes for body color and
wing type were linked together, on the same chromosome.
Alfred Sturtevant (Morgan’s student) developed a linkage map by performing
crossed and calculating recombination frequencies. He discovered four linkage
groups, which provided further evidence for the chromosomal basis of
inheritance (b/c fruit flies have four sets of homologous chromosomes).
Many genetic disorders are the result of errors at the chromosomal level, either
due to entire chromosomes being misassigned to gametes (aneuploidy) or to
damage to parts of chromosomes.
Aneuploidy results when the homologs or sister chromatids are not properly
attached to the microtubules, and one cell receives all or none of the
corresponding chromosome (non-disjunction).
Plants are more tolerant of aneuploidy than animals, and are usually
polyploid.
Trisomy 21 (Down syndrome), Klinefelter syndrome (XXY), Triple X syndrome
(XXX), and Turner syndrome (XO) are all examples of human aneuploid
conditions.
Parts of chromosomes can be deleted, inverted, translocated, or duplicated.
This can lead to structures like Philadelphia chromosomes and conditions such
as cri du chat.
Definitions: chromosomal theory of inheritance, homozygous, heterozygous,
hemizygous, sex-linked gene, X-linked gene, Y-linked gene, Barr body,
recombinant, aneuploidy, nondisjunction, monosomy, trisomy, deletion,
inversion, duplication, translocation, reciprocal translocation.
Chapter 16: The molecular basis of inheritance
Watson and Crick (and Wilkins and Franklin) published on the structure of
DNA as a double helix with the nitrogenous bases hydrogen bonding to each
other in the central part and the sugars and phosphates forming a covalently
bonded backbone
Proof that DNA is the genetic material that can transfer cellular information
chemically.
Griffith: Infected mice with two strains of bacteria, one pathogenic (disease causing,
S strain) and the other harmless (R-strain). Live S strain alone killed
mice. Live R strain alone did not. Heat killed S strain alone did not. Heat
killed S strain + live R strain killed the mice, and Griffith reisolated live S strain.
Conclusion: something in the dead bacteria was being picked up by the live
bacteria and transforming them.
Hershey and Chase: Used radioactively-labeled protein (35S) and DNA (32P) to
infect E. coli bacteria with bacteriophage. Only the P-label was detected in the
bacteria. Conclusion: DNA must be getting into the bacteria and infecting
them, not protein.
Chargaff: discovered different organisms have different ratios of the four
nucleotides, but A=T and G=C. Conclusions: support for DNA as genetic
material and data about composition “Chargaff’s rules”
Watson and Crick: Used X-ray crystallography data from Rosalind Franklin.
They elucidated the structure of DNA as a double helix with a sugar-phosphate
backbone and nitrogenous bases hydrogen bonding in the center. Sugar
phosphate backbones on either side run antiparallel, 5’à3’ on one strand and
3’à5’ on the opposite strand. Purines base-pair with pyrimidines and vise
versa. A and T form two hydrogen bonds, and C and G form three hydrogen
bonds.
Meselson and Stahl: Demonstrated the semiconservative nature of DNA
replication (each strand has new nucleotides added so each replicated
molecule is half old and half new).
DNA replication begins at the origins of replication (ori sites) that are
recognized by the DNA replication machine. A replication bubble opens as
the two strands are pulled apart by helicase and the strands held apart by
single-strand binding proteins. Topoisomerase prevents overwinding of the
DNA, like the strands of a string.
In order to make new DNA, there must be a free 3’-OH group to add the new
nucleotides onto. To do this there must be a short (5-10 nucleotide) primer of
RNA added by the enzyme primase. This produces a free 3’-OH that DNA
polymerase III can build upon. The rate of elongation (adding of nucleotides)
is faster in prokaryotes than eukaryotes. The nucleotides that are added are
deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates (dNTPs), similar to the ATP produced in
cellular respiration only with deoxyribose for the 5 carbon sugar rather than
ribose in ATP. When dNTPs are added, the energy to catalyze the reaction
comes from cleaving off the two terminal phosphates as a molecule of
pyrophosphate.
Chapter 17: Gene expression
Beadle and Tatum’s experiments with Neurospora crassa (bread mold fungus)
demonstrate one geneàone polypeptide hypothesis.
Gene expression: the central dogma of molecular biology. DNA is transcribed
to produce RNA (mRNA), mRNA is translated to produce polypeptide.
The genetic code:
mRNA encodes amino acids (AA) via triplet codeà3 nucleotide words makes
a CODON.
