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 320d ago