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BASIC STRUCTURE AND PROMINENT FUNCTIONS OF VERTEBRATE INTEGUMENT INTRODUCTION The integument or the outer cover of the body is commonly referred to as the skin. Together with its derivatives it makes up the integumentary system. It is continuous with the mucous membrane lining the mouth, eyelids, nostrils, rectum and the openings of the urino-genital ducts. The skin functions primarily to cover and protect the tissues lying beneath it. In other words, it forms the external protective covering of an animal. Forms interface between organism and external environment. Part that the predator sees first, and which offers the first line of defense. Abundantly supplied with sensory nerve endings, which are affected by environmental stimuli and play an important role in communication. General metabolism of the body, temperature regulation and water loss. Character of the skin and its derivatives shows variation in different regions of the body, in different individuals, in the same individual as age advances and in different groups of vertebrates. The type of environment whether aquatic or terrestrial is of importance in connection with these variations. The evolution of vertebrate integument is correlated with the transition of vertebrates from an aquatic to a terrestrial environment. Nevertheless, basic similarities exist in the integument of all vertebrates. INTEGUMENT PROPER In Annelids, Arthropods, integument consists of single layer of cells, the EPIDERMIS, together with an outer non-cellular CUTICLE, secreted by the cells. Annelids have a body covered with an external thin collagenous cuticle (never shed or molted). In Arthropods, the chitinous and rigid cuticle makes up the exoskeleton. Periodic shedding of this cuticle is termed Ecdysis. THE VERTEBRATE SKIN DIFFERS FROM INVERTEBRATE SKIN TWO LAYERS – Outer epidermis derived from ectoderm Inner dermis or corium of mesodermal origin. The relative amount of the two layers varies with the environment. EPIDERMIS – the epidermis is made of stratified epithelium (several layers of columnar epithelium cells). These cells are held together tightly by minute intercellular bridges found on the surface of cells. The innermost layer is stratum Malpighii or stratum germinativum placed over a thin basement membrane. These cells divide constantly to produce new cells. Move upwards, tend to become flattened, protoplasm becomes horny (keratinisation). In fishes and amphibians, this keratinised layer forms a cuticle, but in amniotes, it forms stratum corneum, of hard, horny, flat, cornified cells made largely of keratin, which is tough, waterproof and insoluble protein. It affords protection against mechanical injuries, fungal and bacterial attacks and prevents desiccation. In many Tetrapoda, this layer is shed periodically in pieces or all at once. No stratum corneum in cyclostomes and fishes (since they are fully aquatic) here the epidermis has mucous glands, secreting mucus to keep the skin slimy and protects it from bacteria. The epidermis has no blood vessels and is nourished by capillaries in the dermis. The epidermis rests on a thin basement membrane which separates it from the dermis Dermis has an outer loose layer and inner dense layer Made up of dense connective tissue having cells, muscles, blood vessels, lymph vessels, collagen and elastic fibres, and nerves. Amphibians and reptiles -collagen fibres at right angles in three planes Birds and mammals, they have an irregular arrangement. Substances pass by diffusion from the dermis to the epidermis. Skin contains pigment, if present in epidermis, it occurs as a diffuse substance or as granules. If in dermis, then in the form of granules in special branching cells called chromatophores. The pigment can either collect as a central ball making the skin lighter or spread out into all the branches making the skin darker, thus, chromatophores bring about colour variations. Chromatophores are of many kinds, Melanophores that contain brown to black pigment Lipophores or xanthophores which contain yellow red fatty pigments Iridocytes or guanophores contain crystals of guanine which reflect light. Under dermis, the skin has subcutaneous loose areolar tissue which separates the skin from the underlying muscles, it may contain fat and muscles, especially in mammals. Integument of Anamnia shows a decrease in thickness and also a decrease in the degree of ossification. These are of advantage in allowing greater mobility and in amphibians, they permit respiration by the skin. But in Amniota, the skin becomes progressively thicker to prevent loss of water and to retain body heat. STRUCTURE OF INTEGUMENT IN CYCLOSTOMATA Epidermis is multi-layered (stratified) but has no keratin. It has three types of unicellular gland cells: mucus glands (secrete mucus), club cells (scab-forming cells) and granular cells (unknown function). Below epidermis is the cutis formed of collagen and elastin fibres. Star- shaped pigment cells are also present in the cutis. STRUCTURE OF INTEGUMENT IN PISCES The epidermis has several layers of simple and thin cells, but there is no dead stratum corneum. The outermost cells are nucleated and living. The stratum Malpighii replenishes the outer layers of cells which have some keratin. Unicellular goblet or mucous gland cells are found in the epidermis, as in all aquatic animals. The mucous makes the skin slimy reducing friction between the body surface and water, protects the skin from bacteria and fungi and assists in the control of osmosis. Multicellular epidermal glands like poison glands and light producing organs may also be found. The epidermis rests on a delicate basement membrane. The dermis contains connective tissue, smooth muscles, blood vessels, nerves, lymph vessels and collagen fibres. The connective tissue fibres are generally not arranged at right angles but run parallel to the surface. Scales are embedded in the dermis and projected above the epidermal surface. The colours of fishes are due to chromatophores and iridocytes. STRUCTURE OF INTEGUMENT IN AMPHIBIA: The epidermis has several layers of cells, six to eight cells in thickness and is divisible into three layers: stratum corneum, stratum germinativum and a basal portion in contact with the basement membrane. The outermost layer is a stratum corneum, made of flattened, highly keratinised cells. Such a dead layer appears first in amphibians and is best formed in those which spend a considerable time on land. The stratum corneum is an adaptation to terrestrial life (protects body and prevents excessive loss of moisture). In ecdysis, stratum corneum is cast off in fragments or as a whole in some. (moulting / desquamation i.e., removal of unicellular sheet of stratum corneum). The dermis is relatively thin in amphibians, it is made of two layers - upper loose stratum spongiosum and a lower dense and compact stratum compactum. Connective tissue fibres run both vertically and horizontally. Blood vessels, lymph spaces, glands and nerves are abundant in the stratum spongiosum. There are two kinds of glands, multicellular mucous glands and poison glands in the dermis, but they are derivatives of the epidermis. Mucous gland produces mucus (slimy protective covering, helps in respiration). Amphibian skin is an important organ of respiration. Poison glands produce a mild but unpleasant poison which is protective. In the upper part of the dermis are chromatophores. (melanophores and lipophores) Ability of the skin for changing colour to blend with the environment is well developed. INTEGUMENT IN REPTILIA. The integument is thick and dry, it prevents any loss of water, it has almost no glands. The only glands present are scent glands for sexual activity. The epidermis has a well-developed stratum corneum well adapted to terrestrial life. The horny scales of reptiles are derived from this layer. Ecdysis is necessary to remove dead outer layers, hence scales are shed periodically in fragments or cast in a single slough as in snakes and some lizards Scales often form spines or crests. Below the epidermal scales are dermal bony plates or osteoderms in tortoises, crocodiles and some lizards (Heloderma). The dermis is thick and has an upper layer and a lower layer, upper layer has abundance of chromatophores in snakes and lizards. Lower layer has bundles of connective tissue in which collagen fibres lie at right angles. Leather of high commercial value can be prepared from the skin of many reptiles like lizards, snakes and crocodiles. Many lizards and snakes have elaborate colour patterns, they may be for concealment or as warning colours. There is marked colour change in certain lizards such as chameleon, the colour may change with the environment for concealment or it may change in courtship or threat. The ability of chameleons and some other animals to change colour is known as metachrosis. (metachromatism) In Calotes, chromatophores are controlled by the posterior lobe of pituitary whereas in chameleons they are controlled by the Autonomic Nervous System. INTEGUMENT