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General Biology

The document summarizes several key characteristics of life at the cellular level. It describes the general features of cells, including their chemical makeup, internal structures, transport mechanisms, and modes of reproduction. Specifically, it outlines the cell theory, differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, organelle functions, membrane models, the steps and purpose of mitosis and meiosis, and specialized cell types in different organisms.

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Chelsea Nacino
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
119 views10 pages

General Biology

The document summarizes several key characteristics of life at the cellular level. It describes the general features of cells, including their chemical makeup, internal structures, transport mechanisms, and modes of reproduction. Specifically, it outlines the cell theory, differences between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, organelle functions, membrane models, the steps and purpose of mitosis and meiosis, and specialized cell types in different organisms.

Uploaded by

Chelsea Nacino
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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General Characteristics of Life:

 Homeostasis
 Role in the Ecosystem
 Chemical Uniqueness
 Complexity & Hierarchical Organization
 Reproduction
 Possesion of Genes
 Metabolism
 Development & Growth
 Evolution
 Movement
 Environmental Interaction

Homeostasis – state of internal constancy


“homeo” = the same
“stasis” = standing

Role in the Ecosystem

Producers

 Photosynthesis
 Chemosynthesis

Consumers

 Herbivores – Plants
 Carnivores – Meat
 Omnivores – both meat and plants

Feeding Relationships

 Prey
 Predators
 Scavengers
 Decomposers – recycle

Competition
Symbiosis

 Mutualism – Both organism benefits


 Commensalism – one will benefit but the other is not harmed
 Parasitism – one benefits, one is harmed

Chemical Uniqueness

- living systems demonstrate a unique and complex molecular organization

What makes an organism chemically unique?

- it is made up of organic substance

Organic – Carbon

 Carbohydrates – energy source


 Proteins – building blocks
 Lipids – energy source
 Nucleic – genetics

Complexity & Hierarchical Organization ( Ranking – Ascending )

( Simplest - Complex )

 Cells
 Tissues
 Organs
 Organ System

Reproduction – ability to reproduce

 Genes – replicate
 Cells
 Organisms
 Population
 Species

Genetic Program – Fidelity of Inheritance

Metabolism ( ABCD ) - Sum of all chemical processes in Body

Anabolism – simple to complex structures (built)

Catabolism – complex to simple ( destroy bonds / break down )

Development

 Change in shape/ form


 Qualitative
 Characteristic life cycle

Growth – change in size

Evolution – accumulation of gradual adaptions to changes in the environment

Movement ( purpose ) - living systems and their parts show precise and controlled
movements

Environmental Interaction

 Iritability – ability to respond a stimuli

Characteristic unique to humans :

 Language
 Future planning
 Culture
 Environmental shaping

Cells as units of life

Cell Concepts

Robert Hooke

 Cell Biology
 “cell”
 Improvised Microscope ( cork )

Anton Van Leewenhoek

 Father of Microbiology
 “pond water”
 Animalcules

Cell Theory

3 components:

 Mathias Schleiden – All living organisms are made up of cells


 Theodor Schwann – cell is the basic unit of life
 Rudolf Virchow – All cells come from pre-existing cells

Prokaryotes & Eukaryotes

Basic Features :

1. Cell Membrane – outer covering


o Regulation / regulates the entry and exit of the substance
o Communication between neighboring cells
2. Ribosomes – PROTEIN synthesis Prokaryotes
3.
4. DNA / Cytoplasm – Genetic Material
5. Cytosol – Cytoplasm - celly-like substance where organelles are suspended

Pro – Before
Karyon – Nucleus

 First cells to evolve


 Nucleoid
 Domains – Bacteria & Archaea

Eukaryotes

Eu - True
Karyon – Nucleus

 Membrane – bound organelles & nucleus


 Domains – Protists, Fungi, Plants, Animals

Structures unique to:

PLANTS (3c’s1p)

 Chloroplast – photosynthetic organelle


 Central Vacuole – water storage, lysosomes ( breakdown waste material)
 Cell Wall – protective layer, cellulose
 Plasmodesma / Plasmodesmata – communication, connect adjacent plant cells

ANIMAL CELLS

 Lysosome – digestive compartment


 Centrosome – cell division
 Flagella – locomotion

Plasma membrane

Fluid Mosaic Model

o Phospholipid Bilayer – Hydrophobic (interior), Hydrophilic (exterior), Amphiphilic


o Proteins – Peripheral (Surface), Integral (intro/through plasma membrane)

