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Objective 2 Organization of Living Systems Chemistry connection; Elements Found in Living Things The student will demonstrate an understanding of the organization of living systems CHARACTERISTICS OF LIFE Specific size and shape •Metabolism - activities of the cells that provide for an organism's growth, maintenance and repair •Movement - Some organisms have obvious movement from muscular contraction (e.g. swim, fly, run). Some move by beating of cilia or flagella, or oozing like an amoeba. Others like corals and oysters do not move from place to place. •Irritability - response to a stimulus (e.g. light or chemicals such as food) •Growth - increase in cellular mass, and/or increase in number of cells •Reproduction - formation of another organism. Since viruses cannot reproduce on their own without being inside a host cell, they are not regarded as living organisms. •Adaptation - ability to adapt to an environment, by either seeking a more suitable environment, or by undergoing modifications to be better fitted to its present surroundings Living things are . . . Organized into cells. Grow and develop Respond to the environment. Use energy Reproduce Cells are organized into. . . Tissues are made of cells (not ) Organs are made from layers of tissue Organ systems are organs that work together Organ systems that work together make an organism Reasons for Classification 1. To show relationships between groups 2. To provide a scientific name that is accepted and communicated by scientists from different countries 3. To identify organisms accurately (e.g. poisonous organisms) Binomial Classification Scientific names • • • • two-part names in Latin first part- Genus (capitalized) second part- species (never capitalized) Scientific names are used because the same plant or animal in different places may have different common names. Your scientific name is- Homo sapiens Taxonomy-how to classify life Biological Classification Kingdom Phylla Class Genus Class Order Order Family Family Genus Genus Species Phylla Class Order Family Genus Family Genus Class Order Order Family Family Genus Genus Genus Genus Genus Order Family Family Genus Genus Genus Genus 12 The bullfrog, Rana catesbeiana, is most closely related to the — F spotted chorus frog, Pseudacris clarki G Asian flying frog, Polypedates leucomystax H northern leopard frog, Rana pipiens J African bullfrog, Pyxicephalus adspersus Related in biological terms means family, genus, species. F spotted chorus frog, Pseudacris clarki G Asian flying frog, Polypedates leucomystax H northern leopard frog, Rana pipiens J African bullfrog, Pyxicephalus adspersus • Genus is always a capital letter, species is lower case. • Most closely related would be in the same genus, Rana. • ANSWER? • H The taxonomy divisions from largest to smallest are: B- Genus 49 Which of these classifications Kingdoms (5) is most specific? Phylum A Family B Genus C Phylum D Order Class Order Family Genus species Animal Fungi Plant Protista Archebacteria eubacteria 5 Kingdoms Plantae Animalia Fungi Protista Archeabacteria Eubacteria Classification Kingdom Phylum Class Order Family Genus Species •Mnemonic for Remembering the Classification within a Kingdom •King Paul Cries Out For Good Soup Animal Kingdom *multicellular *have nuclei *do move *heterotrophic *examples - sponge, jellyfish, insect, fish, frog, bird, man Animal Kingdom Two divisions Vertebrates- with backbones Reptiles, mammals, fish, birds… *people, whales, bears, dogs, cats, frogs, parrots, monkeys etc… Invertebrates – no backbones Insects, crustacean … *jellyfish, snails, sea urchins, lobster, ants, cockroaches, etc… Vertibrates are divided into Cold Blooded Warm Blooded Do not generate internal heat They generate internal heat (they sit in the sun to warm up) Reptiles People Snakes, lizards Dogs Fish Cats Amphibians Birds Etc… Etc… Plant Kingdom *multicellular *have nuclei *do not move *autotrophic *examples - multicellular algae, mosses, ferns, flowering plants (dandelions, roses, etc.), trees, etc Plant Systems • There are 3 main plant systems: • Reproductive – the flower structure • Transport – the shoot and roots and their xylem and phloem • Energy – the leaf and other areas of Photosynthesis. Leaf Tissue – What happens where? Photosynthesis 