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Cell Biology Revision Key Areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Cell Structure & Function Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport Mitosis & Cell Culture DNA & Proteins (enzymes) Genetic Engineering Photosynthesis Respiration Key Areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Cell Structure & Function Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport Mitosis & Cell Culture DNA & Proteins (enzymes) Genetic Engineering Photosynthesis Respiration Animal Cell Nucleus Cell membrane Cytoplasm Mitochondria Ribosomes Plant Cell Chloroplasts Mitochondria Vacuole Cell membrane Cytoplasm Nucleus Cell wall Ribosomes Plant Cell Mitochondria Chloroplasts Vacuole Cell membrane Cytoplasm Nucleus Cell wall Ribosomes Chloroplasts are found in leaf cells, they are NOT found in root cells! Yeast/ Fungal Cell Mitochondria Cytoplasm Cell wall Cell membrane Vacuole Nucleus Ribosomes Bacterial Cell Ribosomes Cytoplasm Plasmid Free floating DNA Cell membrane Cell wall Cell Part Function Cells Ribosomes Site of protein synthesis. All Cytoplasm Where chemical reactions occur. All Cell membrane Controls what enters and leaves the cell. All Nucleus Controls all cell activities. Animal, plant and yeast Mitochondria Site of aerobic respiration. Animal, plant and yeast Cell wall Supports the cell. Plant, bacteria and yeast Vacuole Stores cell sap. Plant and yeast Chloroplasts Site of photosynthesis. Plants only Passed naturally between Plasmids bacteria. Extra circular piece of DNA. Free floating DNA Genetic material that codes for protein. Bacteria only Bacteria only Quick Quiz 1 1. Which cell structure controls all cell activity? 2. Which cell structure is found in plant leaf cells but not yeast cells? 3. Which type of cell does not store its DNA inside a nucleus? 4. What is the function of the ribosomes? 5. What is the function of the mitochondria? 6. Which 3 cell structures are found in all cell types? 7. What is the function of the cell wall? 8. Which structure stores cell sap in plants and yeast cells? Quick Quiz 1 - answers 1. Nucleus 2. Chloroplasts 3. Bacteria 4. Site of protein synthesis 5. Site of aerobic respiration 6. Cell membrane, cytoplasm & ribosomes 7. Supports the cell 8. Vacuole Problem Solving Calculating cell size Calculate the average cell length and breadth using the diagram below. Average cell length; Average cell breadth; 5 cells across 2mm 10 cells across 2mm 2/5 = 0.4mm 2mm 2/10 = 0.2mm Total Magnification Eyepiece Lens Objective Lens Eyepiece Lens Objective Lens Total Magnification 10x 10x 100x 5x 20x 10x 50x 20x 800x 30x 900x 10x 400x Key Areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Cell Structure & Function Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport Mitosis & Cell Culture DNA & Proteins (enzymes) Genetic Engineering Photosynthesis Respiration Membrane Structure protein phospho -lipid Selectively Permeable Membrane • Only small molecules can pass through • Larger molecules cannot fit through. Small O2, CO2, glucose, water. Large Starch/protein/fat (need to be digested) Transport across Membrane 1. Passive Transport (diffusion/osmosis) 2. Active Transport Passive Transport • Does not require energy to cross membrane. • Molecules move from high concentration to low concentration, down a concentration gradient. High concentration Low concentration Concentration Gradient • Difference between high & low concentration. • Steeper difference – quicker diffusion rate. Real Diffusion Examples Slow process – happens naturally. No energy required. Air sac - gas exchange Stomata in leaves – gas exchange Small intestine - villus Air sac gas exchange Air sac Blood capillary O2 IN CO2 OUT Blood capillary Air sac Gas Exchange Stomata (plants) CO2 IN Air Mesophyll cells O2 OUT Mesophyll cells Air Small Intestine - Villus Fatty acids & glycerol Lacteal Glucose & Amino Acids Blood capillary Diffusion in Respiration Glucose Water Oxygen Carbon Dioxide IN OUT Osmosis Movement of water from HIGH water concentration to LOW water concentration through a selectively permeable membrane. Osmosis in animal cells Placed in strong sugar solution Water moves OUT CELL SHRIVELS/SHRINKS Placed in pure water Water moves IN CELL BURSTS Osmosis in plant cells Pure water Water IN TURGID 1% Sucrose No water movement 95% Sucrose Water OUT PLASMOLYSED Osmosis Exam Tips! Animal cells Burst/shrink ONLY Plant cells Turgid/plasmolysed ONLY due to cell wall Osmosis is the movement of water. A – 2% salt B – 5% salt A – 98% water B – 95% water (movement from high water to low water = movement from A to B) Problem Solving Potato Osmosis Experiment Changed variable