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Workshop: Biology 3 Final Ray Chen Lilit Haroyan Special Thanks to Dr. Elkerdany for kindly 1 providing his material and support. Ion, atom, isotope • Atoms – smallest units that make up the matter – Hydrogen = H – Sodium = Na – Chloride = Cl • Ions – can form when atoms lose or gain electrons – Positive and negative ions are attracted to one another and bond together in ionic bonds – Ex: Na+, Cl• Isotopes – which have the same numbers of protons and electrons but different numbers of neutron – Ex: C-12, C-13, C-14 Atoms • Protons -- (+) charge • Electron -- (-) charge • Neutron -- No charge • Nucleus consists of protons and neutrons • Atomic number = # of proton • Mass number = # of proton+ # of neutrons • # of protons = # of neutrons • # of protons = # of electrons 3 Example: Carbon # of proton= 6 # of nutron= 6 # of electron= 6 Atomic number= # of proton= 6 Mass number = 6+6=12 Mass number Atomic number Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education, Inc. 12 6 C Chemical symbol Let’s Practice • Given atom Oxygen: # of proton:__ # of electron:__ # of neutron:__ Atomic number:__ Mass number:__ 5 Ionic, covalent, hydrogen bond • Ionic bond: occurs when electron transfer from one to the other. One is losing and one is gaining. (NaCl) • Covalent bond: occurs when two atoms share electron ( • Hydrogen bond: Polar water molecules are attracted to one another and can form H-bond. 6 Transfer of electron Na Sodium atom Cl Chlorine atom + – Na+ Sodium ion Cl– Chloride ion Sodium chloride (NaCl) Na+ Cl– Types of Chemical Bonds • A covalent bond results when two atoms share electrons, thereby completing their valence shells (–) (–) O H (+) H (+) Hydrogen bond Acid, base, buffer, pH • Acid -- Substance that can release H+ ions - HCl: HCl-->H+ + Cl• Base -- Substance that can release OHions - NaOH: NaOH--> Na+ + OH• Buffer -- is a chemical or combination of chemicals that keeps a pH within a given range • pH -- is a mathematical way of indicating 11 + pH scale 0 1 Acidic solution Increasingly ACIDIC (Higher concentration of H+) Battery acid 2 Lemon juice, gastric juice 3 Grapefruit juice, soft drink, vinegar, beer 4 Tomato juice 5 Rain water 6 Human urine Saliva NEUTRAL [H+]=OH–] 7 Pure water Human blood, tears 8 Seawater Increasingly BASIC (Lower concentration of H+) Neutral solution 9 10 Milk of magnesia 11 Household ammonia 12 Household bleach 13 Oven cleaner Basic solution 14 Organic Molecules • Inorganic chemistry - chemistry of the nonliving world • Organic chemistry - chemistry of the living world – Carbon-based molecules are called organic compounds – By sharing electrons (what type of bond?), carbon can bond to four other atoms – By doing so, it can branch in up to four directions • CH4 – most simple organic compound Isomers, hydrocarbon, function group • Hydrocarbon -- Compounds composed of only carbon and hydrogen • Isomer -- different compounds with the same molecular formula can be produced • Functional group -- 14 Propane Ethane Length. Carbon skeletons vary in length. Isobutane Butane Branching. Skeletons may be unbranched or branched. 2-Butene 1-Butene Double bonds. Skeletons may have double bonds, which can vary in location. Cyclohexane Rings. Benzene Skeletons may be arranged in rings. Hydrophobic vs. hydrophilic • Hydrophobic – afraid of water (hydrocarbons) • Compounds containing functional groups are hydrophilic (water-loving) – carboxyl (COOH), alcohol (-OH), amino (-NH2) Monomers, polymers • Polymer: Macromolecule - Carbohydrates (Monomer: small sugar) - Lipids (Monomer: fatty acid) - Proteins (Monomer: Amino acid) - Nucleic acids (Monomer: nucleotides) • Monomer: Building block of macromolecule 17 Short polymer Dehydration reaction Longer polymer Unlinked monomer Hydrolysis Mono-and-poly saccharides • Monosaccharides are carbohydrates with a single sugar molecule - Glucose, Deoxyribose, ribose • Polysaccharides are polymers of monosaccharide - Starch, glycogen, cellulose and chitin 20 Monosaccharides: Ready Energy Polysaccharides as Energy Storage Molecules Fatty Acids • Two types: – Saturated fatty acids - no double bonds between carbon atoms – Unsaturated fatty acids - at least one double bond between carbon atoms • Oils tend to contain unsaturated fatty acids • Fats like butter tend to contain saturated fatty acids Fatty Acids Fatty Acids Hydrophilic heads Water Hydrophobic tails Water Four Levels of Protein Structure Primary structure Amino acids Hydrogen bond Secondary structure Alpha helix Tertiary structure Quaternary structure Polypeptide (single subunit of transthyretin) Transthyretin, with four identical polypeptide subunits Pleated sheet The Effect of Osmosis on Cells Isotonic solution Hypotonic solution Hypertonic solution (A) Normal (B) Lysed (C) Shriveled