64 combinations of 3 nucleotides (4X4X4), -3 stop codons (UAA, UAG, UGA)
and 1 start codon (AUG, also encodes AA methionine)
There is redundancy but no overlap in AA coding
The code is almost universal; any organism can express a gene from any other
organism.
Differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic gene expression
Transcription and translation are spatially separated in euks
Transcription and translation are simultaneous in proks.
Transcription: DNAàmRNA
Initiationàelongationàtermination
Promoter region is bound by transcription factors that bind RNA polymerase II,
RNA pol II reads the template strand of the DNA in the 3’à5’ direction and
makes a complementary RNA strand in the 5’à3’ direction
Prokaryotes have a terminator sequence to terminate transcription
Eukaryotes have a polyadenylation signal (-AAAAAAAAAAAA)
Post-transcriptional processing in euks
Polyadenylation
G-capping at 5’ end
Splicing of introns by snRNPs and the spliceosome
Alternate splicing leads to different gene products (doesn’t happen in proks)
Translation
Occurs at ribosomes in cytoplasm
Also, Initiationàelongationàtermination
tRNA carries amino acids and has anticodons that complement codons in
mRNA
Ribosomes made up of protein and rRNA, have small and large subunits.
Three sites in large subunit, A-amino; P-peptide, and E-exit. mRNA is read in
5’à3’ direction
Mutations
Point mutations affect one or a few nucleotides
Single nucleotide changes may result in silent, missense, or nonsense mutation
INDELs may cause frameshift mutations (affecting every AA downstream from
the mutation)
Unit 4: Evolution -Study Guide
Chapter 22: A Darwinian View of Life
22.1 The Darwinian revolution challenged traditional views of a young Earth
inhabited by unchanging species
Darwin’s predecessors and contemporaries: Aristotle and the Old Testament claim that
species are fixed (unchanging). Linnaeus -taxonomy. Cuvier –paleontology and
catastrophism. Hutton and Lyell –geology and uniformitarianism. Lamarck –evolution
by means of acquired characteristics. Malthus –population growth in humans. A.R.
Wallace –biogeography and similar ideas to Darwin.
22.2 Descent with modification by natural selection explains the adaptations of
organisms and the unity and diversity of life
Darwin’s voyage on HMS Beagle influenced his ideas that would lead him to write
“Origin”. His focus was on adaptation, or “descent with modification”.
Darwin’s theory explains: the unity of life, the diversity of life, and the match between
organisms and their environment.
Darwin viewed the history of life as a tree with the branches indicating shared
common ancestry (“I think” figure, elephant phylogeny [family tree])
He also looked at artificial selection (human modification of plant and animal species)
Two observations lead Darwin to two inferences which are the crux of his theory.
O1. Members of a population vary in their inherited traits. O2. All species are
capable of producing more offspring than the environment can support, and most
offspring fail to survive and reproduce. Therefore, I1. Individuals whose inherited
traits give them a higher likelihood of surviving and reproducing will tend to leave
more offspring than individuals lacking those heritable traits, and I2. Differential
reproduction will lead to the accumulation of favorable traits over generations.
22.3 Evolution is supported by an overwhelming amount of scientific evidence
DIRECT OBSERVATION OF EVOLUTIONARY CHANGE: MRSA (methicillin resistant
Staphylococcus aureus)
HOMOLOGY: Similarity in structure (anatomical, physiological, molecular,
behavioral) resulting from shared common ancestry. E.g. forelimb structure in different
mammals (cat, bat, whale, human). Comparative embryology reveals anatomical
homologies and vestigial structures not seen in adults such as pharyngeal pouches and
a post-anal tail.
ANALOGY: Similarity in structure due to convergent evolution, NOT shared common
ancestry. Analogy occurs when similar environments enforce similar adaptive
constraints, e.g. flying squirrels and sugar gliders in the US and Australia, or cactuses
and euphorbs in deserts in N. America and Africa.
FOSSILS: An extensive fossil record shows the origin of new groups, extinctions, and
transitions within groups. E.g. the transition of cetaceans (whales and dolphins) from
land to sea.
BIOGEOGRAPHY: The geographic distribution of species provides evidence for
evolution. E.g., the genus of oaks (Quercus) has radiated into 100s of oak species
distributed throughout the northern hemisphere. Endemism occurs when a species is
found only a certain area. E.g. the watercress darter (Etheostoma nuchale) is a fish
that is endemic to the Black Warrior River of Alabama. Islands frequently have many
endemic species.