6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 Carbon dioxide Plus Water Produces Glucose And Oxygen Plants do photosynthesis and cellular respiration. Kingdom Fungi *multicellular or single cell *have nuclei *mainly do not move from place to place *heterotrophic (food is digested outside of fungus) *Made of Chitin Feed on dead things – rotting logs etc *examples - mushroom, mold, puffball, shelf/bracket fungus, yeast, etc. Kingdom Protista 1 cell *have a true nucleus - eukaryote *some move (cilia, flagella, pseudopodia); others don't *some are autotrophic; others are heterotrophic *examples - amoeba, diatom, euglena, paramecium, some algae (unicellular), etc Kingdom Monerans *1 cell *no true nucleus - prokaryote (genetic material scattered and not enclosed by a membrane) *some move (flagellum); others don't *some make their own food (autotrophic); others can't make their own food (heterotrophic) *examples - bacteria, blue-green bacteria (cyanobacteria Prokaryotic Cells Prokaryotes are very simple cells they contain a membrane (sometimes a cell wall), cytoplasm and a strand of DNA. Prokaryotic cells do not contain a membrane bound nucleus. Bacteria are prokaryotes. The word "prokaryote" means "before the nucleus" Bacteria Cscope no longer uses Moneria We know classify into two groups 1 Archeobacteria and Eubacteria Archeo is ancient bacteria – can live in extreme enviroments 2 Eubacteria is new bacteria Outer coat is made of different compositions 8 Some bacteria benefit mammals by helping with — • Kingdom Bacteria has F growth G defense H digestion J respiration beneficial and harmful members • The best answer here is H, since digestion systems of mammals contain bacteria. • Bacteria found in the respiratory system usually result in illness, which would trigger the defenses, not help them. The building blocks of life Eukaryotic Cells Eukaryotic cells are more advanced cells. These cells are found in plants, animals, and protists The eukaryotic cell is composed of 4 main parts: •cell membrane - outer boundary of the cell •cytoplasm - jelly-like fluid interior of the cell •nucleus - the "control center" of the cell, contains the cell's DNA (chromosomes) •organelles - "little organs" that carry out cell functions Animal Cell Cell Part Cell membrane Function Nucleus Chromosomes Endoplasmic Reticulum Controls what enters and leaves the cell Controls what enters and leaves the nucleus Control center of the cell Genetic information in the nucleus Transport system in cell Ribosome Golgi Body Organelle makes proteins Organelle packages proteins Vacuole Stores water and/or waste Lysosome Mitochondria Breaks down old cell parts Organelle for cellular respiration – provides energy Nuclear membrane Plant Cells *These are only in plant cells, not animal cells or bacteria Chloroplasts –organelle responsible for photosynthesis Cell Walls – a structure outside of the membrane to provide support Large vacuoles to store extra water Plant Cell Pant cells contains a cell wall, chloroplasts, and a very large vacuole, (animal cells do not have these organelles) Why do plants need large vacuoles? •ANSWER: This is where food and water are stored. 52 Compared to annual rings of trees that have experienced years of sufficient rainfall, the annual rings of trees that have experienced a dry period will — These would F be softer indicate G grow at a faster rate more water, not less H be thinner J photosynthesize at a faster rate Transporting into Cells Diffusion Osmosis is the diffusion of H2O • Passive movement from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration is diffusion. • The diffusion of water is called osmosis. What is Active Transport? Energy is used to move selected molecules into a cell, even if they are at a low concentration. 