ca
Biological Molecules
Carbohydrates
Monomers: Monosaccharides
Examples: Glucose, Fructose, Galactose
Bonds: Glycosidic Bonds
Functions: Provide energy, structural (cellulose in plants)
Lipids
Monomers: Fatty acids and glycerol
Bonds: Ester Bonds
Functions: Energy Storage (Triglycerides)
Proteins
Monomers: Amino Acids
Peptide Bonds
Structural Support, enzymatic activity
Nucleic Acids
Nucleotides
Phosphate group, 5 carbon sugar, Nitrogenous base
Held together by Phosphodiester bonds
Store and transmit genetic information
Water Properties
Physical Properties
High boiling and melting point
High Specific Heat and Heat capacity
Chemical Properties
Polar Molecule
Hydrogen bonding
Biological Roles
Universal Solvent
Higher density as liquid than solid
Allows Ice to float on liquid water
Allows for aquatic environments to be insulated
2 Domains of Life (Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic Structures)
Prokaryotes
Cell wall
Chloroplast
Plasmodesmata
Central Vacuole
Eukaryotes
Flagellum
Lysosome
ECM
Tight Junctions
Gap
Intermediate
Golgi apparatus
Smooth ER
Rough ER
Plasma Membrane
Nuclear Envelope
Nucleus
Ribosomes
Mitochondria
Microfilaments
Microtubes
Peroxisome
Chemical Bonds/Interactions
Intermolecular
Van der Waals/Hydrophobic Interactions
Hydrophobic tails of molecules clump on the "inside" while the hydrophilic heads are "outside" trying to interact with the liquids
Lipids
Ion-Dipole Interaction
When an ionic compound interacts with a polar molecule. Ions are attracted to oppositely charged end of a polar molecule
Salt dissolving in water
Dipole-Dipole Interaction
Positive end of one polar molecule attracted to the negative end of another polar molecule
Hydrogen Bonds
Hydrogen can form these bonds with electronegative atoms like oxygen, nitrogen, or fluorine
Special type of Dipole-dipole interaction involving H atoms
Intramolecular
Covalent Bonds
Polar
When there is an electronegativity difference greater than 0.5 between the atoms of a molecules
Water (H20)
Hydroxyl group (OH)
Sulfhydryl group (SH)
Non-polar
When there is an electronegativity difference less than 0.5 between the atoms of a molecules
Oxygen (O2)
Methyl group (CH3)
Some molecules that have a difference greater than 0.5 can be non-polar due to linearity
Carbon dioxide (CO2)
Ionic Bonds
When one atom donates one or more of its electrons to another and gain a positive charge due to the loss of an electron. The receiving atom gains a negative charge.
Sulfate group (SO4^2-)
Carboxylate group (COO-)
Sodium Chloride (NaCl)
Hydroxide group (OH-)
CONCEPT MAP 2
Membranes
Components of Membranes
Phospholipid Bilayer
Hydrophobic Tail
Hydrophilic Head
Membrane Proteins
Integral Proteins
Transmembrane, meaning they span the length of the membrane, involved in transport, signaling
Peripheral Proteins
Loosely attached to surface of membrane, assist with signaling and structure
Cholesterol
Carbs
Attached to lipids or proteins (glycolipids/glycoproteins)
Function
Selectively Permeable
Regulates what enters/exits cells
Cell Recognition
Ligands attaching to membrane receptors
Cell Signaling
local signaling
paracine
synaptic
long distance
hormone
Intracellular
membrane receptors
G-protein linked
Ion Channel Receptor
Tyrosine Kinase
stretch
ligand
voltage
3 Stages
Reception
Transduction
response
G Protein Receptor
GDP
GTP
phosphatase
cAMP
AMP
Cellular Respiration
Glycolysis
Glucose (C₆) is converted to glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) by hexokinase
Glucose-6-phosphate (G6P) is converted to fructose-6-phosphate (F6P)
Fructose-6-phosphate is converted to fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (F1,6BP) by phosphofructokinase
Products: 2 ATP, 2 NADH, 2 Pyruvate, Water
Oxidative Phospholyration
ATP, Water, NAD⁺ and FAD (recycled electron carriers that go back to glycolysis, pyruvate oxidation, and the citric acid cycle).
