BIO 311C Concept Map

Cell Components

Phospholipid Bilayer

Membrane made up of two fatty acid tails and a hydrophilic head

Fatty acids

Triglycerides

Saturated

Unsaturated

Oils, kinks

Present in plants

Lipids

Glycerol

Mitochondria

Supplies and produces energy for cellular processes

Cell Wall

Protective wall made of cellulose of chitin

Cytoplasm

Place where cell components stay

Vacuole

Contains liquids in cell, two types

Central vacuole

Food vacuole

Nucleus

Contains all genetic information of a cell

Ribosomes

Synthesizes proteins, made of RNA and proteins

Can be free or bound

Proteins

Endoplasmic Reticulum

Synthesizes protein in rough ER

Synthesizes lipids in smooth ER

Golgi Apparatus

Gives instructions to proteins and transports them

DNA Replication

Enzymes involved with DNA

Helicase

Unwinds double helix at replication forks

Primase

Creates RNA primer and attaches on at 5' end of leading strand and multiple on lagging strand

DNA Polymerase III

Synthesizes new DNA strands

DNA Polymerase I

Removes RNA primers and replaces with DNA

Ligase

Connects DNA

Topoisomerase

Relieves strain on DNA strands

DNA Synthesis

Leading Strand

Synthesizes in direction towards replication fork

Lagging strand

Synthesizes in direction away from fork

Replication fork

Where the DNA begins to separate

Origin of Replication

Point in DNA where replication begins

Cell Division

Cell communication

Cells signals one another to tell other cells to begin replication, starting at the phospholipid bilayer

Signal molecules are attached to the phospholipid bilayer and cellular processes begin with the attachment to a receptor molecule

DNA structure

Semi-conservative

Messeleson and Stahl

Strands separated and template synthesizes new complementary strand

Bases

Adenine

Thymine

Guanine

Cytosine

Steps of Replication

Initiation

Begins at ORI, helicase unwinds DNA. Topoisomerase releases tension. RNA primers are created

Elongation

Primer starts making leading strand and uses the existing strand as a template strand. DNA Pol III puts on new bases and lagging strand is synthesized in okazaki fragments. DNA ligase attaches these fragments together

Termination

Gene Regulation

DNA Packaging

Histone core is a protein that binds the DNA

H1, H2A, H2B, H3, H4

H1 is not a part of the core

Nucleosomes formed when DNA wraps around histone twice

Nucleosomes strung together

Interactions between nucleosomes cause thin fiber to coil or fold into thicker fiber

Tight helical fiber needs help of H1

DNA packaged with proteins into chromatin

Prokaryotes

Operons are present

Multiple genes controlled by same promoter

Operator is not in Eukaryotes

Lac Operon

Required for transport and metabolism of lactose

Lac Z forms mRNA

Lac Y takes in lactose

Lac A adds acidicyl group to lactoes

Lac I is lac repressor

Operon off

Lactose absent, repressor on, operon off

Operon on

Lactose present, repressor inactive, operon on

cAMP levels

Lactose present, glucose absent means high cAMP levels and activated CAP

Lactose and glucose present means low cAMP levels and CAP is inactivated

Tryptophan

Amino acid

Negative regulator because binds to repressor

Tryptophan absent, repressor inactivated, operon on

Tryptophan present, repressor active, operon off

Transcription factors

General factors leads to basal level transcription

Repressor binds to enhancer and prevents RNA Pol II to bind

Proximal control elements are close to promoter

Allows RNA Pol II to bind

Transcription factors bind to proximal elements and transcription is low

Specific transcription lead to increased expression

Activators bind to enhancer and bends sequence

Distal control elements are enhancers that are located upstream/downstream of a gene

Cell Signaling

Stages of cell signaling

Reception: Signal molecule binds to receptor protein located at cell's surface

Transduction: Receptor protein changes when signal molecule binds to it. Signal conveyed to form that can bring cellular response. Signal transduction pathway

Cellular response: Transduced signal triggers response

Types of cell signaling

Local

Paracrine

Direct signaling

Synaptic

Neurotransmitters released and diffuses across synapse, stimulating target cell

Signal Molecules

Hydrophobic

Receptor in cell cytoplasm

Receptor in cell nucleus

Hydrophilic

Receptor on/in plasma membrane

Membrane Receptors

G-protein coupled receptor

Cell surgace transmembrane receptor that works with help of G protein

Tyrosine kinase receptor

Allows transfer of phosphate from ATP to tyrosine kinase regions of dimer

Ion Channel receptor

Membrane bound receptor undergoes conformational change, allows for passage of ions

Gene Expression

Translation

Process in which protein is synthesized

Three Steps

Initiation

Small ribosomal unit binds to mRNA. Initiator tRNA binds with start codon

Large ribosomal unit completes initiation complex. Initiation factors in charge of connection of all translation components.

Elongation Cycle

Codon Recognition

Anticodon of aminoacyl tRNA base pairs with complementary mRNA codon in A site. Binds and proceeds

Peptide bond formation

Translocation

Ribosome transolcates tRNA from A site to P site. Empty tRNA in P site moved to E site to get released.

Transcription

Initiation

RNA Pol binds to promoter, DNA strands unwind, Pol initiates RNA synthesis at start point

Transcription in Eukaryotes

TATA box nucleotide sequence (promoter)

Transcription factors bind to DNA before RNA Pol II binds to it

Other transcription factors bind the DNA along with RNA Pol II, forming transcription initiation complex

Elongation

Polymerase moves downstream, unwinding the DNA and elongating the RNA transcription in 5' to 3' direction

Termination

RNA transcript is realsed and polymerase detaches from the DNA

RNA Modifications

5' Cap and Poly A Tail

5' cap and Poly A tail are added to the two ends of pre-mRNA molecule in otder to facilitate the export of mature RNA from the nucleus, protect the mRNA from degrading, and help ribosomes attach to the 5' end of the mRNA when it is in the cytoplasm

RNA splicing

Introns are cut out and exons are spliced together

Lysosome

Breaks down molecules and recycles them

Endocytosis, three types

Receptor mediated

Phagocytosis

Pinocytosis

Photosynthesis

"Synthesis"

Cellular Respiration

Termination

A ribosome reaches the stop codon and the A site accepts a release factor

Release factor promotes hydrolysis of the bond between tRNA in P site and the last amino acid.

Ribosomal subunits and other parts dissociate

"Photo"

Retrieve energy including Light Reactions