IN BIRDS Thin, loose, dry and devoid of glands. There is only a uropygial gland at the base of the tail, its oil is used for preening (to clean and tidy its feathers with its beak) and waterproofing the feathers (aquatic birds) Epidermis is delicate except on shanks and feet where it is thick and forms epidermal scales. The rest of the body has a protective covering of epidermal feathers. The keratin producing powers of the epidermis are devoted to producing feathers and scales. The dermis is thin and has interlacing connective tissue fibres, abundant muscle fibres for moving feathers, blood vessels and nerves. The dermis has an upper and lower compact layer, between which is a vascular layer, the dermis also contains fat cells. The skin has no chromatophores. Pigment is found only in feathers and scales. Colour patterns in birds are vivid (concealment, recognition and sexual stimulation) Colours are produced partly by pigments and partly by reflection and refraction from the surface of the feathers. INTEGUMENT IN MAMMALS Skin is elastic and waterproof, much thicker than in other animals, especially the dermis is very thick and is used in making leather. Epidermis is thickest in mammals. Outer stratum corneum containing keratin, cells not dead as believed before. Below this is stratum lucidum (barrier layer), chemical called eleidin Below this stratum granulosum, darkly staining granules of keratohyalin Below this is stratum spinosum whose cells are held together by spiny intercellular bridges. Lastly stratum germinativum which rests on a basement membrane Dermis is best developed in mammals. Upper layer is papillary layer made up of elastic and collagen fibres with capillaries in-between, thrown into folds called dermal papillae, especially in areas of friction Greater lower part of dermis is reticular layer, having elastic and collagen fibres. In both layers there are blood vessels, nerves smooth muscles, certain glands tactile corpuscles and connective tissue fibres in all directions. Below dermis the subcutaneous tissue contains a layer of fat cells forming adipose tissue In the lowest layer of epidermis there are pigment granules, no pigment bearing chromatophores in mammaIs (in man, branching dendritic cells or melanoblasts) FUNCTIONS OF THE INTEGUMENT ▪ PROTECTION ▪ TEMPERATURE CONTROL ▪ FOOD STORAGE ▪ SECRETION ▪ EXCRETION ▪ SENSATION ▪ RESPIRATION ▪ LOCOMOTION ▪ DERMAL ENDOSKELETON ▪ SEXUAL SELECTION 1. Protection: The integument forms a covering of the body and is protective. It protects the body against entry of foreign bodies and against mechanical injuries. It protects the tissues against excessive loss of moisture, this is very important because both aquatic and terrestrial animals are dependent upon water in their bodies for various metabolic activities. The integument forms protective derivatives, such as scales, bony plates, layer of fat, feathers and hair which reduce the effect of injurious contacts. In some animals the skin shows protective colouration which makes the animals resemble their environment, thus, making them almost invisible to their enemies. Poison glands of toads, slippery skin of aquatic animals and an armour of spines of some mammals are protective devices of the integument. The skin forms a covering which prevents the passage of water and solutes in one of the following ways: (a) By formation of cuticle in Protochordata and embryos of fishes and amphibians, (b) By secreting a coat of mucus in fishes and aquatic amphibians, and (c) By formation of keratin layers in the epidermis of tetrapoda. Keratin is formed from the cytoplasm of degenerating cells of the epidermis which finally form a layer of horny stratum corneum. 2. Temperature Control: Heat is produced constantly by oxidation of food stuffs in tissues. This heat is distributed evenly by the circulating blood. The body heat is lost constantly with expired breath, with faeces and urine, and from the surface of the skin. The integument regulates heat and maintains a constant temperature in endothermal animals. In birds the heat is regulated by adjustment of feathers which retain a warm blanket of air, when feathers are held close to the body, they remove warm air and body cooled, when feathers are fluffed out, they keep the warm air enclosed. In mammals, constant evaporation of sweat regulates the body heat. In cold weather contraction of skin’s blood capillaries reduces the loss of body heat. In some animals, fat in the skin prevents loss of heat because it is a non-conductor of heat. 3. Food Storage: The skin stores fat in its layers as reserve food material which is used for nourishment in times of need. In whales and seals the fat of the skin forms a thick layer, called blubber which is not only reserve food but also maintains the body temperature. 4. Secretion: The skin acts as an organ of secretion. Glands of the skin are secretory. In aquatic forms there are secretory mucous glands whose secretions keep the skin moist and slippery. In mammals, sebaceous glands secrete oil which lubricates the skin and hairs. Mammary glands produce milk for nourishment of the young. In birds uropygial glands secrete oil for preening the feathers. Odours of scent glands attract the opposite sex. Lacrymal glands’ secretion wash the conjunctiva of eyeball in mammals. Ear wax (cerumen) secreted by the glands of auditory meatus greases the eardrums and avoids insects to enter the canal. 5. Excretion: The integument acts as an organ of excretion. Shedding of the corneal layer during ecdysis removes some waste substances. In mammals metabolic waste (salts, urea and water) is removed from the blood by means of sweat. Chloride secreting cells are found in gills of marine fishes. 6. Sensation: The skin is an important sense organ because it has various kinds of tactile cells and corpuscles which are sensory to touch, temperature changes, heat, cold, pressure and pain. 7. Respiration: In amphibians, the moist skin acts as an organ of respiration, in frogs the respiratory function of the skin is greater than that of the lungs. 8. Locomotion: Derivatives of the integument bring about locomotion in some animals, such as the fins of fishes aid in locomotion in water, the web of skin in the feet of frogs and aquatic birds aid in swimming, feathers of the wings and tail of birds are used for flying, and extensions of the integument forming “wings” of flying lizards, extinct pterodactyls, flying squirrels and bats. 9. Dermal Endoskeleton: The skin contributes to the endoskeleton. It forms the dermal bones of vertebrates and also forms parts of the teeth. Endoskeleton of head protects the brain and sense organs. In the body it protects the soft, tender viscera. 10. Sexual Selection: The skin acts as an organ of sexual selection. It provides the feathers of birds which often have brilliant colours which are for sexual attraction. Some integumentary glands of mammals produce odours far attracting the opposite sex. Antlers of male deer distinguish it from female. Besides the above functions, mammalian skin synthesizes the vitamin D with the help of Sebum of sebaceous glands. Brood pouches beneath skin in some fishes and amphibians protect unhatched eggs. Nasal glands of tetrapods, keep the nostrils free of dirt and water. Skin also has the power of absorption of oils, ointments, etc
Updated 22d ago
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1. Adaptation Of An Animal 2. Adaptation Of A Plant 3. Abscisic Acid 4. Actin 5. Amniotic Egg 6. Amylase 7. Angiosperm 8. Animal That Has A Segmented Body 9. Annelid 10. Anther & Filament Of Stamen 11. Arthropod 12. Archaebacteria 13. Autotroph 14. Auxin Producing Area Of A Plant 15. Basidiomycete 16. Batesian Mimicry 17. Biological Magnification 18. Bryophyte 19. C 4 Plant 20. Calvin Cycle 21. Carbohydrate – Fibrous 22. Cambium 23. Cellulose 24. Chitin 25. Chlorophyta 26. Cnidarian 27. Coelomate 28. Conifer Leaf 29. Commensalism 30. Connective Tissue 31. Cuticle Layer Of A Plant 32. Deciduous Leaf 33. Deuterostome 34. Dicot Plant With Flower & Leaf 35. Diploid Chromosome Number 36. Echinoderm 37. Ectotherm 38. Endosperm 39. Endotherm 40. Enzyme 41. Epithelial Tissue 42. Ethylene 43. Eubacteria 44. Eukaryote 45. Exoskeleton 46. Fermentation 47. Flower Ovary 48. Frond 49. Fruit – Dry With Seed 50. Fruit – Fleshy With Seed 51. Gametophyte 52. Gastropod 53. Genetically Modified Organism 54. Gibberellins 55. Glycogen 56. Gymnosperm Cone 57. Haploid Chromosome Number 58. Heartwood 59. Hermaphrodite 60. Insect 61. K-Strategist 62. Keratin 63. Leaf – Gymnosperm 64. Lepidoptera 65. Lichen 66. Lignin 67. Lipid Used For Energy Storage 68. Littoral Zone Organism 69. Long-Day Plant 70. Meristem 71. Modified Leaf Of A Plant 72. Modified Root Of A Plant 73. Modified Stem Of A Plant 74. Monocot Plant With Flower & Leaf 75. Muscle Fiber – Striated 76. Mutualism 77. Mycelium 78. Mycorrhizae 79. Myosin 80. Nematode 81. Niche 82. Nymph Stage Of An Insect 83. Parasite 84. Parenchyma Cells 85. Phloem 86. Pine Cone – Female 87. Platyhelminthes 88. Pollen 89. Pollinator 90. Porifera 91. Prokaryote 92. Protein – Fibrous 93. Protein – Globular 94. Protostome 95. Pteridophyte 96. R-Strategist 97. Radial Symmetry 98. Rhizome 99. Scale From Animal With Two-Chambered Heart 100. Spore 101. Sporophyte 102. Stem – Herbaceous 103. Stem – Woody 104. Stigma & Style Of Carpel 105. Tendril Of A Plant 106. Thorn Of A Plant 107. Unicellular Organism 108. Vascular Plant Tissue 109. Xerophyte 110. Xylem (copy)
