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AP Biology Study Guide

Unit 1: Chemistry of Life

Structure of Water and Hydrogen Bonding

Chemistry Review

  • Matter: anything that takes up space and has mass

  • Elements: a substance that cannot be broken down into other substances by chemical reactions

    • 92 elements occur naturally in nature

  • Compounds: a substance consisting of two or more different elements combined in a fixed ratio

    • H2O

    • NaCl

  • CHOPN: Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorous, Nitrogen; makes up 92% of living matter

  • Essential Elements: of the 92 naturally occurring elements, 20-25% are essential to survive and reproduce

  • Trace Elements: of the 92 naturally occurring elements, these are required by an organism in very small quantities

  • Atomic Number: number of protons (and electrons)

  • Atomic Mass: sum of protons and neutrons averaged over all isotopes

  • Group: vertical columns on Periodic Table; elements in the same group have the same amount of valence electrons

  • Period: horizontal rows on Periodic Table; elements in the same period have the same total number of shells

  • Bohr Model: shows electrons orbiting the nucleus of an atom

    • Electrons are placed on shells outside the nucleus

    • Each shell has a different energy level and can hold up to a certain number of electrons (formula to find e- on each shell is 2n^2, where n is the shell number)

      • 1st shell: 2 e- (electrons); ex. 2(1)^2

      • 2nd shell: 8 e- (electrons); ex. 2(2)^2

      • 3rd shell: 18 e- (electrons); ex. 2(3)^2

  • Lewis Dot Model: simplified Bohr’s diagram

    • Does not show energy levels

    • Only shows electrons in the valence shell (outermost shell)

    • Electrons as dots are placed around the element symbol in N/S/E/W directions

    • First time around the element symbol is single dots then the second time around you pair the dots

Types of Bonds:

  • Elements want to be stable

    • achieve this by forming chemical bonds with other elements

    • Octet rule: elements will gain, lose, or share electrons to complete their valence shell (8 electrons) and become stable (like a noble gas)

  • Chemical Bonds: an attraction between two atoms, resulting from the sharing or transferring of valence electrons

  • Electronegativity: the measure of an atom’s ability to attract electrons to itself

    • electronegativity decreases as you go down the Periodic Table

    • electronegativity increases as you go to the right of the Periodic Table

  • Covalent Bonds: when two or more atoms share electrons (usually between two nonmetals)

    • forms molecules and compounds

      • Single bond: 1 pair of shared e-

      • Double bond: 2 pairs of shared e-

      • Triple bond: 3 pairs of shared e-

    • There are two types of covalent bonds…

      • Nonpolar covalent: electrons are shared equally between two atoms (e.g. O2)

      • Polar covalent: electrons are not shared equally between two atoms (e.g. H2O)

        • unequal sharing of electrons results in partial charges on oxygen and hydrogen

  • Ionic Bonds: the attraction between oppositely charged atoms (ions)

    • usually between nonmetal and metal (metal transfers electrons (e-) to nonmetal)

    • forms ionic compounds and salts

      • NaCl (Sodium Chloride)

      • LiF (Lithium Chloride)

    • occurs when there is a transfer of electrons from one atom to another atom forming ions

      • cation: positively charged ion

      • anion: negatively charged ion

  • Hydrogen Bonds: the partially positive hydrogen atom in one polar covalent molecule will be attracted to an electronegative atom in another polar covalent molecule

    • Intermolecular Bond: bond that forms between molecules

  • Why does this happen?

    • when a hydrogen atom is bonded to an Oxygen or Nitrogen, the electrons are drawn mostly away from the Hydrogen and toward the electronegative atom (Don’t forget that this is a polar covalent bond)

      • this causes the hydrogen to have a partial positive charge and the electronegative atom (N or O) to have a partial negative charge

Properties of Water

  • Polarity: unequal sharing of the electrons makes water a polar molecule

  • Cohesion: attraction of molecules for other molecules of the same kind (H2O molecules stick to each other)

    • hydrogen bonds between H2O molecules hold them together and increase cohesive forces

    • allows for the transport of H2O and nutrients against gravity in plants

    • responsible for surface tension (property of allowing liquid to resist external force)

  • Adhesion: the clinging of one molecule to a different molecule (H2O molecules stick to something else—like a cell wall)

    • because of the polarity of H2O

      • in plants, this allows water to cling to the cell walls to resist the downward pull of gravity

  • Capillary Action: the upward movement of water due to the forces of cohesion, adhesion, and surface tension (moves water upwards)

    • occurs when adhesion is greater than cohesion

      • important for the transport of water and nutrients in plants

  • Temperature Control:

    • High specific heat: H2O resists changes in temp. by…

      • hydrogen bonds

        • heat must be absorbed to break hydrogen bonds, but heat is released when hydrogen bonds are formed

      • Importance of High Specific Heat:

        • moderates air temp

          • large bodies of water can absorb heat in the daytime and release heat at night

        • stabilizes ocean temp

          • benefits marine life

        • organisms can resist change in their own internal temp

    • Evaporative Cooling: water has a high heat of vaporization

      • the molecules with the highest kinetic energy leave as a gas

      • Importance of Evaporative Cooling:

        • Moderates Earth’s climate

        • Stabilizes temp in lakes and ponds

        • Prevents terrestrial organisms from overheating (e.g. sweating in humans)

        • Prevents leaves from becoming too hot in the sun

  • Density (floating ice): as water solidifies it expands and becomes less dense

    • due to the hydrogen bonds:

      • when cooled, H2O molecules move too slowly to break the bonds

        • allows marine life to survive under floating ice sheets

      • with lower temps, hydrogen bonds cause water molecules to form a crystalline structure

  • Solvent: dissolving agent in a solution

    • water is a versatile solvent (could also be referred to as a universal solvent)

      • the polar molecules are attracted to ions and other polar molecules water can form hydrogen bonds with

    • water can interact with sugars or proteins containing many oxygens and hydrogens

    • water will form hydrogen bonds with the sugars or proteins to dissolve it

  • Ionic Compounds: dissolves ions

    • partially negative oxygen in water will interact with a positive atom

    • partially positive hydrogen in water will interact with a negative atom

Elements of Life:

  • Organic Chemistry: the study of compounds with covalently bonded carbon

  • Organic Compounds: compounds that contain carbon and hydrogen

Carbon: can form single, double, or triple covalent bonds

  • a single carbon can form up to 4 covalent bonds

    • can form long chains

  • most commonly formed with hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen

    • the type and number of covalent bonds carbon forms with other atoms affects the length of the carbon shape and the shape of the molecule

Carbon Chains: carbon can use its valence electrons to form covalent bonds to other carbons

  • this links the carbons into a chain

  • Hydrocarbons: organic molecules consisting of only hydrogen and carbon (simple framework for more complex organic molecules)

  • Carbon chains form the skeletons of most organic molecules

    • skeletons can vary in length, branching, double bond position, and presence of rings

  • many regions of a cell’s organic molecules contain hydrocarbons

Functional Groups: chemical groups attached to the carbon skeleton that participate in chemical reactions

  • Hydroxyl group: -OH

  • Carbonyl group: -C=O

  • Carboxyl group: —COOH

  • Amino group: -NH2

  • Sulfhydryl group: -SH

    H

  • Methyl group: -C-H

    H

  • Phosphate group: -OPO²-3 (2 of the 3 Oxygens are negative)

Introduction to Biological Macromolecules

Molecular Diversity due to Carbon

  • variations in carbon skeletons allow for molecular diversity

  • carbon can form large molecules known as macromolecules

    • four classes of macromolecules (molecules made of smaller subunits)

      • Carbohydrates (Polymer): CHO; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen

      • Proteins (Polymer): CHONS; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Sulfur

      • Nucleic acids (Polymer): CHOPN; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, Nitrogen

        • along with carbon, nitrogen is an important element for building proteins and nucleic acids

      • Lipids (doesn’t include true polymers and are hydrophobic molecules): CHONP; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorus

        • phosphorus is important for building nucleic acids and some lipids

Formation and Breakdown of Macromolecules

  • Monomers: the repeating units that make up a polymer

  • Polymers: chain-like macromolecules of similar or identical repeating units that are covalently bonded together (multiple monomers covalently bonded together)

  • Dehydration reaction: bonds 2 monomers with the loss of H2O

    • the -OH of one monomer bonds to the -H of another monomer forming H2O, which is then released

      • Ex. glucose and sucrose lose an H2O molecule and then bind together to form sucrose (a polymer, polysaccharide)

  • Hydrolysis: breaks the bonds in a polymer by adding H2O

    • One of the -H of the H2O bonds to one monomer and the remaining -OH of the H2O attaches to the other monomer

      • Ex. adding water to sucrose splits it into glucose (a monomer, monosaccharide) and fructose (a monomer, monosaccharide)

Biological Macromolecules

Carbohydrates: includes sugars and polymers of sugars (CHO)

  • contains a carbonyl group (-C=O) and many hydroxyl groups (-OH)