34 When a sea urchin egg is removed from the ocean and placed in freshwater, the egg swells and bursts. Which of these causes water to enter the egg? F Coagulation Means to clump together – Incorrect G Sodium pump Sodium is not being moved – Incorrect H Active transport The egg would not use energy to do this since it kills the cell. J Osmosis This is the movement of water from an area of high concentration (the fresh water) to low concentration (inside the Salt Water Urchin Egg) Cellular Respiration • C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O • Occurs in mitochondria of all living things Cell Reproduction The Cell Cycle is the life cycle of a cell It has two parts. interphase and reproduction Mitosis is nuclear division plus cell division, and produces two identical daughter cells – Diploid – double strand DNA Meiosis is the type of cell division by which germ cells (eggs and sperm) are produced. Meiosis involves a reduction in the amount of genetic material. It creates genetic diversity. It Produces 4 non-identical cells – Haploid -½ DNA Interphase is the process of growing and functioning. Mitosis 1 2 the chromosomes start to gradually shorten and thicken. chromosome have divided into 2 chromatids, joined at the centromere. They begin to move towards the equator of the cell. the centromeres attach to threads of a spindle then pull apart from one another and move towards opposite ends of the cell. 3 4 new nuclear membrane begins to form ll into 2 new cells 26 If a cat has 38 chromosomes in each of its body cells, how many chromosomes will be in each daughter cell after mitosis? • • • • F 11 G 19 H 38 J 76 H Mitosis is the normal division of any body cell, so the chromosomes replicate exactly and then separate into two identical cells. So the answer is Genetics – How traits are inherited • Gregor Mendel- Father of Genetics, he experimented with pea plants. • Dominant traits always are visible, and are represented by capital letters. • Recessive traits are hidden unless both alleles are the recessive one -lower case – tt or rr • At least one pair of alleles determines the trait in genetic inheritance. Homozygous both are the same – TT or RR Heterosygous they are different – Tt or Rr Phenotype is what you see Phenotype refers to what is visible – the dominant trait or the recessive trait. • How do you know the phenotype? • • LOOK!! • Color of hair or eyes, height- etc Genotype – actual combination of alleles (genes) Only 3 possibilities; BB = Homozygous Dominant Bb = Heterozygous bb = Homozygous recessive You must look at inheritance patterns to find out. Punnett Squares d d D Dd Dd d dd dd D d D DD Dd d Dd dd Heterzygous & Heterozygous Heterzygous & Homozygous Recessive D d D DD Dd D DD Dd Homozygous Dominant & Heterozygous D D d Dd Dd d Dd Dd Homozygous Recessive & Homozygous Dominant Pedigree shows the Family Tree Colorblindness Inheritance Parents: Father has; Mother is a Carrier Male Parent Male Colorblind Male Male Male Normal Female Female Parent Carrier Female ? Male Female Male Colorblind Female The Stuff of Life • The structure of DNA is called a double helix, or twisted ladder • The base Guanine always pairs to Cytosine. Adenine pairs to Thymine. • Except RNA – U is used instead of T • Mutations are mistakes in the coding. DNA Replication the process of copying DNA DNA is formed of nucleotides, which have 3 parts; a sugar, a phosphate and a nitrogen base make up a nucleotide. The 4 different nitrogen bases of DNA are; Adenine, Thymine, Cytosine Guanine. They pair to form the rungs of the ladder. Transcription and Translation Transcription . . . the messenger RNA reads the DNA in the nucleus Then it leaves the nucleus to take the information to the ribosome. The DNA then wraps back up until next time. Translation . . . Code into words • mRNA takes the code from the nucleus to the Ribosome • It pairs with Transfer RNA to put Amino Acids into chains called proteins. • mRNA pairs to tRNA in the ribosomes • This protein building is called TRANSLATION. • *There is no thymine found in RNA, instead there is a similar compound called uracil. What does this chart represent? It says codons, and has U instead of T, so it must be mRNA. 53 The table shows a comparison of some amino acids found in cytochrome c. The two organisms in the table that are most closely related are — A Q and T B R and S C Q and R D Q and S Genetic Code • All of the information to make a new organism is contained in the chromosomes of the cell. • Chromosomes are made of tightly coiled DNA or Deoxyribonucleic Acid. • Chromosomes contain genes each of which codes for a single protein. • There are hundreds to thousands of genes on each chromosome. To be closely related means the amino acid composition should be almost the same, since that is what the DNA is coding. Between Q and T, only 4 levels are the same – Between R and S only 4 levels are the same – Between Q