Cytoplasm
Cytoskeleton

o Cell shape – intermediate filament


o Movement – microfilament
o Cell division – Microtubule – Centrosome

Endomembrane System

1. Nucleus
2. Endoplasmic Reticulum
 Rough (ribosomes) - Protein Synthesis
 Smooth
 Lipid Synthesis
 Carbohydrates Metabolism
 Calcium Storage
 Detoxification of harmful substance
3. Transport Vesicle
4. Golgi Body ( Apparatus (secretory vesicle) / Complex (lysosome/waste)
5. Plasma Membrane

Golgi Complex – stores modifies & packages

Nucleus - gives instructions to photosynthesis

Microscope

 Head & Neck


 Eye Piece (two)
 Base
 Revolving nose piece
 Stage
 Stage clip
 Stage adjustment knobs - x-axis (top – forward + backward) & y-axis (bottom – left +
right )
 Coarse Adjustment Knob (big)
 Fine Adjustment Knob (small)
 Coarse Objective
 Scanning Objective – 4x (Red)
 Low power Objective – 10x (Yellow)
 High power Objective – 40x ( Blue )
 Oil Immersion Objective – 100x (Black)
 Pointing Needle (right eye piece)
Specimen Parenchyma Shape of cells Arrangement No. Of Nuclei Location of
of cells Nuclei
Liver Hepatocycte Polygonal Columns Mononucleate Central
d/Binucleated
Trachea Chondrocyte Stellate Singly/ Mononucleate Central
Isogenous d
Compact Osteocyte Stellate Concentric Mononucleate Central
Bone d
Thick Skin Epidermal cell Flat Layer Mononucleate Central
d
Spinal Cord Neuron Stellate Random Mononucleate Central
d
Skeletal Skeletal Elongated/ Bundle Multinucleate Peripheral
muscle Muscle Cell cylindrical d

Cell Surfaces & Specializations

o Cilia – does not move the entire cell, but move the fluid on the surfaces
o Flagella – moves the cell from one point to another
o Pseudopodia - “cytoplasmic streaming”
o Primary Cillium – cellular communication (helps the cell detect changes)
o Specialized Junctions (3 Cell junction types)
 Tight Junctions – encircle cells and act as seals to prevent passage of
molecules between cells
 Adhesion Junctions – encircle cells and link adjacent cells together

- lie below tight junctions

- Desmosome (unit) & Hemidesmosome (½ unit)

 Communication Junctions – form tiny cells

Membrane Transport

Passive Transport

 High to Low concentration


 Does not require energy

Diffusion

Simple Diffusion

 Facilitated Diffusion – transport / carrier proteins


 Osmosis (water molecules)
 Hypertonic solution – movement of water towards the inside of the cell
 Isotonic solution – no change of concentration of substances in the cell
 Hypotonic solution – movement of water towards the outside cell

Active Transport

 Low to High concentration


 Requires energy (in the form of ATP)
1. Endocytosis
 Phagocytosis (solid particles/ large)
 Pinocytosis – liquid (bulk-phase endocytosis)
 Receptor – mediated endocytosis (require specific molecules)
2. Exocytosis

Food Vacuole – structure form in the plasma membrane during Phagocytosis

Cell Division – Asexual mode of Reproduction

Reproductive – Gametes
Somatic Cells – Body Cells

Stages of Cell Division: (PMAT)

 Prophase
 Metaphase
 Anaphase
 Telophase

Ploidy – Chromosome

MITOSIS

 Gap 1 – Functional Proteins / Preparation for DNA


 Gap 2 – Preparation for structural Proteins
 Synthesis Phase – DNA replication/ Building up

PROPHASE

 Create/ produce chromosomes


 Chromatic condenses
 Nuclear membrane disappear
 Centrosomes replicate and move to opposite poles
 Produce Spindle Fibers

How Chromosomes are formed: (Prophase)

 CHROMATIN – thin strands of DNA


 CHROMATID – condense
 SISTER CHROMATIDS - (homologs = look a like) Fused Together
 CHROMOSOME

TELOPHASE

 Opposite of prophase
 Decondense
 Cleavage Furrow

METAPHASE

 Chromosomes align

ANAPHASE

 Chromosomes will split into 2 sister chromatids


 Chromatids move to opposite poles again to create new chromosomes

MEIOSIS
PROPHASE 1

 Some events in prophase of Mitosis


 2 unique events:
 Synapsis – formation of Tetrads (two homologus chromosome fused)
 Crossing Over – randomization of traits to ensure variation