Concentration of sugar solution Measured variable % change mass Variables kept constant Volume of solution Temperature Type of potato Surface area of potato • • • Blotted potato to remove excess water Used more readings to increase reliability Used percentages as starting mass not the same. Graph Percentage Change in mass Change/original number x 100 Potato weighed 1g now weighs 3g – calculate the percentage change in mass? Percentage Change in mass Potato weighed 1g now weighs 3g – calculate the percentage change in mass? Change = 3-1 = 2g Change/original x 100 2/1 x 100 = 200% increase Active Transport The movement of molecules from a region of low concentration to a region of high concentration against a concentration gradient Active Transport – key features 1. Direction Low High 2. Specific Different conc. of different ions inside cell e.g. K, Na, Mg 3. Mitochondria Large number needed to produce ATP for active transport Concentration Gradient • Going against the gradient (low to high) • Moving along/down gradient (high to low) Diffusion High to low concentration Active Transport Need energy Low to high concentration needs energy (ATP) ATP = Energy What is ATP??? ATP = Adenosine Tri Phosphate. Energy made during respiration adenosine Pi Pi Pi Summary Breakdown releasing energy. ENERGY!! ATP (high energy state) Build up requiring energy. ADP + Pi (low energy state) Active Transport ATP ADP P High ATP uses proteins on the membrane to carry molecules across. LOW Key Areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Cell Structure & Function Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport Mitosis & Cell Culture DNA & Proteins (enzymes) Genetic Engineering Photosynthesis Respiration Recap S3 Diploid Body Cell 2 sets of 23 chromosomes = 46 chromosomes Cell division = mitosis 1 diploid cell 2 diploid cells Location of mitosis? Nucleus Cytoplasm Where DNA is found! In the nucleus Cell membrane Mitochondria Ribosomes Need for Mitosis Unicellular Multicellular Reproduction Growth and Repair DNA & Chromosomes • DNA Gene Chromatid Chromosome Stage 1 Chromosomes in the nucleus coil up, replicate and become visible on staining. Stage 2 Chromosomes now consist of two identical chromatids joined by a centromere. Chromatid Chromatid Stage 3 Equator Chromosomes line up along the equator of the cell and spindle fibres form. Spindle fibres Stage 4 Spindle fibres pull identical chromatids towards opposite ends of cell Stage 5 Nuclear membranes reform. Cytoplasm divides. Stage 6 2 diploid daughter cells which contain the same number of chromosomes as the original cell. They are identical to each other and the original cell. Problem Solving Mitosis Problem Solving • A bacterial cell divides every 4 minutes. How many bacteria are present after 24 minutes? Mitosis Problem Solving 0 mins – 1 bacteria 4 mins – 2 bacteria 8 mins – 4 bacteria 12 mins – 8 bacteria 16 mins – 16 bacteria 20 mins – 32 bacteria 24 mins – 64 bacteria Mitosis Importance It is important that every new cell has exactly the same number of chromosomes (46) so that no genetic information is lost. Cell Culture Growing cells (mitosis) on a liquid or solid media Types of Cultures Agar slopes (solid) Broth nutrient(liquid) Aseptic Techniques Promote cell division (growth) of 1 micro organism (prevent contamination from other microbes). Aseptic Techniques Examples; • • • • • • Wearing a lab coat Washing hands Disinfect the work surfaces Open petri dish lid for a very short time Flame the inoculating loop Use an autoclave to sterilise equipment Fermenters • Large containers used in industry to grow specific micro organisms by mitosis for useful products. Fermenters Computers monitor the conditions to ensure optimal... A) temperature B) oxygen C) pH D) nutrient level Fermenters Cleaned by heating to 120 degrees at high pressure for 20 minutes to prevent contamination. Key Areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Cell Structure & Function Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport Mitosis & Cell Culture DNA & Proteins (enzymes) Genetic Engineering Photosynthesis Respiration Chromosomes & DNA Chromosomes and their genes are made of a molecule called DNA. Each chromosome is a very long molecule of tightly coiled DNA. The DNA molecule looks like a twisted ladder this spiral shape is called a DOUBLE HELIX DNA Chromosome Numbers All cells contain 46 chromosomes with 2 exceptions 1. Gametes (sex cells) contain half the DNA - 23 chromosomes (haploid) 2. Red blood cells - No DNA DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid. What does DNA do? Genetic code for protein molecules. DNA nucleotide 3 parts phosphate base sugar DNA Bases The double helix ‘ladder’ of a DNA molecule is held together by complementary bases. Adenine (A) Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) Guanine (G) Complementary Base Pair Activity Problem Solving DNA Calculation • If there are 2000 bases and 10% are Adenine – how many Guanine bases are there? DNA Calculation • 10% A • 10% T = 20% A & T 80% G & C 40% = C 40% = G of 2000 = 40/100 x 2000 = 800 G bases Proteins Proteins are made up of different sequences of amino acids. 