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Energy, Control & Continuity Contents             Energy Supply Photosynthesis Respiration Survival and Coordination Homeostasis Nervous Coordination Analysis and Integration Muscles as Effectors Inheritance Variation Selection and Evolution Classification Energy Supply  ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is required for endothermic processes but can be re-synthesised when coupled to exothermic processes: ATP ADP + Pi  ATP is synthesised across the inner membranes of the mitochondria and chloroplasts so they are adapted to give max. surface area. Energy for ATP synthesis is supplied by ATP-ase enzymes that are powered by a proton gradient  NADH (NADPH in photosynthesis) and FADH2 are reduced coenzymes that are used to carry electrons to a different part of the organelle Photosynthesis  Occurs in two stages: 1) Light dependent reactions - photon hits chlorophyll molecule in PS II and excites electron. Photolysis of H2O into oxygen, protons and electrons is triggered - released electrons pass through series of electron carriers before reaching PS I - at PS I, electrons are excited again by incident photons. They pass through ferredoxin electron carrier - Electrons can either travel back to plastoquinone, powering proton pump or reach NADP reductase enzyme where NADP+ ions are reduced to NADPH -Proton gradient powers production of ATP from ATP-ase enzymes in thylakoid membrane Photosynthesis 2) Light independent reactions - rubisco enzymes catalyses the fixing of the CO2 molecule to the 5-carbon ribulose biphosphate - decays into two 3-carbon molecules of phosphoglycerate - ATP from LDR is used to form diphosphoglycerate - NADPH used to reduce this to GALP - one molecule of GALP is removed per 3 molecules of CO2 and the rest are modified into (i) ribulose phosphate and (ii) ribulose biphosphate Aerobic Respiration  Occurs in four stages: - Glycolysis in the cytoplasm - Link reaction in the matrix - Krebs cycle in the matrix - Electron transport chain on the cristae Survival and Coordination  Human body is controlled by two major systems: 1) Nervous system 2) Endocrine system  These systems are linked together by the hypothalamus  Reflex arc is an instant uncontrolled action: - sensory neurone  relay neurone  motor neurone  Postural reflex, e.g. knee jerk, maintains position and body control without conscious adjustment Homeostasis     Endocrine glands produce hormones (peptides, proteins, lipids) which fit into specific receptor molecules on target cells to trigger a change in intercellular activity Homeostasis: maintenance of constant internal body environment. Two systems are involved: 1) Sympathetic nervous system (stimulates) 2) Parasympathetic nervous system (inhibits) Postitive feedback: homeostatic mechanism increases the change and brings factor further from resting level Negative feedback: homeostatic mechanism reverses the change and restores factor to resting level Homeostasis  In 1) 2) 3) 4) the dermis, there are receptors to different stimuli: thermoreceptors pacinian corpuscles meissner’s corpuscles free nerve endings  For thermoregulation, there are two types of organism: 1) endotherms (produce and maintain body temp.) 2) exotherms (rely on environment to maintain body temp.) Thermoregulation  Hypothalamus maintains thermoregulation  Temp too high: - sweating, blood moves to surface so heat radiates away, hairs fall so heat is not trapped, muscles become inactive  Temp too low: - sweating stops, shivering starts (muscles vibrate), blood is drawn away from surface, raised hairs trap air  Thyroid gland controls metabolic rate  iodine is essential Blood Glucose Level  Pancreatic Islets of Langerhans maintain blood glucose level - Hyperglycaemia (too much blood glucose) - Hypoglycaemia (too little blood glucose) - Gluconeogenesis occurs in times of starvation (glucose production from lipid/protein sources)  Ultrafiltration: blood filtered under pressure  produces a filtrate identical to tissue fluid  Selective reabsorption: reabsorption of useful substances back into blood stream  Loop of Henle: reabsorbs water  Osmoreceptors in the hypothalamus: monitor osmotic blood concentration  Baroreceptors in the circulatory system: monitor blood pressure The Eye  Light entering eye: focused on retina - cornea does most refraction. Cornea and vitreous humour have the same refractive index - lens fine focuses using ciliary muscles: Distant object: ciliary muscles relax, ligaments tighten  lens becomes flat and thin Close-up object: ciliary muscles contract, ligaments relax  lens becomes more spherical and fat  Iris controls pupil size: Dim light: radial muscles contract, circular muscles relax  pupil dilates Bright light: radial muscles relax, circular muscles contract  pupil constricts The Eye  Rods respond to dim light, responsible for peripheral vision. Contain the visual pigment, rhodopsin  Cones respond to bright light, responsible for central and colour vision. Contain the visual pigment, iodopsin  Rods – low visual acuity Cones – high visual acuity   Trichromatic theory = red, blue and green cones. Each detects different wavelength of light Nervous Coordination Intermediate neurones Predominantly in nervous tissue Sensory neurones Motor neurones Myelinated neurones: Myelin sheath speeds up impulse Non-myelinated neurones: No myelin sheath Nervous Coordination  Glial cells: - packed between neurones to form neuroglia tissue: a) provides mechanical support and electrical insulation b) Schwann cells are specialised glial cells, forming myelin sheaths c) control nutrient and ionic balance. Break down neurotransmitters  Nissl tissues: - contained in neurones: a) generate enzymes involved in impulse transmission and synthesis of trophic factors b) regulate growth and differentiation of nervous tissue Nervous Coordination  When impulse