Categorías: Todo - macromolecules - chemistry - fats - proteins

por Charles Igwe hace 1 año

182

Exam 1

The content delves into fundamental concepts of molecules and macromolecules, emphasizing the need to memorize specific functional groups such as hydroxyl, carbonyl, and amino groups.

Exam 1

Glycogen (extensive branching) a(1-4) branches at a(1-6) animals

amylose (no branching) a(1-4) plants

Amylopectin (branching) a(1-4) branches at a(1-6) plants

Exam 3

Cell Cycle

Terminology
Germ Cells - Gamete cells (sex cells/sperm & egg), undergo meiosis, haploid in nature
Somatic Cells - mitotically dividing and Go -arrest cells, diploid in nature, cells of the body
Diploid/Haploid - 2n is two sets (2n=46 for humans) and n is a single set usually for gametes (n=23 for humans)
Karyotype - arrangement of chromosomes in pairs starting with the longest chromosome (usually in prometaphase)
Allele - alternate forms of genes located on homologous chromosomes
Homologous chromosomes - 2 chromosomes with genes for the same traits (one from each parent)
Autosomes - 22 pairs of chromosomes that do not determine sex
Interphase
G1 Phase

Cell growth, accumulates materials for DNA synthesis

Subtopic

S Phase

DNA synthesis occurs, and DNA replication results in duplicated chromosomes

G2 Phase

Meiosis 1

End product - Four (haploid) genetically different cells with half the chromosomes compared to the beginning (germ cells)

Meiosis 2

Telophase 2 and cytokinesis

Anaphase 2

Metaphase 2

Prophase 2

Same as Mitosis- separation of sister chromatids

Two haploid cells form - each chromosomes still has two sister chromatids

Telophase 1 and cytokinesis

Anaphase 1

Metaphase 1

Prophase 1

Three events unique to meiosis 1) Synapsis and crossing over in prophase 1 (homologous chromosomes physically connect and exchange genetic info 2) Homologous pairs at the metaphase plate 3) Separation of homologs during anaphase 1

A special form of cell division that produces gametes - occurs in reproductive organs - each gamete has one set of autosomes and one sex chromosome Separation of homologous chromosomes

Mitosis (M phase)

End product - Two genetically identical cells with the same number of chromosomes (somatic cells)

Telephase

1) Spindle fibers disperse 2) Nuclear envelope forms around group of chromosomes at each pole 3) One or more nuecleoli reappear 4) Chromatids - decondense - tangled mass of chromatin - mitosis - division of one nucleus into two nuclei

Cytokinesis

Begins during anaphase and ends after telophase - cytoplasm division In animals, a cleavage furrow forms from pinching. In plants, a cell plate forms using vesicles.

Anaphase

Shortest phase (sister chromatids move) 1) Separation of sister chromatids are pulled toward opp pole - disjunction 2) Genetic info at two poles is the same

Metaphase

Also known as the "Middle" stage (longest stage) 1) Centrosome at opposite ends 2) Chromosomes align center of cell between poles at 90o angle - metaphase plate 3) Sister chromatids facing opp poles

Prometaphase

1) Degradation of nuclear envelope 2) Microtubules extend from each centrosome and attach to the kinetochore on chromosome 3) Kinetochore of unattached sister chromatid associates w/ other microtubule 4) Two sister chromatids oriented - opp poles (stable arrangement)

Prophase

1) Gradual condensation of chromosomes 2) Sister chromatids 3) Nucleoli begin to break down/disappear 4) Mitotic spindle begins to form Centrosomes move apart to opp ends

Cell synthesizes proteins needed for cell division (two centrosomes, nucleus envelope seen, one or more nucleoli

Cell Signaling and Proteins

Proteins and Diffusion
Simple Diffusion
Facilitated Transport
Active Transport (requires protein
Overview of protein functions 1) Transport 2) Enzymes 3) Signal Transduction 4) Cell-Cell Recognition 5) Intercellular Joining 6) Acctachment of cytoskeleton and ECM
Transmembrane, peripheral, and integral proteins
Transduction
Synaptic Signaling 1) Action potential reaches a terminal (first messenger I think) 2) Ca2+ enters neuron (second messenger) 3) Triggers neurotransmitters to be released and taken in by the ligand-gated ion channels on the other neuron 4) Repeats
Overview 1)Reception 2) Transduction (phosphorylation cascade) 3) Response using transcription factor in nucleus
Transduction 1) Adenylyl cyclase turns ATP to cAMP (second messenger) 2) cAMP binds to its first protein kinase, which would add a phosphate group to the next kinase 3) Phophatases removes the phosphate groups from the proteins after use 4) Repeats until the a specific protein is reached and produces a cellular response
After first messenger (signal molecule) binds to GPCR to eventually activate adenylyl cyclase, tranduction occurs
Cell Communication
Ion channel receptor 1) Signal molecule binds to ion channel receptor (ligand-gated for example) 2) Gate opens, letting in ions into the cell for cellular response 3) Eventually, signal molecule unbinds and the gate closes 4) Repeats
Tyrosine Kinase Receptor 1) Two signal molecules bind to tyrosine receptors, causing the two receptors to become a dimer 2) Activated tyrosine-kinase regions become phosphorylated using ATP (unphoshorylated) 3) Fully activated receptor tyrosine-kinase (phosphorylated dimer) 4) Activated relay proteins bind to receptor and create cellular responses 5) Repeats
G-protein coupled receptor 1) Signal molecule binds to receptor and activates it 2) Inactive G-protein binds to receptor and turns GDP to GTP to be active 3) Active G-protein binds to Adenylyl cyclase and activates it 4) Cellular response occurs and inorganic phosphate is removed from G-protein, making it inactive again 5) Back to beginning state
Signal Molecule Receptor Signal molecule nonpolar/hydrophobic - receptor inside cytoplasm or nucleus (like TESTOSTERONE signaling) Signal molecule polar/hydrophilic - receptor on the membrane (g-protein linked, tyrosine kinase, ion channel receptors) Needs second messengers
1) Physical contact (cell touching) 2) Local signaling - releasing a signal (like paracrine or synaptic signaling) 3) Long Distance signaling (hormonal signaling across the body)

