AP Biology: Units 1-2

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116 Terms
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Observation

regarding a phenomena (which leads to a question)

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Question

regarding a cause or variable which might influence the observed phenomena

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Hypothesis

The predicted relationship between the variable and the observed phenomena

IF (cause) THEN (effect)

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Independent Variable

the manipulated variable

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Dependent Variable

which will change as a result

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Confounding Variables

might influence dependent variable so must be controlled (kept constant)

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Replication

obtain a larger sample of data which is likely to be more representative of natural variations

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Statistical analysis

reduce the effect of outliers on the overall data pool

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Scaled, titled graph

Title: Dependent vs. Independent

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Conclusion

Explains how the data does or does not support the hypothesis

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Matter

has mass and takes up space 

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Matter is made of…

elements

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Atomic number

number of protons and electrons 

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Atomic mass 

protons + neutrons

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Where are protons and neutrons located?

nucleus

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electrons found in

specific orbitals or energy levels 

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types of orbitals 

* s-orbital holds 2e- 

* px, py & pz  orbitals hold 2e- each

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octet rule

principle in chemistry that states that atoms tend to gain, lose, or share electrons in order to achieve a stable electron configuration with eight valence electrons (8e- in outer level is stable) 

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What does the location of electrons determine?

effect the chemical reactivity by determining bonding activity 

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Covalent Bonds

atoms share a pair of valence e- 

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Ionic Bonds

an e- is transferred from one atom to another 

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Oxidation

a substance loses electrons, resulting in an increase in its oxidation state

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Reduction

involves the gain of electrons or the loss of oxygen, resulting in a decrease in the oxidation state of an atom, ion, or molecule

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What does the movement of electrons between energy levels do?

Energy can be stored or released; commonly used to transfer energy in cellular reactions like photosynthesis and respiration

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e- elevated to higher level

energy is stored

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e- drop to lower level

energy is released

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Water 

Oxygen forms one covalent bond with each of the 2 hydrogens by sharing e- pairs

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What shape does a water molecule have?

Tetrahedron because exposed protons repel and unshared electrons repel

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Water is dipolar because…

oxygen is more electronegative and pulls e- away from hydrogen (un-bonded e- create negative pole)

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Water creates an…

 electrostatic attraction between opposite charges that forms lots of Hydrogen bonds between water molecules

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cohesion

stick to each other  (surface tension)

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adhesion

stick to other  polar molecules (your finger)

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Water is important for…

capillary action

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Capillary action

draw water up the tubular structures of plants

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Water’s high specific heat

can absorb a lot w/o change in temp (slow to change temp-homeostasis)

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Water’s high heat of vaporization

resist evaporation (so sweating takes a lot of heat away)

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Water stabilizes…

temperature homeostasis of body and ecosystems

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Hydration shell

refers to the sphere of water molecules that surround dissolved ions or polar molecules in a solution, formed due to the attraction between the charged or polar solute particles and the water molecules

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Dissolve

forms hydrogen bonds w/ other charged or polar molecules so they dissociate ionic compounds & can’t re-associate

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Dissolving is important for

transportation all molecules carried, dissolved sugars, salts, gases in blood & body fluids and plants

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hydrophobic

nonpolar, insoluble

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hydrophilic

polar, soluble

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Hydrophobic exclusion

water molecules push nonpolar molecules away - exclude

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Water is important for maintaining

cell membranes (phospholipids), nucleic acids and folding protein

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Because oxygen _____________________ very strongly (it is very ________________________ or ______________________) it leaves the remaining ________________ from the _____________ exposed so creates a partial ____________________ charge all of which makes this molecule ______________________.

attracts these electrons; electronegative; electron loving; proton; hydrogen; positive; polar

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Because ___________ does ________ attract the electrons as strongly (it is __________________)  the ________________in the ___________ are not as _____________ so no _________________ is created.  This molecule therefore is ____________ or __________________ (water fearing) and _______________.

carbon; not; less electronegative; electrons; hydrogen; attracted; partial charge; nonpolar; hydrophobic; insoluble

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Because ___________________ is ______________________ it attracts the _________________  so hydrogen’s protons _________ exposed creating a partial ____________________ charge.  This molecule is therefore ____________ and will be ______________________ and ______________________. 

nitrogen; more electronegative; hydrogen electrons; are; positive; polar; hydrophilic; soluble

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(Ionically Bonded Molecules)

Because electrons are ________________ in this molecule, it becomes ____________________ (which is even more than just ________________).  These molecules will therefore both _______________ and ____________________.

transferred; fully charged +/-; partially charge; soluble, hydrophilic

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Hydrophobic molecules are

uncharged and nonpolar; bonded covalently w/low electronegative atoms

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Hydrophilic molecules are

charged and or polar; bonded ionically or covalently w/elements of high electronegativity

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pH

negative logarithm of H+ concentration that a substance makes as it dissociates in solution