is not transmitted: - charge (resting potential) across axon membrane = -70mV  When impulse is transmitted: - action potential is a brief reversal of resting potential  All-or-None rule: - stimulus needs the minimum intensity to initiate an action potential. Below this, there is no impulse  Impulse takes place over: - temporal or spatial summation Nervous Coordination  Synapses: - are gaps between neurones to control impulses chemically - release neurotransmitters that diffuse across synaptic cleft and trigger action potential in membrane - once it reaches post-synaptic neurone, enzymes break it down and it diffuses back across synapse  Neurotransmitters used in the human body are: - acetylcholine (motor neurones) - noradrenaline (sympathetic synapses) - serotonin, dopamine (in brain) Nervous Coordination Synapses: - are effected by drugs: Hallucinogens (LSD) mimic actions of other neurotransmitters Nicotine is addictive Curare and atropine block acetylcholine Muscarine mimics acetylcholine  Analysis and Integration  Central Nervous System: 1) Spinal Cord 2) Hindbrain 3) Midbrain 4) Forebrain  Cerebral Cortex: 1) Sensory areas 2) Motor areas 3) Association areas  Visual Cortex: 1) Simple cells 2) Complex cells 3) Association areas Analysis and Integration  Brain and spinal cord protected by: 1) Bone (skull and vertebral column) 2) Spinal and cranial meninges 3) Cerebrospinal fluid  Opposing functions of sympathetic & parasympathetic divisions of the ANS: 1) Iris 2) Ciliary muscle 3) Lacrimal gland 4) Urinary bladder wall Muscles are Effectors  Skeletal muscles occur in antagonistic pairs, held together by connective tissue with a tendon at each end attached to the bones  Collagen is a fibrous protein in tendons and bones that prevent them from breaking or stretchy  Arthropods have exoskeletons as their cuticle. This must be shed to grow  Skeletal muscle consists of muscle fibres, each containing many myofibrils  Sliding filament hypothesis of muscle contraction is like a ratchet mechanism Inheritance Genotype: combination of alleles  Phenotype: observable features of an organism  Gene: length of DNA for a characteristic  Chromosome: long DNA molecule  Locus: position of a gene on a chromosome  Allele: alternative form of a gene  Homozygous: both alleles are the same (both dom, both rec)  Heterozygous: alleles are different (dominant & recessive)  Meiosis: First Division Meiosis: Second Division Chromosomes Humans have 23 pairs of chromosomes: 22 pairs of autosomes Final pair determines sex – XX or XY Ova have X chromosome, sperm determines X or Y Alleles  Homozygous dominant (AA) – dominant allele expressed  Homozygous recessive (aa) – recessive allele expressed  Heterozygous (Aa) – dominant allele expressed  Codominant alleles: IA & IB are A & B proteins, I0 = no proteins - I0I0 = blood group O - IAIA or IAI0 = blood group A - IBIB or IBI0 = blood group B - IAIB = blood group AB (codominance)  Parents AABB and aabb  F1 will all be AaBb  F2 will give 9:3:3:1 ratio of phenotypes Sex-Linked Inheritance  Occurs when the gene occurs on the sex chromosomes  Males cannot be carriers, if the faulty allele is on the X chromosome, as they will only have one copy of the gene.  Men tend to be much more affected, as women must have both faulty alleles, whereas men only need have one - red/green colour blindness: recessive on X chromosome - pattern baldness: dominant on Y chromosome - haemophilia: recessive on X chromosome Genetic Variation Two types:  Discontinuous: usually coded for by one gene - specific outcome, e.g. hair colour  Continuous: usually polygenic - many outcomes, e.g. mass, height Caused by:  Variation during meiosis  Mutations  Environmental factors Genetic Variation Gene frequencies are predicted by the Hardy-Weinberg  Total frequency for phenotype, p and q: p+q=1  p2 + 2pq + q2 = 1, whereby: p2 = frequency pf AA 2pq = frequency of Aa q2 = frequency of aa  Assuming: large population, random breeding, no natural selection, no allele mutations Selection Natural Selection (selection pressure)  Organisms whose genes give them an advantage for survival - more likely to survive, reproduce and pass genes on   Feature arises by random mutation, and survival determines whether feature is passed on through population  Artificial Selection Breeding is controlled for certain characteristics - new breeds but not new species   When no selection pressure, characteristics are best suited for the environment in which an organism lives Species  A population or group of similar organisms that can reproduce to produce fertile offspring  New species evolve by: - isolation - natural selection - speciation  Evolution relies strongly on immigration and emigration  Evidence for evolution: fossil records, common blood pigments, similar larval forms (annelids and echinoderms), similar embryological development in mammals, fish and reptiles Classification Kingdom  Phylum  Class  Order  Family  Genus  Species   Canis domesticus: Canis = genus, domesticus = species  Genus has an upper case 1st letter: Canis Species has a lower case 1st letter: domesticus  Classification  Five kingdoms of living organism:  Kingdom Animalia - multicellular eukaryotes, heterotrophic nutrition, radial or bilateral symmetry Kingdom Plantae – multicellular eukaryotes, cellulose cell walls Kingdom Fungi – eukaryotes that reproduce by spore production Kingdom Protoctista – e.g. amoeba Kingdom Prokaryotae – no nucleus, circular DNA     Summary             Energy Supply Photosynthesis Respiration Survival and Coordination Homeostasis Nervous Coordination Analysis and Integration Muscles as Effectors Inheritance Variation Selection and Evolution Classification
 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
									 
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                             
                                            