  • Monosaccharides: simple sugars

    • molecular formulas with multiples of the unit CH2O

    • most common is glucose

      • nutrients and fuel for cells

      • used in cellular respiration

    • can serve as building blocks for amino acids, or as monomers for disaccharides and polysaccharides

  • Disaccharides: 2 monosaccharides joined together by covalent bonds

    • most common is sucrose

      • monomers of sucrose: glucose and fructose

      • plants transfer carbohydrates from leaves to other parts of the plant in the form of sucrose

  • Polysaccharides: polymer with many sugars joined via dehydration reactions

    • storage polysaccharides

      • plants store starch (polymer of glucose monomers)

        • allows plants to store excess glucose

      • animals store glycogen (polymer of glucose)

        • stored in liver and muscle cells

    • structural polysaccharides:

      • cellulose: tough substance that forms plant cell walls

      • chitin: forms exoskeleton of arthropods

Protein: molecule consisting of polypeptides (polymer of amino acids) folded into a 3D shape (CHONS)

  • Formation: amino acids→peptide→polypeptide→protein

  • shape determines function

  • Amino Acids: molecules that have an amino group and a carboxyl group (—COOH)

    • 20 different amino acids

    • general structure: amino group on the left side, R group (variable side chain) in the middle, and carboxyl group on the right side

    • each amino acid (AA) has a unique side chain

      • unique aspects of the AA are based on the side chain’s physical and chemical properties

      • side chains can be grouped as

        • nonpolar (hydrophobic)

        • polar (hydrophobic)

        • charged/ionic (hydrophilic)

      • side chains interact, which determines the shape and function of the protein

  • Formation of peptide bonds: to form a peptide bond, the carboxyl group of one AA must be positioned next to the amino group of another AA

  • Polypeptides: many AA linked by peptide bonds

    • each polypeptide has a unique sequence of AAs and directionality

      • each end is chemically unique

        • one end is a free amino group (N-terminus)

        • one end is a free carboxyl group (C-terminus)

      • the sequence of AAs determines the 3D shape (shape determines function)

        • when a polypeptide twists and folds (b/c of R group interaction) it forms a protein

  • Functions of Proteins:

    • Antibody: help protect the body from disease

    • Enzyme: carry out chemical reactions or assist in creating new molecules

    • Messenger: transmit signals (ie hormones)

    • Structural: provide structure and support

    • Transport/storage: bind to and carry small atoms and molecules through the body

  • Levels of Protein Structure:

    • Primary: linear chain of AA

      • determined via genes

      • dictates secondary and tertiary forms

    • Secondary: coils and folds due to hydrogen bonding within the polypeptide backbone

      • pleated sheet: hydrogen bonds between polypeptide chains lying side by side

      • helix: hydrogen bonding between every 4th AA

    • Tertiary: 3D folding due to interactions between the side chains of the AAs

      • reinforced by hydrophobic interactions and disulfide bridges of the side chains

      • the covalent bond formed between sulfur atoms and two cysteine monomers

    • Quaternary: association of 2+ polypeptides

      • found in only some proteins

Nucleic Acids: polymers made of nucleotide monomers (CHONP)

  • Function to: store, transmit, and express hereditary information

    • 2 forms:

      • DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid

      • RNA: ribonucleic acid

  • Components: nucleotides→polynucleotides→nucleic acids

  • Nucleotide: each nucleotide is comprised of a…

    • Nitrogenous base: 2 types…

      • pyrimidines: one ring with 6 atoms

        • cytosine

        • thymine (only found in DNA)

        • uracil (only found in RNA)

      • purines: one ring with 6 atoms bonded to one ring with 5 atoms

        • adenine and guanine

    • Five Carbon Sugar: a sugar is bonded to the base

      • DNA: sugar is deoxyribose (b/c one less OH in the base)

      • RNA: sugar is ribose (b/c one more OH than DNA in the base)

        • they both differ in structure and function

    • Phosphate Group: added to the 5’ carbon of the sugar (which is attached to the base) to form a nucleotide

      • nucleoside: portion w/o phosphate group

  • Polynucleotides: phosphate groups link adjacent nucleotides

    • phosphodiester linkage

    • directionality: 5’ phosphate end to 3’ hydroxyl (-OH) end (nucleotides get added to 3’)

    • sequence of bases along the DNA or mRNA is unique for each gene

      • dictates AA sequence

        • dictates primary structure of protein

          • dictates 3D structure of a protein

    • DNA: consists of 2 polynucleotides

      • forms a double helix

        • strands are antiparallel (5’ to 3’ and 3’ to 5’)