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Acids

molecules that release an excess of H+ hydrogen ions when they dissociate in solution

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Bases

molecules that release an excess of OH- ions when they dissociate in solution

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Neutral (7)

H+ = OH-

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Buffers

Compounds that can both absorb and release H+ so that pH remains relatively constant

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Buffers example

CO2 in blood creates a buffer to prevent pH changes

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Bicarbonate buffering system

-Add a base (take up H+)the buffer responds by producing more

-Add acid (releases H+) the buffer absorbs them 

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Dehydration Synthesis

the process that allows cells to remove a hydrogen from one molecule and a hydroxyl group from another (forming water) and bond the remaining subunits together 

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(Dehydration synthesis)

monosaccharide + monosaccharide →

di- and polysaccharides + water

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(Dehydration synthesis)

amino + amino→

Polypeptides & larger proteins + water

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(Dehydration synthesis)

glycerol + 3 fatty acids →

Triglyceride + 3 water

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Hydrolysis

the process of inserting a hydrogen and hydroxyl group into a pre-existing bond to break the two sub-units apart

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(Hydrolysis)

di- and polysaccharides + water →

monosaccharide + monsaccharide

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(Hydrolysis)

polypeptides & larger proteins + water →

amino acid + acid

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(Hydrolysis)

triglyceride + 3 water

glycerol + 3 fatty acids

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Carbohydrates types

Monosaccharides, disaccharides, polysaccharides

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Monosaccharides (one sugar) functions

-Ready energy due to many C-H bonds 

-Rapidly available- monos don’t need hydrolysis to get to blood

-Transport sugar in animals due to –OH groups which are polar so dissolve readily in blood 

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Isomers

molecules with same molecular or empirical formula but different structural formula

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Monosaccharides examples

Glucose or galactose; fructose

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Disaccharides (two sugars) functions

Transportation of sugars in plants because of a lot of –OH groups w/ high electronegative O that makes molecules polar so they will dissolve in water

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Disaccharides examples

Glucose+fructose=sucrose

Glucose+glucose=maltose (boned by dehydration synthesis)

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Polysaccharides (many sugars) functions

-Storage – polys can be retrieved later because alpha glucose forms linkage that enzymes can digest

-Structural – can’t be broken down and used for energy because it is made of beta glucose that have bond angles you can’t digest

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Polysaccharides examples

Amylose (plants), glycogen (animals), cellulose (plants), chitin (exoskeletons of anthropods/fungi)

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Amylose & glycogen are

Digestible – made of alpha glucose isomers form 1-4 linkage that can digest

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Cellulose & chitin

Indigestible- made of beta glucose isomers that you can’t digest

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Lipids

All are long chains of C-H bonds, so they are nonpolar & hydrophobic

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Lipids types

Triglyceride, phospholipids, terpenes, prostaglandins, steroids

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Triglyceride functions

-Long term storage because many C-H bonds

-Saturated – no double bonds, lie flat. Solid fats – animal fats

-Unsaturated – double bond kink fatty acids – won’t be flat so stay liquid – plant oils

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Triglyceride examples

fats & oils

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Glycerol

3 carbon alcohol

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3 Fatty Acids

Long chain of C w/H

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Phospholipids functions

Cell membrane – barrier to entrance into the cell by charged or water soluble because lipids are nonpolar (hydrophobic exclusion)

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Outside cell

hydrophilic

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Fatty acids

hydrophobic

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Inside cell

hydrophilic

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Terpenes functions

Pigments like chlorophyll – tail acts as anchor that holds polar chlorophyll to membrane inside chloroplast (in order to gather maximum amount of light)

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Terpenes examples

non-polar tails, long chains of carbons with methyl groups

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Prostaglandins functions

-Stimulate smooth muscle

-Vasodilatation

-Uterine contraction

-Affect wide range of cells b/c soluble in membranes

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Prostaglandins examples

Ring with long chain of carbons

(Don’t need membrane receptors because they are soluble in the cell membrane – so they can affect a wide range of cells)

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Steroids functions

-Add flexibility to cell membrane in cold conditions 

-Affect wide range of cells b/c soluble in membranes

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Steroids examples

-Cholesterol (which is made into reproductive hormones like estrogen and testosterone)

(Don’t need membrane receptors because they are soluble in the cell membrane – so they can affect a wide range of cells)

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Peptide Bonding

between amino acids

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Peptide bond

C-N-C

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Primary

sequence of amino acids varies as coded in DNA

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Secondary

folding due to H-bond between polar groups on amino acids; two patterns of H bonding

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Two types of secondary folding

Beta pleated sheet & alpha helix

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beta pleated sheet

2 parallel strands, bonds form across strands

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alpha helix

single strand spirals, H bonds form above and below

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Motif

describes protein secondary structure – alpha, alpha, beta etc.

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Tertiary

occur when protein interacts with water – hydrophobic R-groups fold to inside and hydrophilic R-groups go to outside

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