20 different types of amino acids – many different protein sequences. 3 DNA bases 1000’s Amino Acids 1 amino acid protein DNA and Proteins The sequence of bases on DNA determines the sequence of amino acids in a protein - 3 bases 1 Amino Acid A A T C T G C A T G G C A T C A G T Coding for protein Different sequence of bases on DNA n produces a different sequence of amino acids in a protein. A A T C T G C A T G G C A T C A G T Building a protein DNA is only found in the nucleus. Proteins are assembled using amino acids at structures called ribosomes Messenger RNA (mRNA) DNA instructions in nucleus Messenger RNA carries a copy of the genetic code from the DNA to the ribosomes. Assembly of amino acids at ribosomes DNA mRNA Protein Same bases as DNA except mRNA has no T bases - Swap T for Uracil (U) bases DNA code AAC GTA mRNA code AAC GUA DNA base sequence Amino Acid sequence Structure of protein Function of protein Proteins Needed for growth and repair. 1. Hormones - Carry chemical messages in the blood. 2. Enzymes – act as biological catalysts to speed up chemical reactions inside cells. 3. Antibodies – help to protect the body against infection. 4. Structural – give strength and support to cell membranes. 5. Receptors – help cells recognize specific substances. What do enzymes do? Enzymes are biological catalysts – they speed up reactions but are not used up. Enzymes allow reactions to happen sufficiently quickly at relatively low temperatures (37 °C). Enzymes are specific – they will only react with one type of substrate. Lock and Key Mechanism SUBSTRATE PRODUCT ACTIVE SITE ENZYME ENZYME- SUBSTRATE COMPLEX Example of Enzymes Degrading Synthesising Catalase Phosphorylase Amylase Lipase Pepsin Synthesizing Small molecules Large molecule Degrading Large molecule Small molecules Catalase enzyme • Hydrogen peroxide (substrate) water + oxygen (products) Amylase enzyme • Starch (substrate) maltose (products) Pepsin (stomach) Protein Amino Acids Lipase Fat Fatty acids + glycerol **Phosphorylase** Only found in plants Glucose 1 - Phosphate Starch Factors affecting Enzymes 1. Temperature 2. pH Describe what is happening at points A,B,C and D. Effect of temperature – on human enzymes A - rate of reaction increases very slowly B- rate of reaction increases with temperature C - Optimum temperature of 37˚C D- Enzyme denatured above 50˚C and stops working Pepsin amylase 2 7 catalase Enzyme activity 9 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 pH 8 9 10 11 12 Key Areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Cell Structure & Function Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport Mitosis & Cell Culture DNA & Proteins (enzymes) Genetic Engineering Photosynthesis Respiration Genetic Engineering Transfer of a gene from 1 organism (human) to another (bacteria) Uses Insulin (diabetes) Human Growth Hormone (dwarfism) 1. Genetically Modified Plants Tomatoes which keep fresh longer and do not spoil quickly. 2. Productivity of Rice Real Life Applications • Made in fermenters • Can be expensive Bacteria need optimum • pH • oxygen • temperature • nutrient (food) levels. Why use a Bacterial cell? 1. DNA is loose in the cytoplasm, making it easy to modify. 2. Bacteria grow & replicate quickly by mitosis 3. Plasmids enable foreign DNA to produce a useful protein. . Human cell Chromosome Gene Bacterial cell Product Plasmid Stage 1 2 3 4 5 6 Description Gene is located on the human chromosome Gene is removed from the chromosome using enzymes Plasmid removed from bacterial cell and cut open Gene is inserted into plasmid Plasmid is inserted into bacterial cell to create a GM organism Bacterial cells multiply and produce product Human cell Chromosome Gene Bacterial cell Product Plasmid Stage 1 2 3 4 5 6 Description Gene is located on the human chromosome Gene is removed from the chromosome using enzymes Plasmid removed from bacterial cell and cut open Gene is inserted into plasmid Plasmid is inserted into bacterial cell to create a GM organism Bacterial cells multiply and produce product Advantages of Genetic Engineering 1. Large quantities can be produced. 