ETC
Protein complexes I, II, III, and IV.
Mobile electron carriers: Ubiquinone (CoQ) and cytochrome c
NADH donates electrons to Complex I, FADH₂ donates electrons to Complex II.
Protons (H⁺) are actively pumped into the intermembrane space by Complex I, Complex III, and Complex IV creating gradient
The protons flow back into the mitochondrial matrix
The flow of protons through ATP synthase drives the conversion of ADP and inorganic phosphate (Pi) to ATP
Products: 3 NADH, 1 FADH₂, 1 GTP (or ATP), 2 CO₂
Pyruvate Oxidation and Citric Cycle
Pyruvate Oxidation
1 Acetyl-CoA, 1 NADH, 1 CO₂
Pyruvate transported to mitochondria
Pyruvate (3-carbon) is decarboxylated, meaning it loses a carbon atom as CO₂
Coenzyme A (CoA) binds to the remaining 2-carbon fragment, forming acetyl-CoA.
NAD⁺ accepts electrons and a proton (H⁺), becoming NADH
Photosynthesis
Chloroplasts
Light Dependent Reactions
Light absorption by PSII
Transport of H+ through ETC
ATP and NADPH Production
3 ATP:1 molecule NADPH
Photolysis
Production of O2 as a byproduct
Calvin Cycle
Carbon fixation
G3P formation
A regeneration phase
G3P is used to regenerate RuBisCO
Is used for carbon fixation
Conversion of CO2 into Glucose
PSII and PSI
PSII is First to ACT
Photolysis
Generate high energy E for ETC
PSI is second to ACT
Production of NADPH
Used in Calvin Cycle
Membrane Proteins (Action Potential)
Integral membrane proteins
Na+, K+, Ca, H+ will travel through these channels
Na+/K+ pump
Resting Potential
Depolarization
"Peak Phase"
Repolarization
Hyperpolarization
Refractory Period
Return to resting potential
Hyrdophobic regions allow them to interact with internal layer
CONCEPT MAP III
Mutations
Random Changes in DNA structure
Point Mutations
Substitution
Silent Mutation
No change in amino acid coded for
Redundancy of genetic code, multiple codons can code for the same amino acid
No effect
Missense Mutation
Change in an amino acid in the protein
Potential changes in protein structure and function
Nonsense mutation
Introduces an early stop codon
Truncation/faulty protein
Frameshift
One or more base pairs swapped that alters the reading of the DNA sequence
Lead to genetic variation
Transcription
Prokaryotes
RNAP
Promoter
Unwinds DNA
Creates new RNA transcript
reads 3' to 5'
Termination
Terminates at given termination site
Reads until AAUAAA sequence and adds A polytail at the 3' end
Creates new pre-RNA transcript
RNA splicing
Splicesome removes introns
Eukaryotes
RNA polymerase II
Transcription factors
Translation
Initiation
mRNA, tRNA, Ribosome
Eukaryotes
Met is starting amino acid
Prokaryotes
fMet is starting amino acid
Termination
Stop codon enters A site
Release factor comes to A site instead of tRNA
Elogation
mRNA enters
read from 5' to 3'
A site
forms peptide bonds between amino acids attached to tRNA
P site
E site
Empty tRNA from P site leaves
added from N to C
EUKARYOTIC VS PROKARYOTIC GENE REGULATION
Regulation
Prokaryotes
Simple, single celled
Gene Regulation
s
Key mechanism: Operons
Inducible Operons
EXAMPLE: LAC Operon, ON when lactose is present
Repressible Operons
TRP Operon: Off when tryptophan is abundant
Eukaryotes
Complex, multicellular
Gene Regulation
Occurs at MULTIPLE levels
Primarily on transcriptional level
Control of Gene Regulation also occurs on Epigenetic, post-transcriptional, translational and post-translational level.
DNA REPLICATION
DNA REPLICATION
Okazaki fragments
Short segments of DNA synthesized on lagging strand
DNA Polymerase III
DNA replication reads 3' to 5', makes DNA 5'to3'
Adds nucleotides to the 3' end of a growing DNA strand.
Topoisomerase
keeps it from breaking
Primase
Synthesizes short RNA primers
DNA Polymerase I
Ligase
Glues/connects everything together
helicase
unzips DNA
SSB
at