Updated 207d ago
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1. Adaptation Of An Animal 2. Adaptation Of A Plant 3. Abscisic Acid 4. Actin 5. Amniotic Egg 6. Amylase 7. Angiosperm 8. Animal That Has A Segmented Body 9. Annelid 10. Anther & Filament Of Stamen 11. Arthropod 12. Archaebacteria 13. Autotroph 14. Auxin Producing Area Of A Plant 15. Basidiomycete 16. Batesian Mimicry 17. Biological Magnification 18. Bryophyte 19. C 4 Plant 20. Calvin Cycle 21. Carbohydrate – Fibrous 22. Cambium 23. Cellulose 24. Chitin 25. Chlorophyta 26. Cnidarian 27. Coelomate 28. Conifer Leaf 29. Commensalism 30. Connective Tissue 31. Cuticle Layer Of A Plant 32. Deciduous Leaf 33. Deuterostome 34. Dicot Plant With Flower & Leaf 35. Diploid Chromosome Number 36. Echinoderm 37. Ectotherm 38. Endosperm 39. Endotherm 40. Enzyme 41. Epithelial Tissue 42. Ethylene 43. Eubacteria 44. Eukaryote 45. Exoskeleton 46. Fermentation 47. Flower Ovary 48. Frond 49. Fruit – Dry With Seed 50. Fruit – Fleshy With Seed 51. Gametophyte 52. Gastropod 53. Genetically Modified Organism 54. Gibberellins 55. Glycogen 56. Gymnosperm Cone 57. Haploid Chromosome Number 58. Heartwood 59. Hermaphrodite 60. Insect 61. K-Strategist 62. Keratin 63. Leaf – Gymnosperm 64. Lepidoptera 65. Lichen 66. Lignin 67. Lipid Used For Energy Storage 68. Littoral Zone Organism 69. Long-Day Plant 70. Meristem 71. Modified Leaf Of A Plant 72. Modified Root Of A Plant 73. Modified Stem Of A Plant 74. Monocot Plant With Flower & Leaf 75. Muscle Fiber – Striated 76. Mutualism 77. Mycelium 78. Mycorrhizae 79. Myosin 80. Nematode 81. Niche 82. Nymph Stage Of An Insect 83. Parasite 84. Parenchyma Cells 85. Phloem 86. Pine Cone – Female 87. Platyhelminthes 88. Pollen 89. Pollinator 90. Porifera 91. Prokaryote 92. Protein – Fibrous 93. Protein – Globular 94. Protostome 95. Pteridophyte 96. R-Strategist 97. Radial Symmetry 98. Rhizome 99. Scale From Animal With Two-Chambered Heart 100. Spore 101. Sporophyte 102. Stem – Herbaceous 103. Stem – Woody 104. Stigma & Style Of Carpel 105. Tendril Of A Plant 106. Thorn Of A Plant 107. Unicellular Organism 108. Vascular Plant Tissue 109. Xerophyte 110. Xylem
Updated 208d ago
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1.3 Macro Intro Breaking a bond = hydrolysis Build/make a bond = remove water, dehydration synthesis 1.4 Macros Nucleic Acids DNA and RNA Made from nucleotides A, T, C, G, U Proteins Amino acids Polypeptide To make it into a protein you need to fold and modify Carbs Monosaccharides Ex. glucose Polysaccharides Ex. starch, cellulose, glycogen, chitin Lipids nonpolar Ex. phospholipids Saturated (butter) vs unsaturated (oil) 1.5 Macros structure + function Uses covalent bonds between nucleotides Main structure want it to be covalent bond so its strong Bases use hydrogen bonds DNA is antiparallel, equally spaced read in opposite directions Protein Primary - Amino acids Secondary - Pleats and coils (hydrogen bonding) Tertiary - Interactions between the R-groups (unique shapes) Quaternary - 2 or more chains (any bond) Carbs Chains of sugars using covalent bonds 1.6 Nucleic Acids DNA Deoxyribose sugar T Double stranded RNA Ribose sugar U Single stranded Common Both use nucleotides A, G, C U2 Cells Organelles Ribosomes = protein synthesis Found on rough ER or free Show common ancestry Endoplasmic Reticulum Rough = ribosomes Smooth = makes lipids, detox Golgi complex Protein trafficking Packaging and transport of proteins mitochondria Site of cellular respiration, ATP production Double membrane Own DNA circular DNA Chloroplast Site of photosynthesis Own circular DNA Lysosome Hydrolytic enzymes Apoptosis Vacuole Large in plants Small in animal cells 2.3 Cell Size Small cells Inc surface area to volume ratio More efficient Better for transportation, elimination of waste, heat, exchanges, etc 2.4 Plasma Membrane Small and nonpolar can pass through easily (oxygen and carbon dioxide) 2.5 Membrane Permeability Selectively permeable Transport proteins needed for larger polar molecules Cell wall - plants, fungi, and prokaryotes Provides extra support and protection 2.6 Transport Passive transport (high to low) Does Not require any energy Diffusion Osmosis Facilitated diffusion (uses proteins) Active transport (low to high) Require energy Exocytosis Moving things in or out Endocytosis 2.7 Facilitated diffusion Uses integral proteins Ex. aquaporins, ion channels, neurons Proteins also used for active transport 3.6 Cellular Respiration Glycolysis Within the cytoplasm Evidence of common ancestry because all organisms go through glycolysis Glucose to 2 pyruvates Energy investment phase and energy payoff phase Get pyruvate, ATP, and NADH Fermentation (ONLY IF NO OXYGEN) To reset everything Takes NADH and turns it back to NAD+ to keep running glycolysis Grooming Phase Modify and turn it into Acetyl CoA Kreb Cycle With in the matrix Making electron carriers (NADH and FADH2) Inner mitochondrial membrane Where the electron transport chain takes place 3.7 Fitness Max offspring Variation can increase fitness Unit 4 Cell Communications 4.1 Signal Transduction Pathway Autocrine (signal yourself) Paracrine (next to you) Endocrine (far from you) 4.2 Signal Transduction Pathway intro Reception → transduction → response Reception: ligand attacks to the receptor The process by which a cell detects a signal in the environment. Ex. ligand binds to G protein which activates Transduction: phosphorylation cascade and amplifies signal The process of activating a series of proteins inside the cell from the cell membrane. Response: The change in behavior that occurs in the cell as a result of the signal. Second messenger - first is ligand, second messenger is for amplification (cAMP - each can have their own phosphorylation cascades) 4.3 STP Responses Turn gene off/on Apoptosis Cell growth start/stop 4.4 changes to STP Mutations (respond too much or too little to the signal molecule attacking) Chemical can release that can interfere with your STP resulting with death 4,5 Feedback Respond to changes (homeostasis) Negative (reverse change) Positive (increasing the change) 4.6 / 4.7 Cell Cycle/ Regulation G1 - growth G1 checkpoint (determine if you go to S phase or to G0 non dividing state) S - DNA replication G2 - organelle replication and growth G2 checkpoint - make sure the cell is ready for division M phase - Mitosis PMAT Prophase - nucleus disappears Metaphase - lined up at the equator Anaphase - replicated chromosomes are split Telophase - move to opposite ends M-phase checkpoint - checks to make sure division is correct Cytokinesis - final split into 2 Cyclin increases during S and peaks at M Cdk binds with cyclin to produce mpf Level of cyclins lets cell know where it’s supposed to be Tells your cell you are at your full maturity ready to produce Unit 5 Heredity 5.1 / 5.2 Meiosis Increases genetic variation Crossing over (Prophase 1) Reduction division haploid (half the amount of genetic information) Random fertilization Nondisjunction (meiosis 1 all 4 cells are irregular / meiosis 2 half the cells are irregular) Independent Assortment Increases genetic diversity 5.3 Mendelian Genetics A = dominant allele a = recessive allele Genotype - combination of letters (AA, Aa, aa) Phenotype = looks Law of Segregation - Aa → A / a Law of Independent Assortment (Aa Bb → AB, Ab, aB, ab) Sex Linked Located on a sex chromosome Usually X Sex linked recessive is more common in males because they only have one X Sex linked dominant both can inherit easily Incomplete dominance - blending Codominance - both alleles expressed 5.5 Environmental Effects Ex. weather, pH of soil 5.6 Chromosomal Inheritance Mutation → inherited Some have no effect, negative effect, neutral effect, 6.1 Gene Expression and Regulation 6.1 DNA Double stranded Deoxyribose T RNA Ribose Single stranded U 6.2 Replication (S-Phase) 5’ → 3’ Ligase - binds the new bases together Helicase - unwinds the DNA DNA poly - put down the new bases Primase - makes primer Topoisomerase - stops DNA from getting overwind Leading - able to all go in one go Lagging - many primers and okazaki fragments 6.3 Transcription and Processing Nucleus RNA poly makes primary transcript (pre mRNA) from DNA Template strand is the one the DNA is using to build Non template strand one not being used RNA processing Introns are removed Exons are put together Add cap and tail for protection Alternative splicing 6.4 Translation Ribosome Reverse Transcriptase retroviruses Ex. HIV RNA genomes use reverse transcriptase to make DNA from RNA 6.5 Regulation of Gene Expression Signal to unpack the gene Transcribed (transcription factors differ by cells and allows different gens to turn