2. Fast process Key Areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Cell Structure & Function Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport Mitosis & Cell Culture DNA & Proteins (enzymes) Genetic Engineering Photosynthesis Respiration Summary Photosynthesis Plants make their own food (glucose) using light! Photosynthesis 2 stages 1. Light dependent stage 2. Carbon fixation CO2 Glucose (C6) Energy Conversion Light energy Chemical energy (ATP) How? Chlorophyll (in chloroplasts) traps the light energy. Light Dependent Stage Fill in the Blanks Carbon Fixation Series of enzyme controlled reactions. CO2 Glucose Need H2 & ATP from Light Dependent Stage Carbon Fixation Uses of Glucose • 1. Glucose for Respiration (use chemical energy to make ATP) • 2. Converted into larger carbohydrate molecules Starch (energy storage) Cellulose (part of cell wall) Testing Leaf for Starch The Need for Light Foil keeps out the light Results – The Need for Light No starch present No photosynthesis Measuring Photosynthesis 3 ways • O2 produced/ time • CO2 used/time • Dry mass of carbohydrate produced/time Limiting Factor A factor that increases the rate of a reaction if it is increased. Rate of photosynthesis (units) Light Intensity limiting 30 Light Intensity no longer limiting 20 10 0 0 10 20 Light Intensity (units) Problem Solving Limiting factor at point... P = temperature Q = carbon dioxide concentration R = light intensity Key Areas 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Cell Structure & Function Diffusion, Osmosis & Active Transport Mitosis & Cell Culture DNA & Proteins (enzymes) Genetic Engineering Photosynthesis Respiration What is respiration? The process by which chemical energy (ATP) is released during the breakdown of food, such as glucose. When food is burned, its chemical energy is released rapidly as heat and light. In a living cell, the chemical energy is not released as quickly. This helps to protect the cell. Chemical energy in food released through a series of enzyme controlled reactions. Respiration = making energy (ATP) an energy store Adenosine Pi Adenosine triphosphate Pi Pi ATP Adenosine Pi Pi Pi Made from… ADP + Pi Adenosine Pi Pi Pi (Adenosine diphosphate) (Inorganic phosphate) Role of ATP; Transfers chemical energy from food to other reactions. • Muscle contraction • Protein synthesis • DNA replication • Mitosis • Nerve impulse transmission • Active transport Breakdown releasing energy. ATP (high energy state) ENERGY!! Build up requiring energy. ADP + Pi (low energy state) CO2 + water Respiration Glucose + oxygen energy ATP Amino acids Chemical energy transfer energy ADP + Pi Work Protein Types of Respiration 1. Aerobic Respiration –requires oxygen Location - mitochondria 2. Fermentation – does not require oxygen Location – cytoplasm Aerobic respiration Very active cells (muscle, sperm, etc) have lots of mitochondria & therefore can produce lots of energy that it needs. Aerobic respiration glucose + oxygen Raw materials energy + CO2 + Products water 1. Glycolysis – occurs in 1x glucose the cytoplasm 2 ATP Pyruvate 2. Aerobic +O 2 36 ADP + Pi respiration – occurs in mitochondria 2 ADP + Pi 36 ATP CO2 + Water Step 1 Glycolysis 1 x glucose 2 ADP + Pi Splitting of Glucose Location – cytoplasm 2 ATP Pyruvate Does not require oxygen Turns 1 glucose molecule (6c) into 2 pyruvate molecules (3C) and produces 2 molecules of ATP. Step 2 – Aerobic respiration Pyruvate +O 2 Location – mitochondria 36 ADP + Pi Requires oxygen (aerobic) 36 ATP CO2 + Water Turns the pyruvate molecules into CO2, water and produces 36 molecules of ATP. Aerobic respiration summary 1 x glucose 2 ADP + Pi Glucose is broken down 2 ATP Pyruvate + O2 O2 is required 1 glucose releases 38 ATP 36 ADP + Pi Produces CO2 and water 36 ATP CO2 + Glycolysis occurs in cytoplasm, aerobic Water respiration completed in the mitochondria. Aerobic Respirometer experiment respiration – common exam question!!! Experiment to measure respiration rate (i.e. the volume of O2 consumed per unit of time). Oxygen drawn up the tube – measured in mm per min Q. Why use a chemical such as sodium hydroxide? A. To absorb CO2 that is produced. Q. How would you set up a control? A. Exact same set up but with a dead worm (no respiration). Q. What variables would need to be kept constant? A. Temperature, diameter of tube, volume of chemical. Fermentation animals Respiration in the absence of O2. lactic acid + ENERGY glucose plants and yeast ethanol + CO2 + ENERGY Fermentation in animals 1 x Glucose 2 ADP + Pi Pyruvate + Lactic acid 2 ATP Fermentation in plants and yeast 1 x Glucose 2 ADP + Pi 2 ATP Alcohol builds up & kills plant/yeast. Pyruvate Ethanol + CO2 Respiration summary; Net energy Location Products Aerobic Fermentation 38 ATP 2 ATP Cytoplasm & Cytoplasm mitochondria CO2 & water Animal – lactic acid Plants – ethanol & CO2