and S 5 of the levels are the same, but – Between Q and R 5 of the levels are the same and differ in the other 2 by a smaller percent. Answer: Not A Not B Not D C What is the DNA base pair rule? 24 If the template of a strand of DNA is 5' AGATGCATC 3', the complementary strand will be — F 3' TCTACGTAG 5' G 5' CTACGTAGA 3' H 3' AGATGCATC 5' J 5' AGACGTCTA 3' In DNA A to T and T to A, C to G and G to C 5' AGATGCATC 3‘ TCTACGTAG • Base pair each letter by the above rule. • So the answer is: • F 38 In DNA, which of the following determines the traits of an organism? F Amount of adenine G Number of sugars This is only one of the 4 nitrogen bases, it can’t code for anything by itself. Every nitrogen base is attached to a sugar, . so this is not correct H Sequence of nitrogen Bases Correct J Strength of hydrogen bonds Hydrogen bonds strength does not change enough to code for trait changes. For more information on body systems go to http://www.innerbody.com/image/skelfov.html Homeostasis This is the maintenance of the normal operating conditions of an organism. The body must maintain a balanced state: body temperature, pulse rate, blood pressure, blood sugar, urine output, digestive absorption, metabolism rate, growth rate and hormone levels Integumentary System Skin, Nails & Hair The skin is the largest organ in the body: 12-15% of body weight. • mucous membranes that line the mouth, etc • Two distinct layers occur in the skin: the dermis and epidermis. • for protection, temperature regulation, sensory reception, biochemical synthesis, and absorption. Skeletal System Vertebrates have developed an internal mineralized endoskeleton composed of bone and/or cartilage. Bones are the support system & structure of the body *Make blood cells *Allow movement ; Muscles are on the outside of the endoskeleton. Note- Sharks, and rays have skeletons composed entirely of cartilage Structural System – Muscles *3 types of muscles Smooth, involuntary Striated, voluntary Cardiac, heart muscle *Allow for movement *Attached by tendons above and below joints 17 Which structure in the upper arm is responsible for raising the lower arm? A1 B2 C3 D4 3 1 or 2 is used to lower the arm 4 is a bone not a muscle Nervous System Consists of brain, spinal chord, nerves Nerve cells send and receive information Voluntary- you control and choose Involuntary- allows parts to keep functioning without you knowing Nervous System Nerve cells have 3 parts: Axon – Sends signal Cell Body – controls cell functions Dendrite – Receives signal from another *Synapse space between cells Digestive System Animals are heterotrophs, they must absorb nutrients or ingest food sources. The majority of animals, use a mouth to ingest food. . Circulatory System This system helps to connect many other systems as it provides the transport of substances from one organ to another. Every cell must touch a blood vessel to take in what it needs and get rid of waste. Arteries carry blood away from the heart and veins carry it back to the heart. The heart pumps the blood Circulatory System - 2 The top parts of the heart receive blood – Atrium The bottom two are very muscular and pump the blood – Ventricles Two contractions, right ventricle pumps to the lungs, and the left ventricle pumps to the body and brain. 29 Nutrients from digested food move from the digestive system directly into the — Endocine system does not transport anything. So . . . A circulatory system B integumentary Excretory system system gets rid of waste CO2 and H2O, C excretory not food. So . . system Integumentary D endocrine system holds organs and system The Circulatory System tissues in place. So. . . carries everything to every cell, so it is . . C The Respiratory System and Gas Exchange A supply of oxygen is required for the aerobic respiratory. There must be an exchange of gases: carbon dioxide leaving the cell, oxygen entering. Animals have organ systems involved in facilitating this exchange as well as the transport of gases . Reproductive System The ability to reproduce one self is a characteristic of all living things. Sexual reproduction produces offspring that are genetically different from their parents. Asexual reproduction produces offspring genetically identical to their parent. The medulla, part of the brain stem, reacts quickly to increased levels of CO2 in the blood