on) RNA editing Translation Polypeptide folding All need to go correctly or else the gene wont be expressed Acetylation of histones - adding acetyl group causes the DNA to be more loose making it easier to read Methylation of histones - adding methyl groups to the DNA causes it to be tighter and harder to read Enhancers - enhances transcription and causes it to occur more often Activators - dont bind to RNA poly it binds to the enhancer Depends of which genes and stage of development Epigenetics - one gene controls another gene Inducible Operon - usually off Repressor is bound to operon and lactose inactivates Repressible Operon - usually on Repressor is usually inactive, trp activates repressor 6.6 Gene Expression and Cell Specialization Promoter region (TATA box) alerts RNA poly that its a promoter region and where to attach Negative regulation - blocks promoter so RNA poly cant attach small RNA - can turn certain genes off 6.7 Mutations Increase normal gene function Decrease normal gene function Can lead to new phenotypes Cancer can be due to overproduction of growth factors, hyperactive proteins (requires many mutations Can have positive, negative, or no effect Causes of mutation Exposures Random Errors in DNA replication Increase or decrease in chromosome number Prokaryotes Transformation - pick up random DNA Transduction - virus accidentally is filled with bacterial DNA Conjunction - mating bridge/sex pilus 6.8 Biotechnology Electrophoresis - separates DNA by charge and size PCR - artificial DNA replication, increases amount of DNA sample Transformation - you make the bacteria take up a gene you're interested in Unit 7 7.1 Natural Selection natural / selective pressures decide survival Reproductive fitness (max out your kids) 7.2 Natural Selection Acts on phenotypes which can affect genotype Preferring brown fur over white decreases white fur allele frequency Environmental changes → selective pressures 7.3 Artificial Selection Humans select (ex. Dogs, livestock, etc) Convergent evolution - not closely related but because of similar environments you look alike Divergent - had a recent common ancestor but you started becoming separate Niche partitioning - choosing separate niches so you dont have to compete with others 7.4 Population Genetics Mutation - variety and evolution Genetic drift - random event that alters the gene pool Bottleneck effect - an event causes a large part of the population to die off and the remaining left repopulate with a different gene pool Founder effect - the og are there but some leave/get separated 7.5 Hardy Weinburg Large population No natural selection Random mating No mutation No gene flow P+q = 1 p2 + 2pq +q2 = 1 (AA) + (Aa) + (aa) = 1 7.6 Evidence of Evolution Fossils DNA (molecular homologies) Anatomy Vestigial structure (things we dont need anymore) (evidence of common ancestry) Biogeography (species are found all around the world)(kangaroos, genetic code, glycolysis) 7.7 Common Ancestry All Eukaryotes Membrane bound organelles Linear DNA and chromosomes Genes with introns 7.8 Continuing Evolution Genomic changes over time Continuous changes in fossils Evolution of antibiotic resistance Disease evolution 7.9 Phylogeny / Cladistics Phylogeny = included time Cladograms = just traits Shared characters Derived characters Molecular (DNA, proteins, amino acids) are more accurate than characteristics Parsimony - the one with the fewer events on it, the frewer you have the more likely it is 7.10 Speciesation Pre-zygotic Mechanical - parts dont match Gametic - egg doesnt match Geographical - dont live in the same place Temporal - ready to mate at different times Behavioral - specific type of mating display is not there Post-zygotic Hybrid sterility - the hybrid made is healthy but they cannot have children (mule) Hybrid breakdowns - the hybirds are okay but after a generation or two they cannot produce anymore Hybrid inviability - hybrid is produced but cannot survive long enough to reproduce Sympatric New species arrises in the original location Gradualism - slow steady evolution Allopstric Separation leads to speciation Punctuated - long periods of evolution with no change then rapid change 7.11 Extinction Can be natural or human caused If something goes extinct it can open up opprotunities for other species 7.12 Variation Genetic diversity Diversity of the ecosystem = inc biodiversity Less likey to be 7.13 Origins of Life on Earth No oxygen on earth 4.6 billion No ozone layer Tons of UV radiation High ocean levels Vooacanic eruptions RNA was the first genetic material DNA is dependant of RNA in
Updated 319d ago
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microorganisms are organisms too small to be seen with a naked eye Includes bacteria, fungi, Protozoa, microscopic, algae, and viruses Or pathogenic causes diseases Majority are helpful Decompose organic waste (planet not be filled with dead organic waste) Produce industrial chemicals, such as ethanol and acetone Produces fermented food like vinegar, cheese, and bread Produce products used in manufacturing and disease treatment History of microbiology Greek air with bad older causes diseases or could catch disease by breathing bad air Romans believed in Miasma hypothesis and created a complex sanitation infrastructure to deal with sewage Build aqueducts that brought freshwater in Giant sewer, Cloaca Maxima that carried waste away and into the river Tiber Greek physician HIPPOCRATES (460-370 BC) Father of Western medicine Dismiss the idea that diseases come from supernatural forces Diseases have natural causes from patients environment THUCYDIDES observed that survivors of Athenian plague where immune to the infection after MARCUS TERENTIUS VARRO propose the diseases can be caused by certain minute disease, causing animals to small to be seen The birth of microbiology Antonine Van Leeuwenhoek: first, to develop a lens powerful enough to view microbes The golden age of Michael biology 1857-1914 Louis Pasteur French Chemist Introduce discrimination, pasteurization and vaccines for the treatment of diseases, mostly in rabies and animals and humans Rober Koch German Physician First to demonstrate the connection between a single, isolated micro, and a known human disease Discovered the bacteria Anthrax (Bacillos anthracis) Cholera (Vibrio Cholera) Tuberculosis (mycobacterium tuberculosis) Microbiology toolbox Microscopes produce magnified images of microorganisms Stains and dyes are used to add color to microbes, so they are more visible in a microscope Growth Media are used to grow microorganisms in the lab Petri dish flat lidded dish typically 10 to 11 cm in diameter and 1 - 1.5 cm Test tube, cylindrical, plastic or glass two used to grow microbes in broth or semi solid or solid gross media Bunsen burner metal apparatus creates a flame used to sterilize equipment Micro incinerators, have same sterilization purpose with no open flame Inoculation loop handle with a small wire loop on one end Binomial nomenclature: where the first part of a name is the genus name and the species name after. Naming and Classifying Microorganisms Carl Linnaeus- Binomial nomenclature Each organism has two names the genus and species ESCHERICHIA COLI Honors the discoverer, Theodore Escherichia Describes the bacterium’s habitat the large intestine or colon Three Domains: Bacteria (prokaryote) , Archaea(prokaryote), and Eukarya ( Eukaryote) 4 major kingdoms: Protists ( “catchall”) Fungi Plants Animals Prokaryotic Microorganisms: BACTERIA (unicellular) found in nearly every habitat on earth: including within and on humans Most are harmless or helpful They don’t have a nucleus or nuclei Their genetic material is located in the nucleoid and not a true nucleus Most have cell walls that have peptidoglycan Coccus: Circular Bacillus: little rods Vibrio: slightly curved rod Coccobacillus: oval shaped Spirillum: spiral Spirochete: long loose helical spiral (cork screw) Prokaryotic Microorganisms: ARCHAEA (unicellular) found in nearly every habitat on earth Include extreme environments that are very cold, hot, basic, or very acidic Lack Peptidoglycan cell walls instead are made of Pseudomurein No known human pathogen, completely harmless EUKARYOTIC MICROORGANISMS cells have a nucleus (major feature where the genetic material is enclosed) Uni or multicellular The kingdoms are Protists, fungi, plants, and animals Plant like protists= algae Animal like protists= protozoans EUKARYOTIC MICROORGANISMS: PROTISTS eukaryotes that are not plant, animals, or fungi Ex: ALgae and Protozoa Algae: Cellulose Cell Walls Use photosynthesis for energy PROTOZOA Very diverse Live as free entities or as “parasites” May be motile via pseudopods, cilia, or flagella Some are pathogens FUNGI yeast are unicellular Good (fermentation) Cell walls are made of Chitin Not photosynthetic (no pigments to trap energy from sun) they depend on other organisms VIRUSES ( do not fall into any domains) ACELLULAR (not composed of cells) They have either DNA or RNA core Core is surrounded by a protein coat and genetic material ( can be enclosed in a lipid envelope) Replicate only when they are in a living host (“obligate parasite”) Terms that fall under Microbiology: Bacteriology: study of bacteria Mycology: study of fungi Protozoology: study of Protozoa Virology: the study of viruses Parasitology: the study of Protozoa and parasitic worms