Gene expression and Regulation

Cell Cycle Regulation (cancer)
Cancer Cell Traits

Cancer development 1) Polyp - small benign growth 2) Adenoma - larger benign growth 3) Carcinoma - malignant tumor

BRCA 1 and BRCA2 - breast cancer

Tumor-Suppressor Genes - encode proteins that inhibit abnormal cell division p53 - a transciption factor - if defective or missing, it cannot activate transcription

RAS protein: a type of G-protein that when mutated becomes hyperactive Ras protein, which issues signals on its own

Genes associated with Cancer

Oncogenes (mutated version of proto-oncogene) - cancer-causing genes Proto-oncogenes - normal genes that code for proteins that stimulate normal cell growth and division

1)Uncontrolled cell growth 2) Accumulation and propagation of mutants 3) Ability to invade and distrupt local and distant tissues 4) Loss of density dependent inhibition and anchorage dependence)

Do not need growth factors to grow and divide (they can make their own growth factor, convey a growth factor signial w/o the actual factor, and have abnormal cell cycle control system

Do not respond normally to body's control mechanisms

Does not have density-dependent inhibition (in which crowded cells stop dividing)

Does not Anchorage dependence (in which cells must be attached to a substratum to divide)

Cell Cycle Regulators

CDK is recycled throughout cell cycle, but cyclin will degrade after M phase.

Cyclin increases from G2 to M and MPF increases w/ it thru M phase

MPF: maturation promoting factor or M-phase promoting factor - G2 to M transition

Cyclin dictates which target protein will be phosphorylated by the CDK - ctrl of cell cycle thru phosphorylating other proteins

CDKs (cyclin-dependent kinases): a kinases that depend upon cyclin (cyclin bound to CDK)

Cyclins: Structureally and functionally related proteins required in cell cycle function in Eukaryotes

Gene Expression
Lac operon (both neg. and pos. regulation) components Layout: Promoter -> lacI+ -> Terminator -> Promoter -> Operator -> lacZ+ -> lacY+ -> lacA+ -> Terminator LacI+ is always ON and making high levels of mRNA - which means it is constitutive Structural genes: lacZ (beta-galactosidase - turns lactose into galactose and glucose), lacY (permease - opens the cell to allow lactose to come in), and lacA (transacetylase - adds an acetyl group to lactose or any other molecule) Lac Operon ON only when lactose is present Lac Operon OFF when glucose is present or if there is an absense of lactose Trp Operon (looks very similar to lac operon and is a form of neg. regulation) Trptophan present = trp operon off Trptophan absent = trp operon on
Positive Regulation - Activator bound to operator = transcription / activator not bound = no transcription Negative Regulation - Repressor not bound to operator = transcription / repressor bound to operator = no transcription
Operons - A cluster of functionally related genes can be under a coordinated control of a single on-off "switch "Switch" is a segment of DNA called an Operator, which is usually in the promoter Enchancers are the switch in Eukaryotes
Regulation of Gene expression in Prokaryotes - Operons
Gene regulatikon in Euk
Combinatorial control of gene expression - basically you need to have to specific available activators bound to the enchancers in order to express a gene Example: In a liver cell, Albumin gene is expressed b/c it has the necessary activators on the enhancers, but it doesn't express crystallin (in the eye) b/c there aren't any activators present for it
Transcription Factors - present inside the nucleus, waiting to be active General Transcription Factors - leads to low (basal level of transcription) Specific Transcription Factors - activators (lead to increased expression or high lvl) and repressors (leads to low or basal lvl of expression)
Control Sequences in DNA Proximal control elements: Sequences in DNA close to promoter Distal control elements: Sequences in DNA upstream or downstream of gene - may even be located in an intron ex. Enchancers
Expression Heterochromatin: highly compact / no genes expressed Euchromatin: Less compaction / genes expressed
Differential gene expression - Human cell expresses 20% of genes at a time and genes expressed in different cells are different
DNA Packaging
10-nm fiber: DNA winds around histones to form nucleosome "beads" / strung together using linker DNA
Histones - beads on a string (DNA wraps around it twice - histones used: H1, H2A, H2B, H3, H4