METAPHASE 1

 Tetrads move to the metaphase plate/ equitorial plate

ANAPHASE 1

 Tetrads split & chromosomes move to the opposite poles

Centrosomes – produce spindle fibers


Cytokinesis- splitting of the cytoplasm into two individual cells

MITOSIS CHARACTERISTICS MEIOSIS


( DISCOPUG)
1 DIVISIONS 2
NO INDEPENDENT ASSORTMENT YES ( METAPHASE)
NONE SYNAPSIS YES
NO CROSSING OVER YES
2 CELLS OUTCOME 4 CELLS
46 CHROMOSOMES PLOID 23 CHROMOSOME
SOMATIC CELLS USE GAMETES
IDENTICAL CELL GENETICS VARIATION

At the end of of Meiosis 1 what is the ploidy?

Inorganic Compounds

 Usually lack carbon


 Structurally simple
 Ionic or covalent
 Water, many salts acids and bases

Organic Compounds

 Contain Carbon
 Contain Hydrogen
 Always have covalent bonds

Water – most important and most abundant inorganic compound in all living system ( 55 to
60%)

Properties of H2O:

 High Specific Heat Capacity – amount of energy beeded to raise the temp of 1g of H20
by 1 C
 High heat of vaporization – amount of energy needed to convert H2O to vapor
 Unique Density Behavior – 4 most dense; 0 C least dense
 High Surface Tension – cohesive property of water; maintain protoplasm and
movement
 Low Viscosity – increased ability to flow
 Excellent Solvent – binds well with most substances; dipolar
 Participates in Chemical Reactions
 Hydrolysis: + water = breakdown
 Dehydration: synthesis – water= build up

Inorganic Compounds

Acids – substance that break apart or dissolve in water

Bases – usually dissociate into one or more hydroxide ions (OH -) when it dissolves in water

Salts – when dissolved in water dissociate into cations and anions, neither of which is H+ or OH-

Buffers -

Organic Compunds

Carbohydrates (Fuel Source/ Structural Function – Plants )

 Contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen


 Include sugars, glycogen, starches, cellulose

Three major groups:

 Monosaccharides – simple sugars (glucose)


 Tetroses
 Pentoses – DNA & RNA
 Hexose –Glucose, Fructose, Galactose
 Disaccharides – simple sugars (two monosaccharides linked together)
 Glucose + Glucose = Maltose
 Fructose + Glucose = Sucrose
 Galactose + Glucose = Lactose
 Polysaccharides – large, complex, carbohydrates that contain tens or hundreds of
monosaccharides joined through dehydration synthesis reactions
 Starch (Plant) / Storage form of Glucose
 Glycogen (Animals) / Storage form of Glucose
 Cellulose (Plant) / Structural Component
 Chitin (Insects) / Structural Component

Lipids (fuel source, structural, storage)


monomer: fatty acids

 Hydrophobic
 Insoluble in water
 Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen

a. Trigycerides = 1 glycerol = 3 fatty acids

Neutral fats : Saturated (solid at room temp.) & Unsaturated (liquid at room temp.)

b. Phospholipids = 1 glycerol + 2 fatty acids + structure of phosphoric acid or organic base


cell membrane & tissues
c. Steroids – complex alcohols structurally unlike fats but have fat-like properties
Cholesterol

 HOL – High Density Lipoprotein


 LDL – Low Density Lipoprotein

Proteins (structure, enzymes, storage, transport, etc.)


monomer: Amino Acids

 are large molecules that contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen
 Contain sulfur
 Much more complex in structure than carbohydrates or lipids
a. Simple: Protein Only
b. Complex: Protein + Other Substance
 Chromoproteins – proteins + pigment
 Lipoproteins – proteins + lipids
 Glycoproteins – proteins + carbohydrates
 Phosproteins - Proteins + phosphoric acid

CHON

1. Primary structure: linear chain of amino acids


2. Secondary structure: spiraling / pleating
3. Tertiaty structure: bending / fold
4. Quaternary structure: Multiple polypeptides

NUCLEIC ACIDS

 Phosphate Group
 Nitrogenous Group
 Pentose Sugar

Infromation Storage / Building Blocks

Monomer: Nucleotides

 DNA – provides the blueprint of life


o Nucleotide bases: Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, Thymine
 RNA
o Nucleotide bases: Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, Uracil

ATP – chemical energy used by all cells

- energy released when phosphate bone is broken

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