Updated 412d ago
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chitin
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Fungi (Topic 4)
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4 main classes of macromolecules carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids whats the difference between polymers and monomers? a monomer is 1 building block, a polymer is many monomers what is the reactant of dehydration synthesis? product? reactant is 2 or more monomers, the product is a polymer what is the reactant of hydrolysis? product? reactant is a polymer, the product are monomers Common name for Carbohydrates? glucose monomers of carbohydrates monosaccharides What type of bonds do monosaccharides form? glycosidic linkage What do we call two monomers joined together by one of these bonds? polysaccharide How are polysaccharides used in the body? either as building blocks or energy reserves What polysaccharide is used by plants? What is it composed of? Glucose, entirely of glucose monomers What polysaccharide is used by animals? What is it composed of? Glycogen, highly branched glucose Differentiate between alpha and beta linkages. alpha has OH below, beta has OH above What type of carbohydrates have alpha/beta linkages? glucose monomers, cellulose, and starch What qualities do starch gain from its alpha linkages? makes a helix shape and lets it connect What qualities do cellulose gain from its beta linkages? Makes a linear shape What is chitin? Where is it found? Structural polysaccharide found in cell wall of fungi and arthropods. What type of linkages does chitin have? beta linkages . Why don't lipids have an affinity for water? non-polar Describe the composition of a fat. they are made up of glycerol and fatty acids What is the composition of a triglyceride? a glycerol bound to 3 fatty acids How is a triglyceride formed? What type of bonds? 3 fatty acids joined to a glycerol by dehydration synthesis saturated fatty acids Saturated had hydrogen bonds at every position and no carbon carbon bonds Unsaturated fatty acids unsaturated has carbon- carbon bonds and have a kink in the skeleton What property of unsaturated acids makes them liquid at room temperature? they are bent Do saturated or unsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point? saturated What is the main function of fats? What makes them so good at this? they store twice the amount of energy that carbohydrate do Describe the structure and function of a phospholipid. glycerol connected to 2 fatty acids and a phosphate, forms the cell wall What part of the phospholipid is hydrophobic? tails What part of a phospholipid is hydrophilic? head Describe the arrangement of phospholipids in a membrane. Why do phospholipids arrange themselves in such a way? They make a bilayer, tail avoid water inside Describe the structure of a steroid. 4 fused carbon rings What are some examples of steroids? cholesterol, estrogen, testosterone What are some functions of proteins? structure, support, storage, transport, defense, movement What are the monomers of proteins? amino acids What 4 things are attached to the central carbon of the amino acid? hydrogen atom, carboxyl group, amino group, R variable What is the significance of the R group? determine the characteristics of an amino acids How are amino acids joined? dehydration synthesis What type of bond is formed between the amino acids? peptide bonds What are the names of the two ends of the polypeptide chain of amino acids? n and c terminals How do the two ends of the polypeptide chain get their names? n has a free amino group, c has a free carboxyl group How do proteins form from a polypeptide chain? interactions in the polypeptide make the polypeptide chain and different amino acids form What type of bond is formed in a polypeptide chain? peptide bond Define primary structure. order of amino acids Define secondary structure. What holds it together? coiled and folded shaped bond, hydrogen bonds Describe an alpha helix. What holds it together? a coil, every 4th amino acid has a hydrogen bond Describe a beta pleated sheet. What holds it together? a folding shape, hydrogen bonds hold it in the parallel peptide backbones Describe tertiary structure. 3d shape of a protein determined by the r group How to sulfhydryl groups contribute to the tertiary structure of a protein? strong covalent bonds/disulfide bridges How does quaternary structure arise? aggregation of 2 or more polypeptides How is quaternary different from tertiary? has 4 different polypeptides What factors can lead to the denaturation of proteins? physical and chemical condition of its environment How might this affect the function of the protein? it becomes biologically inactive What is the function of chaperonins? they help fold proteins What might happen if chaperonins don't function properly? it can lead to diseases What are the two types of nucleic acids? DNA and RNA What are nucleic acids monomers? nucleotides Describe the path that information taken from DNA to protein. DNA Gives information to RNA, RNA makes proteins Describe the makeup of a nucleotide. a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, phosphate group What are the four bases of DNA? Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, Guanine Distinguish between purines and pyrimidines. Purines have 1 6 ringed side and one 5 ringed side, Pyrimidines have 1 ring with 6 sides Which bases are purines and which are pyrimidines? Purines: Adenine and Guanine Pyrimidines: Thymine and Cytosine sugar pentose for rna? ribose sugar pentose for DNA? deoxyribose does not have oxygen on carbon 2 What type of bonds are formed between nucleotides? Where on the nucleotide are these bonds formed? phosphodiester bonds, the OH 3 end connects to the phosphate 5 end Describe the double helix of DNA. What's on the inside? What's on the outside? sugar phosphate backbone outside, nitrogenous bases inside What holds the double helix of DNA together? hydrogen bonds How does the cell ensure the DNA will copy correctly? each strand acts likea template What distinguishes RNA from DNA? uracil and single stranded
Updated 937d ago
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4 main classes of macromolecules carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids whats the difference between polymers and monomers? a monomer is 1 building block, a polymer is many monomers what is the reactant of dehydration synthesis? product? reactant is 2 or more monomers, the product is a polymer what is the reactant of hydrolysis? product? reactant is a polymer, the product are monomers Common name for Carbohydrates? glucose monomers of carbohydrates monosaccharides What type of bonds do monosaccharides form? glycosidic linkage What do we call two monomers joined together by one of these bonds? polysaccharide How are polysaccharides used in the body? either as building blocks or energy reserves What polysaccharide is used by plants? What is it composed of? Glucose, entirely of glucose monomers What polysaccharide is used by animals? What is it composed of? Glycogen, highly branched glucose Differentiate between alpha and beta linkages. alpha has OH below, beta has OH above What type of carbohydrates have alpha/beta linkages? glucose monomers, cellulose, and starch What qualities do starch gain from its alpha linkages? makes a helix shape and lets it connect What qualities do cellulose gain from its beta linkages? Makes a linear shape What is chitin? Where is it found? Structural polysaccharide found in cell wall of fungi and arthropods. What type of linkages does chitin have? beta linkages . Why don't lipids have an affinity for water? non-polar Describe the composition of a fat. they are made up of glycerol and fatty acids What is the composition of a triglyceride? a glycerol bound to 3 fatty acids How is a triglyceride formed? What type of bonds? 3 fatty acids joined to a glycerol by dehydration synthesis saturated fatty acids Saturated had hydrogen bonds at every position and no carbon carbon bonds Unsaturated fatty acids unsaturated has carbon- carbon bonds and have a kink in the skeleton What property of unsaturated acids makes them liquid at room temperature? they are bent Do saturated or unsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point? saturated What is the main function of fats? What makes them so good at this? they store twice the amount of energy that carbohydrate do Describe the structure and function of a phospholipid. glycerol connected to 2 fatty acids and a phosphate, forms the cell wall What part of the phospholipid is hydrophobic? tails What part of a phospholipid is hydrophilic? head Describe the arrangement of phospholipids in a membrane. Why do phospholipids arrange themselves in such a way? They make a bilayer, tail avoid water inside Describe the structure of a steroid. 