Translation

Peptidyl Transferase

enzyme takes the amino acid and adds it to the existing polypeptide chain

ribosomal RNA

where the elongation of the polypeptide occurs. Consists of a small subunit and a large submit. Made of RNA and proteins

Aminoacyl-TRNA synthesase

enzyme responsible for matching the correcting amino acid with a tRNA

Anticodon

nucleotide bases complimentary to the coding mrna strand

tRNA

translates mrna sequence using the triplet code

DNA Repliclation

DNA polymerase

DNA polymerase 3
elongates the RNA primer 5' to 3' by writing complimentary DNA
DNA polymerase 1
enzyme that removes RNA primer and replaces them with DNA nucleotides

Lagging Strand

made of Okazaki fragments, made discontinously

Leading Strand

made 5' to 3' continuously, uses one primer and DNA polymerase 3 elongates

Ligase

joins Okazaki fragments together

Primase

starts an RNA chain complimentary to DNA strand , makes multiple one at a time

Single Stranded Binding Protein

binds to the unwinded strands to prevent the rebinding of them

Topoisomerase

enzymes that relieves stress at the ends of unwound strands to reduce

Helicase

unwinds DNA

Replication Fork

Y shaped region found in both directions of DNA replication after DNA is unwounded

Primer

Nucleotide sequence produced first in DNA synthesis made of RNA

ORI

Replication of DNA starts here

Exam 1

Molecules

Carbon Skeletons
Double Bonds
Rings
Brancing
Chains- Long and short
NEED TO MEMORIZE- Hydroxyl (OH), Carbonyl (CO), Carboxyl (COOH), Amino (NH2), Sulfhydryl (SH), Phosphate (PO3), Methyl (CH3)
Macro-molecules
Nucleic Acids

Nucleotide- with phosphate

Cytosine

Thymine

Adanine

Guanine

Nucleoside- no phoshate

DNA- (the sugar lacks an oxygen)

RNA

Proteins

Side chain R group

Main chain N,C,H terminus

quaternary- combination of tertiary (dimer)

tertiary- interactions of R groups

secondary- interactions of N, C terminus

primary- order of amino acids

Fats

Amphipathic

Steroids

HDL good LDL bad

Micelles- used in

phospholipids

Glycerol

Hydrocarbons

Unsaturated fats

Less hydrogen

Saturated fats

More hydrogen

Bad for your body

Carbohydrates

Glucose

Beta (OH up)

Apha (OH down)

Monosaccarhide

(Di/poly)saccarhides

Polysaccharides

Starch (alpha) OH on bottom

Cellulose (beta) OH alternating

b(1-4) plants

Sucrose- Glucose+Fructose

Maltose- Glucose 2x

Biology

Exam 2

Transcription
Exons

coding segments of nucleotides that are later expressed into amino acids

Introns

non-coding segments of nucleotides that lie between exons (coding regions)

Spliciesomes

proteins responsible for splicing RNA

Transcription Factors

proteins that help with the binding of RNA polymerase to the promoter to initiate transcription

RNA Splicing

the pre-mrna strand is spliced: exons stay in and introns are spliced out

Transcription Initiation Complex

complex of transcription factors and RNA pol 2 bound to the the promoter

RNA Processing

a 5' cap and 3' tail is added to the RNA transcript

Terminator

this sequence signals the end of transcription

Promoter

RNA pol attaches her and starts transcription

TATA Box

the sequence of DNA where the initiation complex forms in eukaryotes

RNA Polymerase

separates two strand of DNA and joins complimentary RNA nucleotides together to form the RNA strand

Basic Chemistry

pH Scale
Opposite of the pOH scale
-log[H+]

10^x = x is the pH level

Strength order L --> G Van der Waals, hydrophobic, hydrogen, Ionic, Covalent
Isomers

Enantiomers- Mirror images of eachother

Geometric- Same geometric structure but different spacial configurations

Trans-isomer- similar molecules are on different sides

Cis-isomer- similar molecules are on the same side

Structural- same chemical formula, but different arrangement of atoms

Bonds
Ionic- e- taken

Na+ Cl-

Covalent- e- shared

Nonpolar

C-C , O-O , C-H

Polar

Water (H2O) Emergent properties

Universal solvent

Hydration shell

Denser as a liquid

Exhibits temporary hydrogen bonding

Expands when a solid

Exhibits permanent hydrogen bonding and a lattice structure

High specific heat

Heat of vaporization (high)

When water evaporates it releases heat

Regulates temp well

Cohesion and adhesion behavior

High surface tension for bugs to walk on water

Water transport up trees

O-H , O-C , N-H

Interactions
Dipole-Dipole
Ion-diple
Hydro "phobic" and "philic"
Van der waal's
Hydrogen Bonds