Animal cell Plasma membrane Plant cell (D) Flaccid (E) Turgid (F) Shriveled (plasmolyzed) NUCLEUS: Nuclear envelope Smooth endoplasmic reticulum Chromosomes Nucleolus Rough endoplasmic reticulum Lysosome Centriole Ribosomes Peroxisome CYTOSKELETON: Microtubule Intermediate filament Microfilament Golgi apparatus Plasma membrane Mitochondrion NUCLEUS: Rough endoplasmic reticulum Nuclear envelope Chromosome Ribosomes Nucleolus Smooth endoplasmic reticulum Golgi apparatus CYTOSKELETON: Central vacuole Microtubule Chloroplast Cell wall Intermediate filament Plasmodesmata Microfilament Mitochondrion Peroxisome Plasma membrane Cell wall of adjacent cell 3 components of cytoskeleton • Microfilaments • Intermediate filaments • Microtubules 31 1 Enzyme available with empty active site Active site Glucose Substrate (sucrose) 2 Substrate binds to enzyme with induced fit Enzyme (sucrase) Fructose 4 Products are released 3 Substrate is converted to products Energy of Activation Reaction without enzyme EA without enzyme EA with enzyme Reactants Net change in energy (the same) Reaction with enzyme Products Progress of the reaction Lock and Key Model • Enzyme represented rigid • Substrate fits perfectly in the active site region; if doesn’t fit perfectly it will not react Induced-fit Model • Enzyme structure flexible • Enzyme and active site adjust shape to bind substrate increases range of substrate specificity 3 types of cell transport • • • - Passive transport Requires no energy Simple diffusion/Osmosis (diffusion of water) always from high conc to low conc always involve small/nonpolar molecules Active transport Require energy and membrane protein always go against its concentration Bulk transport Require energy Endocytosis, Exocytosis 36 Cellular Respiration – Glucose loses its hydrogen atoms and is ultimately converted to CO2 – At the same time, O2 gains hydrogen atoms and is converted to H2O – Loss of electrons is called oxidation – Gain of electrons is called reduction oxidation C6H12O6 + 6 O2 6 CO2 + 6 H2O + energy reduction Glucose Breakdown NADH Mitochondrion High-energy electrons carried by NADH NADH FADH2 and OXIDATIVE PHOSPHORYLATION (Electron Transport and Chemiosmosis) GLYCOLYSIS Glucose CITRIC ACID CYCLE Pyruvate Cytoplasm Inner mitochondrial membrane CO2 CO2 ATP ATP Substrate-level phosphorylation Substrate-level phosphorylation ATP Oxidative phosphorylation Energy Currency • NADH=3ATP • FADH2=2ATP 39 • Glycolysis takes place in cytoplasm • Krebbs cycle takes place in the matrix of mitochondria. • Electron transport chain takes place in the inner membrane of mitochondria 40 • Anaerobic -- no oxygen • Aerobic -- have oxygen 41 2 ADP +2P 2 ATP GLYCOLYSIS Glucose 2 NAD+ 2 NADH 2 Pyruvate 2 NADH 2 CO2 released 2 NAD+ 2 Ethanol Alcohol fermentation Mitosis Prophase Chromosomes condense, nuclear membrane, centriole separate, spindle apparatus forms Metaphase forming the metaphase plate Anaphase Sister chromatid separation Telophase Cytokinesis(cytoplasm separate), spindle disappear, nuclear membrane forms 43 • • - Mitosis: final result: Dipolid (2N) Somatic cells (body cells) Meiosis: final result: Hapolid (N) Egg cells or sperm cells • # of chromosome in human body cell= 46 • # chromosome in human sperm or egg cell = 23 44 Abnormal sex chromosomes number • Down syndrome is trisomy for chromosome 21 • A Turner syndrome female has monosomy for the sex chromosomes (XO) • A person with Klinefelter syndrome is an XXY male Light energy 6 CO2 + 6 H2O Carbon dioxide Water C6H12O6 Photosynthesis + 6 O2 Glucose Oxygen gas Reduction 6 CO2 + 6 H2O C6H12O6 + 6 O2 Oxidation CO2 H2O Chloroplast Light NADP+ ADP + P LIGHT REACTIONS CALVIN CYCLE (in stroma) (in thylakoids) ATP NADPH O2 Sugar • PS I: Split of H2O by solar energy • PSII: NADP+ is reduced to NADPH 48 Photon Photosystem II Stroma Electron transport chain Provides energy for synthesis of ATP by chemiosmosis NADP+ + H+ Photon Photosystem I 1 Primary acceptor Primary acceptor 2 e– e– Thylakoid membrane 4 P700 P680 Thylakoid space 3 H2O 1 2 5 O2 + 2 H+ 6 NADPH Chargaff rule • A-T • C-G • DNA replication: occur in the nucleus • Transcription: occur in the nucleus • Translation: cytoplasm 50 http://www.dnai.org/lesson/go/19436/15510 Next amino acid to be added to polypeptide Growing polypeptide tRNA mRNA Codons Third base First base Second base • PCR: is a method of amplifying a specific segment of a DNA molecule • Restriction Enzyme: is an enzyme that cuts double-stranded or single stranded DNA at specific recognition nucleotide sequences known as restriction sites. 