4 fused carbon rings What are some examples of steroids? cholesterol, estrogen, testosterone What are some functions of proteins? structure, support, storage, transport, defense, movement What are the monomers of proteins? amino acids What 4 things are attached to the central carbon of the amino acid? hydrogen atom, carboxyl group, amino group, R variable What is the significance of the R group? determine the characteristics of an amino acids How are amino acids joined? dehydration synthesis What type of bond is formed between the amino acids? peptide bonds What are the names of the two ends of the polypeptide chain of amino acids? n and c terminals How do the two ends of the polypeptide chain get their names? n has a free amino group, c has a free carboxyl group How do proteins form from a polypeptide chain? interactions in the polypeptide make the polypeptide chain and different amino acids form What type of bond is formed in a polypeptide chain? peptide bond Define primary structure. order of amino acids Define secondary structure. What holds it together? coiled and folded shaped bond, hydrogen bonds Describe an alpha helix. What holds it together? a coil, every 4th amino acid has a hydrogen bond Describe a beta pleated sheet. What holds it together? a folding shape, hydrogen bonds hold it in the parallel peptide backbones Describe tertiary structure. 3d shape of a protein determined by the r group How to sulfhydryl groups contribute to the tertiary structure of a protein? strong covalent bonds/disulfide bridges How does quaternary structure arise? aggregation of 2 or more polypeptides How is quaternary different from tertiary? has 4 different polypeptides What factors can lead to the denaturation of proteins? physical and chemical condition of its environment How might this affect the function of the protein? it becomes biologically inactive What is the function of chaperonins? they help fold proteins What might happen if chaperonins don't function properly? it can lead to diseases What are the two types of nucleic acids? DNA and RNA What are nucleic acids monomers? nucleotides Describe the path that information taken from DNA to protein. DNA Gives information to RNA, RNA makes proteins Describe the makeup of a nucleotide. a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, phosphate group What are the four bases of DNA? Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, Guanine Distinguish between purines and pyrimidines. Purines have 1 6 ringed side and one 5 ringed side, Pyrimidines have 1 ring with 6 sides Which bases are purines and which are pyrimidines? Purines: Adenine and Guanine Pyrimidines: Thymine and Cytosine sugar pentose for rna? ribose sugar pentose for DNA? deoxyribose does not have oxygen on carbon 2 What type of bonds are formed between nucleotides? Where on the nucleotide are these bonds formed? phosphodiester bonds, the OH 3 end connects to the phosphate 5 end Describe the double helix of DNA. What's on the inside? What's on the outside? sugar phosphate backbone outside, nitrogenous bases inside What holds the double helix of DNA together? hydrogen bonds How does the cell ensure the DNA will copy correctly? each strand acts likea template What distinguishes RNA from DNA? uracil and single stranded
Updated 937d ago
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4 main classes of macromolecules carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids whats the difference between polymers and monomers? a monomer is 1 building block, a polymer is many monomers what is the reactant of dehydration synthesis? product? reactant is 2 or more monomers, the product is a polymer what is the reactant of hydrolysis? product? reactant is a polymer, the product are monomers Common name for Carbohydrates? glucose monomers of carbohydrates monosaccharides What type of bonds do monosaccharides form? glycosidic linkage What do we call two monomers joined together by one of these bonds? polysaccharide How are polysaccharides used in the body? either as building blocks or energy reserves What polysaccharide is used by plants? What is it composed of? Glucose, entirely of glucose monomers What polysaccharide is used by animals? What is it composed of? Glycogen, highly branched glucose Differentiate between alpha and beta linkages. alpha has OH below, beta has OH above What type of carbohydrates have alpha/beta linkages? glucose monomers, cellulose, and starch What qualities do starch gain from its alpha linkages? makes a helix shape and lets it connect What qualities do cellulose gain from its beta linkages? Makes a linear shape What is chitin? Where is it found? Structural polysaccharide found in cell wall of fungi and arthropods. What type of linkages does chitin have? beta linkages . Why don't lipids have an affinity for water? non-polar Describe the composition of a fat. they are made up of glycerol and fatty acids What is the composition of a triglyceride? a glycerol bound to 3 fatty acids How is a triglyceride formed? What type of bonds? 3 fatty acids joined to a glycerol by dehydration synthesis saturated fatty acids Saturated had hydrogen bonds at every position and no carbon carbon bonds Unsaturated fatty acids unsaturated has carbon- carbon bonds and have a kink in the skeleton What property of unsaturated acids makes them liquid at room temperature? they are bent Do saturated or unsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point? saturated What is the main function of fats? What makes them so good at this? they store twice the amount of energy that carbohydrate do Describe the structure and function of a phospholipid. glycerol connected to 2 fatty acids and a phosphate, forms the cell wall What part of the phospholipid is hydrophobic? tails What part of a phospholipid is hydrophilic? head Describe the arrangement of phospholipids in a membrane. Why do phospholipids arrange themselves in such a way? They make a bilayer, tail avoid water inside Describe the structure of a steroid. 4 fused carbon rings What are some examples of steroids? cholesterol, estrogen, testosterone What are some functions of proteins? structure, support, storage, transport, defense, movement What are the monomers of proteins? amino acids What 4 things are attached to the central carbon of the amino acid? hydrogen atom, carboxyl group, amino group, R variable What is the significance of the R group? determine the characteristics of an amino acids How are amino acids joined? dehydration synthesis What type of bond is formed between the amino acids? peptide bonds What are the names of the two ends of the polypeptide chain of amino acids? n and c terminals How do the two ends of the polypeptide chain get their names? n has a free amino group, c has a free carboxyl group How do proteins form from a polypeptide chain? interactions in the polypeptide make the polypeptide chain and different amino acids form What type of bond is formed in a polypeptide chain? peptide bond Define primary structure. order of amino acids Define secondary structure. What holds it together? coiled and folded shaped bond, hydrogen bonds Describe an alpha helix. What holds it together? a coil, every 4th amino acid has a hydrogen bond Describe a beta pleated sheet. What holds it together? a folding shape, hydrogen bonds hold it in the parallel peptide backbones Describe tertiary structure. 3d shape of a protein determined by the r group How to sulfhydryl groups contribute to the tertiary structure of a protein? strong covalent bonds/disulfide bridges How does quaternary structure arise? aggregation of 2 or more polypeptides How is quaternary different from tertiary? has 4 different polypeptides What factors can lead to the denaturation of proteins? physical and chemical condition of its environment How might this affect the function of the protein? it becomes biologically inactive What is the function of chaperonins? they help fold proteins What might happen if chaperonins don't function properly? it can lead to diseases What are the two types of nucleic acids? DNA and RNA What are nucleic acids monomers? nucleotides Describe the path that information taken from DNA to protein. DNA Gives information to RNA, RNA makes proteins Describe the makeup of a nucleotide. a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, phosphate group What are the four bases of DNA? Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, Guanine Distinguish between purines and pyrimidines. Purines have 1 6 ringed side and one 5 ringed side, Pyrimidines have 1 ring with 6 sides Which bases are purines and which are pyrimidines? Purines: Adenine and Guanine Pyrimidines: Thymine and Cytosine sugar pentose for rna? ribose sugar pentose for DNA? deoxyribose does not have oxygen on carbon 2 What type of bonds are formed between nucleotides? Where on the nucleotide are these bonds formed? phosphodiester bonds, the OH 3 end connects to the phosphate 5 end Describe the double helix of DNA. What's on the inside? What's on the outside? sugar phosphate backbone outside, nitrogenous bases inside What holds the double helix of DNA together? hydrogen bonds How does the cell ensure the DNA will copy correctly? each strand acts likea template What distinguishes RNA from DNA? uracil and single stranded