Chapter 23: Evolution of Populations
The population is the smallest unit of evolution. Microevolution is the change in allele
frequencies in a population over generations and it is driven by two random factors
(genetic drift and gene flow) and a non-random factor: natural selection.
23.1 Genetic variation makes evolution possible
Genetic variation occurs due to changes in the nucleotide sequences in DNA.
Variation can be discrete (all or none: purple/white) or quantitative (occurring along
a spectrum: height). There are many ways to measure genetic variation in a
population, such as average heterozygosity or nucleotide variability.
New alleles for genes form via mutation (silent, missense, nonsense) or gene
duplication.
23.2 The Hardy-Weinberg (HW) equation can be used to test whether a population is
evolving
The HW principle describes a situation where a population is NOT evolving and allele
and genotypic frequencies DO NOT change from one generation to another. It is a
NULL MODEL (meaning it is a useful way to describe a population that is NOT
evolving). For a gene to be maintained at HW equilibrium, five conditions must be
met:
1. No mutations
2. Random mating (no sexual selection)
3. No gene flow (no immigration or emigration)
4. No genetic drift (large population size)
5. No natural selection
23.3 Natural selection, genetic drift, and gene flow can alter allele frequencies in a
population
The three biggest contributors to shifts in allele frequencies (microevolution) are
natural selection, genetic drift, and gene flow.
NATURAL SELECTION increases the frequency of beneficial alleles, and diminishes the
frequency of harmful alleles (see Ch. 22).
GENETIC DRIFT (GD) is the result of a random decrease in population size, typically
through founder effect or genetic bottleneck. The smaller a sample from a parent
population, the greater the deviation in allele frequency. Alleles may be lost from a
population. The founder effect occurs when a new small number of individuals leave
a large population and start a new population in a new location, like an island. A
genetic bottleneck may occur when populations become fragmented or a catastrophic
event randomly destroys a large number of individuals in a population.
GD is most significant in small popualtions. GD causes random changes in allele
frequency. GD can lead to loss of genetic diversity and allele fixation (only one allele
for a gene present in the population)
GENE FLOW (GF) is the spread of alleles throughout a population and between
populations. It can increase or decrease the fitness of a population, but it is a random
process.
23.4 Natural selection is the only mechanism that consistently causes adaptive
evolution
Mutation, GD and GF are random processes that contribute to changes in allele
frequency in population. Natural selection is NOT RANDOM.
NOTE: DARWIN did NOT coin the phrase “survival of the fittest”. Survival and
reproduction together comprise fitness, so the term is circular, and implies a “high-bar”
for fitness. Survival of the fit-enough also applies.
Three modes of selection are typical when allele frequencies shift: directional,
disruptive, and stabilizing. Know the differences.
Sexual selection leads to mating success and can lead to sexual dimorphism (male
and female appear different).
Genetic variation can be preserved by diploidy or balancing selection.
Chapter 24: The Origin of Species
Speciation =origin of new species =divergence of old species
24.1 The biological species concept (BSC) emphasizes reproductive isolation
A biological species is “is a group of populations whose members have the potential
to interbreed in nature and produce viable, fertile offspring; they do not breed
successfully with other populations”. The key to species membership is GENE FLOW.
Species are kept distinct by REPRODUCTIVE ISOLATION, though HYBRIDS may
occur. Reproductive isolation is classified as PRE-ZYGOTIC or POST-ZYGOTIC.
PRE-ZYGOTIC: Habitat isolation, temporal isolation, behavioral isolation, mechanical
isolation, gametic isolation.
POST-ZYGOTIC: Reduced hybrid viability, reduced hybrid fertility, hybrid breakdown
BSC is limited in that it can’t resolve organisms that are asexual or extinct. Other
species concepts include morphological species concept, ecological species concept,
and phylogenetic species concept.
24.2 Speciation can take place with or without geographic separation
Allopatric (other country) vs. sympatric (same country) speciation
Allopatric speciation is much more common. Allopatric barriers not universal but
depend on species
Regions with more geographic barriers tend to be more biodiverse.
Sympatric speciation may result from polyploidy (autopolyploidy or allopolyploidy),
habitat differentiation, or sexual selection
Chapter 53. Intro to Ecology/Population Ecology
At the end of this chapter, you should be able to:
1. Define ecology
2. Describe the levels of specialization within ecology (global àorganismal)
3. Define density, dispersion, demographics,
4. Contrast the most common dispersion patterns and the underlying biological
principles that produce them