and stimulates a response from the — A excretory system B immune system C respiratory system D integumentary system Increased respiration gets rid of excess CO2 Immune System - 1 • • • Your immune system protects you from infections and illness 1st Order Non-specific includes skin, mucous membranes, cilia of trachea and bronchi, stomach acid, tears 2nd Order includes the inflammatory response (swelling, redness due to histamine release), fever, white blood cells such as phagocytes and macrophages destroying the pathogens and infected tissue cells. Bacterial Infection Most bacteria are beneficial to living organism, even necessary, but some are harmful. Bacterial infections are treated with antibiotics. They can be killed since they are alive. Bacteria are living cells and can multiply very rapidly. Inside the body they attack tissues and release poisons or toxins. Diseases caused by bacteria include: •food poisoning, or salmonella •cholera •typhoid •whooping cough Bacteria • Bacteria can cause illnesses too, however 90% of all bacteria is helpful, NOT harmful. • Without bacteria, you would not be able to make or eat cheese or ice cream. Without them, you would be ill most of the time. • Strep Throat and Staph infections are examples of bacterial infections. Viral Illness Viruses are specific to their hosts. They can only attack specific cells, and not all viruses can pass between different species (though some can). Rabies, for instance, can be passed from animal to human. HIV is a virus that seems specific to humans. The common cold is a virus that attacks cells of the respiratory track (hence the coughing and sneezing and sniffling). HIV virus specifically attacks white blood cells. Measles, mumps, colds, influenza, Cold Sores, mononucleosis, EpsteinBarr virus are all illnesses that are caused by a virus. Virus Viruses are made of DNA and a protein coat, since they do not actually grow, reproduce (on their own) or carry out other life functions, they are not considered to be living organisms. They use other organism’s cells to reproduce. HIV Virus attaching to the helper T-cells j) How HIV infects cells HIV infects an immune system cell, the T Helper Cell. Once infected, the T-Helper cell turns into an HIV replicating cell. There are 1 million T-cells per one milliliter of blood HIV will slowly reduce the number of these cells until the person develops the disease AIDS. HIV Infection 1 - HIV enters the host by attaching to host receptors. It is as if the virus has a specific key that only works on the host cell with the right lock. 2 - The viral RNA and core proteins are released into the cytoplasm where reverse transcription converts the viral RNA to DNA.. 3 - Viral DNA, now double stranded is transported into the nucleus. In the nucleus, the enzyme called integrase fuses it with the host cell's normal DNA. Viral DNA can persist within the cell's DNA for many years in a latent state, which further complicates efforts to treat or cure the disease. 4 - The RNAs are transported to the cytoplasm and the golgi apparatus where their message is used to create viral proteins, which will become part of the completed virus. 5 - Using the proteins assembled from the golgi apparatus and the completed viral RNA, the mature virus buds off from its host cell. 6-The process of budding destroys the host cell. Treating viral infections Viruses are not alive so you cannot kill them. (You have to treat the symptoms or prevent replication) Drugs such as AZT by inhibiting the function of reverse transcript, thus preventing the virus from converting the RNA to DNA. Another enzyme, protease is needed to assemble the proteins. Protease inhibitors are another drug used to combat AIDS. 6 Most viruses infect a specific kind of cell. Which of the following are infected by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV)? F Helper T cells G Liver cells H GABA-receptor cells J Red blood cells Ask yourself, which cell type deals with immunity? F Helper T cells G Liver cells H GABAreceptor cells J Red blood cells • Answer? F Helper T cells. • All the rest are body cells with specific jobs that do not relate to immunity. Cells Alive Http://web.jjay.cuny.edu/~acarpi/NSC/index.htm Cancer When cells reproduce out of control tumors are formed. It may or may not be malignant (the type that spreads and kills).