Updated 937d ago
flashcards Flashcards
4 main classes of macromolecules carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids whats the difference between polymers and monomers? a monomer is 1 building block, a polymer is many monomers what is the reactant of dehydration synthesis? product? reactant is 2 or more monomers, the product is a polymer what is the reactant of hydrolysis? product? reactant is a polymer, the product are monomers Common name for Carbohydrates? glucose monomers of carbohydrates monosaccharides What type of bonds do monosaccharides form? glycosidic linkage What do we call two monomers joined together by one of these bonds? polysaccharide How are polysaccharides used in the body? either as building blocks or energy reserves What polysaccharide is used by plants? What is it composed of? Glucose, entirely of glucose monomers What polysaccharide is used by animals? What is it composed of? Glycogen, highly branched glucose Differentiate between alpha and beta linkages. alpha has OH below, beta has OH above What type of carbohydrates have alpha/beta linkages? glucose monomers, cellulose, and starch What qualities do starch gain from its alpha linkages? makes a helix shape and lets it connect What qualities do cellulose gain from its beta linkages? Makes a linear shape What is chitin? Where is it found? Structural polysaccharide found in cell wall of fungi and arthropods. What type of linkages does chitin have? beta linkages . Why don't lipids have an affinity for water? non-polar Describe the composition of a fat. they are made up of glycerol and fatty acids What is the composition of a triglyceride? a glycerol bound to 3 fatty acids How is a triglyceride formed? What type of bonds? 3 fatty acids joined to a glycerol by dehydration synthesis saturated fatty acids Saturated had hydrogen bonds at every position and no carbon carbon bonds Unsaturated fatty acids unsaturated has carbon- carbon bonds and have a kink in the skeleton What property of unsaturated acids makes them liquid at room temperature? they are bent Do saturated or unsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point? saturated What is the main function of fats? What makes them so good at this? they store twice the amount of energy that carbohydrate do Describe the structure and function of a phospholipid. glycerol connected to 2 fatty acids and a phosphate, forms the cell wall What part of the phospholipid is hydrophobic? tails What part of a phospholipid is hydrophilic? head Describe the arrangement of phospholipids in a membrane. Why do phospholipids arrange themselves in such a way? They make a bilayer, tail avoid water inside Describe the structure of a steroid. 4 fused carbon rings What are some examples of steroids? cholesterol, estrogen, testosterone What are some functions of proteins? structure, support, storage, transport, defense, movement What are the monomers of proteins? amino acids What 4 things are attached to the central carbon of the amino acid? hydrogen atom, carboxyl group, amino group, R variable What is the significance of the R group? determine the characteristics of an amino acids How are amino acids joined? dehydration synthesis What type of bond is formed between the amino acids? peptide bonds What are the names of the two ends of the polypeptide chain of amino acids? n and c terminals How do the two ends of the polypeptide chain get their names? n has a free amino group, c has a free carboxyl group How do proteins form from a polypeptide chain? interactions in the polypeptide make the polypeptide chain and different amino acids form What type of bond is formed in a polypeptide chain? peptide bond Define primary structure. order of amino acids Define secondary structure. What holds it together? coiled and folded shaped bond, hydrogen bonds Describe an alpha helix. What holds it together? a coil, every 4th amino acid has a hydrogen bond Describe a beta pleated sheet. What holds it together? a folding shape, hydrogen bonds hold it in the parallel peptide backbones Describe tertiary structure. 3d shape of a protein determined by the r group How to sulfhydryl groups contribute to the tertiary structure of a protein? strong covalent bonds/disulfide bridges How does quaternary structure arise? aggregation of 2 or more polypeptides How is quaternary different from tertiary? has 4 different polypeptides What factors can lead to the denaturation of proteins? physical and chemical condition of its environment How might this affect the function of the protein? it becomes biologically inactive What is the function of chaperonins? they help fold proteins What might happen if chaperonins don't function properly? it can lead to diseases What are the two types of nucleic acids? DNA and RNA What are nucleic acids monomers? nucleotides Describe the path that information taken from DNA to protein. DNA Gives information to RNA, RNA makes proteins Describe the makeup of a nucleotide. a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, phosphate group What are the four bases of DNA? Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, Guanine Distinguish between purines and pyrimidines. Purines have 1 6 ringed side and one 5 ringed side, Pyrimidines have 1 ring with 6 sides Which bases are purines and which are pyrimidines? Purines: Adenine and Guanine Pyrimidines: Thymine and Cytosine sugar pentose for rna? ribose sugar pentose for DNA? deoxyribose does not have oxygen on carbon 2 What type of bonds are formed between nucleotides? Where on the nucleotide are these bonds formed? phosphodiester bonds, the OH 3 end connects to the phosphate 5 end Describe the double helix of DNA. What's on the inside? What's on the outside? sugar phosphate backbone outside, nitrogenous bases inside What holds the double helix of DNA together? hydrogen bonds How does the cell ensure the DNA will copy correctly? each strand acts likea template What distinguishes RNA from DNA? uracil and single stranded
Updated 937d ago
flashcards Flashcards
4 main classes of macromolecules carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids whats the difference between polymers and monomers? a monomer is 1 building block, a polymer is many monomers what is the reactant of dehydration synthesis? product? reactant is 2 or more monomers, the product is a polymer what is the reactant of hydrolysis? product? reactant is a polymer, the product are monomers Common name for Carbohydrates? glucose monomers of carbohydrates monosaccharides What type of bonds do monosaccharides form? glycosidic linkage What do we call two monomers joined together by one of these bonds? polysaccharide How are polysaccharides used in the body? either as building blocks or energy reserves What polysaccharide is used by plants? What is it composed of? Glucose, entirely of glucose monomers What polysaccharide is used by animals? What is it composed of? Glycogen, highly branched glucose Differentiate between alpha and beta linkages. alpha has OH below, beta has OH above What type of carbohydrates have alpha/beta linkages? glucose monomers, cellulose, and starch What qualities do starch gain from its alpha linkages? makes a helix shape and lets it connect What qualities do cellulose gain from its beta linkages? Makes a linear shape What is chitin? Where is it found? Structural polysaccharide found in cell wall of fungi and arthropods. What type of linkages does chitin have? beta linkages . Why don't lipids have an affinity for water? non-polar Describe the composition of a fat. they are made up of glycerol and fatty acids What is the composition of a triglyceride? a glycerol bound to 3 fatty acids How is a triglyceride formed? What type of bonds? 3 fatty acids joined to a glycerol by dehydration synthesis saturated fatty acids Saturated had hydrogen bonds at every position and no carbon carbon bonds Unsaturated fatty acids unsaturated has carbon- carbon bonds and have a kink in the skeleton What property of unsaturated acids makes them liquid at room temperature? they are bent Do saturated or unsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point? saturated What is the main function of fats? What makes them so good at this? they store twice the amount of energy that carbohydrate do Describe the structure and function of a phospholipid. glycerol connected to 2 fatty acids and a phosphate, forms the cell wall What part of the phospholipid is hydrophobic? tails What part of a phospholipid is hydrophilic? head Describe the arrangement of phospholipids in a membrane. Why do phospholipids arrange themselves in such a way? They make a bilayer, tail avoid water inside Describe the structure of a steroid. 