54 Cycle 1 yields 2 molecules Genomic DNA 3 1 3 5 3 Target sequence 5 5 5 3 Cycle 2 yields 4 molecules 3 5 5 2 Cool to allow 3 Heat to primers to form separate DNA strands hydrogen bonds with ends of target sequences 5 3 5 3 Primer 5 DNA polymerase adds nucleotides to the 3 end of each primer 5 3 New DNA Cycle 3 yields 8 molecules Genes and Gene Mutations • A mutation is a change in the nucleotide sequence of DNA – Mutations in DNA are rare (one in 100 million cell divisions) – Base substitutions: replacement of one nucleotide with another – Deletions or insertions • Mutations can be caused by – mutagens • Radiation (radioactivity, X-rays, UV light) • Chemicals (pesticides, cigarette chemicals) – Spontaneous • Errors in DNA replication • Phloem: is the living tissue in vascular plants carries organic nutrients (glucose) to where needed. • Xylem is the transport tissue in vascular plants carries water and minerals from roots throughout the plant 57 • • • • • • • • • • • Truebreeding: AA x aa Monohybrid cross: Single character (tall x short) Dihybrid cross: Two character (round/tall x wrinkle/short) Incomplete dominance: Red, pink, white flower Codominace: AB blood type Pleiotropy: One gene influencing many characteristics X-linked gene: Colorblindness/hemophilia Genotype: gene makeup (AA, Aa, aa) Phenotype: trait ( have the disease or not) homozygous: AA or aa 58 heterozygous: Aa Lamarck vs. Darwin • Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck – According to Lamarck, individuals passed on to offspring body and behavior changes acquired during their lives – Adaptation occurs because of the use or disuse of a structure (Use it or lose it), an element of the theory of acquired characteristics (wrong) – Use and dis-use theory (true) • Darwin - Theory of natural selection - Variation among the population - limited resources - Fittest survive, and pass their gene to the next gene 59 • Microevolution involves the evolutionary changes within a population • Microevolution involves changes on the small scale at the level of gene pool alleles • Causes: – Mutations introduce new variation into a population – Gene flow when breeding members of a population leave a population or new members enter – Nonrandom mating – selection of specific mates – Genetic drift – change in allele frequency of a gene pool due to chance (small population – 50 people or less- maybe one specimen doesn’t mate) Two small population can differ strongly - founder effect occurs when one of a few individuals migrate and become the founders of a new, isolated population at some distance from their place of origin 60 – bottleneck effect occurs when a population is drastically reduced in 61 Two Types of Succession • There are two types of succession. – Primary succession occurs where soil has not formed. – Secondary succession occurs on a disturbed site with soil (such as an old agricultural field) that returns to a natural pattern of community change. Interactions in Communities • The species in a community can interact in a variety of ways. – Competition occurs when species compete for the same resource. – In predation, one species preys upon another. – In parasitism(+/-), one species is a parasite on another. – In commensalism(+/-), one in which the interaction benefits one species, but the other is not affected. – In mutualism (+/+), the interaction benefits both species. Ecology of Ecosystems • The populations of an ecosystem are described in terms of their food source. • Autotrophs, also called producers, produce their own food. – Photoautotrophs use the sun to make their own food. – Chemoautotrophs obtain energy to make food by oxidizing inorganic compounds. 8 Superior vena cava Capillaries of head, chest, and arms Pulmonary artery Pulmonary artery Capillaries of right lung 9 Capillaries of left lung Aorta 2 7 2 3 3 4 5 10 4 Pulmonary vein Right atrium 6 1 9 Pulmonary vein Left atrium Left ventricle Right ventricle Inferior vena cava Aorta 8 Capillaries of abdominal region and legs Closed Circulatory Systems • Arteries carry blood away from the heart; elastic walls (why?); high pressure • Veins return blood to the heart; thinner walls; unidirectional valves; larger diameter; low pressure (why?) • Capillaries - fine network of vessels involved in exchange of oxygen and food between blood and body’s cells; narrow and thin Flow of blood through veins Comparison of Circulatory Pathways • All other vertebrates have a double circulatory system – The systemic circuit includes the blood vessels that carry blood to the body – The pulmonary circuit includes the blood vessels that send blood to the lungs • The double circulatory system helps terrestrial organisms breathe air (use lungs) Right atrium To lung To lung Left atrium From lung From lung Semilunar valve Semilunar valve Atrioventricular (AV) valve Atrioventricular (AV) valve Right ventricle Left ventricle Gland Secreted Digest Pancreas Amylase, chemotrypsin, lipase, nucleases Carbohydrate, protein, fat Salivary gland Amylase Starch to Disaccharide Large intestine None Absorb H2O+Salt