4 fused carbon rings What are some examples of steroids? cholesterol, estrogen, testosterone What are some functions of proteins? structure, support, storage, transport, defense, movement What are the monomers of proteins? amino acids What 4 things are attached to the central carbon of the amino acid? hydrogen atom, carboxyl group, amino group, R variable What is the significance of the R group? determine the characteristics of an amino acids How are amino acids joined? dehydration synthesis What type of bond is formed between the amino acids? peptide bonds What are the names of the two ends of the polypeptide chain of amino acids? n and c terminals How do the two ends of the polypeptide chain get their names? n has a free amino group, c has a free carboxyl group How do proteins form from a polypeptide chain? interactions in the polypeptide make the polypeptide chain and different amino acids form What type of bond is formed in a polypeptide chain? peptide bond Define primary structure. order of amino acids Define secondary structure. What holds it together? coiled and folded shaped bond, hydrogen bonds Describe an alpha helix. What holds it together? a coil, every 4th amino acid has a hydrogen bond Describe a beta pleated sheet. What holds it together? a folding shape, hydrogen bonds hold it in the parallel peptide backbones Describe tertiary structure. 3d shape of a protein determined by the r group How to sulfhydryl groups contribute to the tertiary structure of a protein? strong covalent bonds/disulfide bridges How does quaternary structure arise? aggregation of 2 or more polypeptides How is quaternary different from tertiary? has 4 different polypeptides What factors can lead to the denaturation of proteins? physical and chemical condition of its environment How might this affect the function of the protein? it becomes biologically inactive What is the function of chaperonins? they help fold proteins What might happen if chaperonins don't function properly? it can lead to diseases What are the two types of nucleic acids? DNA and RNA What are nucleic acids monomers? nucleotides Describe the path that information taken from DNA to protein. DNA Gives information to RNA, RNA makes proteins Describe the makeup of a nucleotide. a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, phosphate group What are the four bases of DNA? Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, Guanine Distinguish between purines and pyrimidines. Purines have 1 6 ringed side and one 5 ringed side, Pyrimidines have 1 ring with 6 sides Which bases are purines and which are pyrimidines? Purines: Adenine and Guanine Pyrimidines: Thymine and Cytosine sugar pentose for rna? ribose sugar pentose for DNA? deoxyribose does not have oxygen on carbon 2 What type of bonds are formed between nucleotides? Where on the nucleotide are these bonds formed? phosphodiester bonds, the OH 3 end connects to the phosphate 5 end Describe the double helix of DNA. What's on the inside? What's on the outside? sugar phosphate backbone outside, nitrogenous bases inside What holds the double helix of DNA together? hydrogen bonds How does the cell ensure the DNA will copy correctly? each strand acts likea template What distinguishes RNA from DNA? uracil and single stranded
Updated 937d ago
flashcards Flashcards
4 main classes of macromolecules carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, nucleic acids whats the difference between polymers and monomers? a monomer is 1 building block, a polymer is many monomers what is the reactant of dehydration synthesis? product? reactant is 2 or more monomers, the product is a polymer what is the reactant of hydrolysis? product? reactant is a polymer, the product are monomers Common name for Carbohydrates? glucose monomers of carbohydrates monosaccharides What type of bonds do monosaccharides form? glycosidic linkage What do we call two monomers joined together by one of these bonds? polysaccharide How are polysaccharides used in the body? either as building blocks or energy reserves What polysaccharide is used by plants? What is it composed of? Glucose, entirely of glucose monomers What polysaccharide is used by animals? What is it composed of? Glycogen, highly branched glucose Differentiate between alpha and beta linkages. alpha has OH below, beta has OH above What type of carbohydrates have alpha/beta linkages? glucose monomers, cellulose, and starch What qualities do starch gain from its alpha linkages? makes a helix shape and lets it connect What qualities do cellulose gain from its beta linkages? Makes a linear shape What is chitin? Where is it found? Structural polysaccharide found in cell wall of fungi and arthropods. What type of linkages does chitin have? beta linkages . Why don't lipids have an affinity for water? non-polar Describe the composition of a fat. they are made up of glycerol and fatty acids What is the composition of a triglyceride? a glycerol bound to 3 fatty acids How is a triglyceride formed? What type of bonds? 3 fatty acids joined to a glycerol by dehydration synthesis saturated fatty acids Saturated had hydrogen bonds at every position and no carbon carbon bonds Unsaturated fatty acids unsaturated has carbon- carbon bonds and have a kink in the skeleton What property of unsaturated acids makes them liquid at room temperature? they are bent Do saturated or unsaturated fatty acids have a lower melting point? saturated What is the main function of fats? What makes them so good at this? they store twice the amount of energy that carbohydrate do Describe the structure and function of a phospholipid. glycerol connected to 2 fatty acids and a phosphate, forms the cell wall What part of the phospholipid is hydrophobic? tails What part of a phospholipid is hydrophilic? head Describe the arrangement of phospholipids in a membrane. Why do phospholipids arrange themselves in such a way? They make a bilayer, tail avoid water inside Describe the structure of a steroid. 4 fused carbon rings What are some examples of steroids? cholesterol, estrogen, testosterone What are some functions of proteins? structure, support, storage, transport, defense, movement What are the monomers of proteins? amino acids What 4 things are attached to the central carbon of the amino acid? hydrogen atom, carboxyl group, amino group, R variable What is the significance of the R group? determine the characteristics of an amino acids How are amino acids joined? dehydration synthesis What type of bond is formed between the amino acids? peptide bonds What are the names of the two ends of the polypeptide chain of amino acids? n and c terminals How do the two ends of the polypeptide chain get their names? n has a free amino group, c has a free carboxyl group How do proteins form from a polypeptide chain? interactions in the polypeptide make the polypeptide chain and different amino acids form What type of bond is formed in a polypeptide chain? peptide bond Define primary structure. order of amino acids Define secondary structure. What holds it together? coiled and folded shaped bond, hydrogen bonds Describe an alpha helix. What holds it together? a coil, every 4th amino acid has a hydrogen bond Describe a beta pleated sheet. What holds it together? a folding shape, hydrogen bonds hold it in the parallel peptide backbones Describe tertiary structure. 3d shape of a protein determined by the r group How to sulfhydryl groups contribute to the tertiary structure of a protein? strong covalent bonds/disulfide bridges How does quaternary structure arise? aggregation of 2 or more polypeptides How is quaternary different from tertiary? has 4 different polypeptides What factors can lead to the denaturation of proteins? physical and chemical condition of its environment How might this affect the function of the protein? it becomes biologically inactive What is the function of chaperonins? they help fold proteins What might happen if chaperonins don't function properly? it can lead to diseases What are the two types of nucleic acids? DNA and RNA What are nucleic acids monomers? nucleotides Describe the path that information taken from DNA to protein. DNA Gives information to RNA, RNA makes proteins Describe the makeup of a nucleotide. a nitrogenous base, pentose sugar, phosphate group What are the four bases of DNA? Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine, Guanine Distinguish between purines and pyrimidines. Purines have 1 6 ringed side and one 5 ringed side, Pyrimidines have 1 ring with 6 sides Which bases are purines and which are pyrimidines? Purines: Adenine and Guanine Pyrimidines: Thymine and Cytosine sugar pentose for rna? ribose sugar pentose for DNA? deoxyribose does not have oxygen on carbon 2 What type of bonds are formed between nucleotides? Where on the nucleotide are these bonds formed? phosphodiester bonds, the OH 3 end connects to the phosphate 5 end Describe the double helix of DNA. What's on the inside? What's on the outside? sugar phosphate backbone outside, nitrogenous bases inside What holds the double helix of DNA together? hydrogen bonds How does the cell ensure the DNA will copy correctly? each strand acts likea template What distinguishes RNA from DNA? uracil and single stranded
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