        • held together by hydrogen bonds between bases (adenine to thymine, cytosine to guanine)

    • RNA: single-stranded polynucleotide

      • variable in shape

        • due to base pairing within RNA

          • adenine bonds to uracil

          • cytosine bonds to guanine

Lipids: class of molecules that do not include true polymers (CHOP)

  • generally small in size

  • often not considered to be a macromolecule

  • lipids are nonpolar-hydrophobic

  • types of lipids:

    • fats: composed of glycerol (alcohol, hydroxyl groups) and fatty acids (long carbon chains, carboxyl groups at one end)

      • 3 fatty acids join to a glycerol via ester linkage

      • bond between a hydroxyl and carboxyl group

        • classified as either a:

          • saturated fatty acid: no double bonds between carbons in the carbon chain = more hydrogen (saturated w/ hydrogen)

          • an unsaturated fatty acid: contains one or more double bonds

  • phospholipids major component of cell membranes

    • 2 fatty acids attached to a glycerol and a phosphate

    • assembles as a bilayer in H2O

      • tails (fatty acids) are hydrophobic

      • head (phosphate and glycerol) is hydrophilic

  • steroids: lipids that have four fused rings

    • unique groups attached to the ring determine the type of steroid

Unit 2a: Cell Structure and Function

Subcellular Components and Compartmentalization

Cells:

  • the basic structural and functional units of every organism

    • all cells:

      • are bound by a plasma membrane

      • contain cytosol

      • contain chromosomes

      • contain ribosomes

  • 2 types of cells:

    • Prokaryotes:

      • domains bacteria and archaea

      • DNA is in the nucleoid region

      • generally smaller in size than eukaryotes

    • Eukaryotes:

      • protists, fungi, plants, animals

      • DNA is in the nucleus

      • contains membrane-bound organelles

Organelles & Other Features:

  • Organelles: membrane-bound structures in eukaryotes; there are 2 categories

    • Endomembrane organelles:

      • nuclear envelope

      • endoplasmic reticulum

      • golgi complex

      • lysosomes

      • vesicles/vacuoles

      • plasma membrane

    • Energy organelles:

      • mitochondria

      • chloroplasts

  • Other features: not membrane-bound but critically important in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes

    • ribosomes: distinct differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes

    • cytoskeleton:

      • microtubules

      • microfilaments

      • intermediate filaments

Organelles:

  • Compartmentalization: in organelles allows for different metabolic reactions to occur in different locations

    • increases surface area for reactions to occur

    • prevents interfering reactions from occurring in the same locations

  • Unique cell components: plant cells and animal cells have certain organelles that only belong to either the plant or animal cell

    • Plants:

      • chloroplasts

      • central vacuole

      • cell wall plasmodesmata (or plasmodesma)

    • Animals:

      • lysosomes

      • centrosomes

      • flagella

Endomembrane Organelles:

  • Nucleus: contains chromosomes (genetic information)

    • enclosed by the nuclear envelope

      • double membrane

    • has pores

      • pores regulate entry and exit of materials from the cell

    • contains a nucleolus

      • dense region of the nucleus where ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is synthesized

        • rRNA is combined with proteins to form large and small subunits of ribosomes

        • subunits exit via nuclear pores

          • assembles into ribosomes

            • ribosomes translate messages found on mRNA (messenger RNA) into the primary structure of polypeptides

  • Ribosomes: compromised of ribosomal RNA and protein (some texts don’t classify them as organelles because they are not membrane-bound)

    • functions: synthesize proteins

    • can be found in 2 locations:

      • cytosol

        • proteins produced here generally function only within the cytosol (ex. enzymes)

        • known as free ribosomes (not bound to anything)

      • bound to the endoplasmic reticulum or nuclear envelope

        • proteins produced here can be secreted from the cell

          • leave via transport vesicles

  • Endoplasmic Reticulum: a network of membranous sacs and tubes

    • Functions:

      • synthesizes membranes

      • compartmentalize the cell to keep proteins formed in the rough ER separate from those of free ribosomes

    • 2 types:

      • rough ER:

        • contains ribosomes bound to the ER membrane

      • smooth ER:

        • contains no ribosomes

        • synthesizes lipids, metabolizes carbohydrates, and detoxifies the cell

  • Golgi Complex: contains flattened membranous sacs called cisternae

    • separate the sacs from the cytosol

    • each cisternae is not connected

    • has directionality

      • cis face: receives vesicles from the ER

      • trans face: sends vesicles back out into the cytosol to other locations or to the plasma membrane for secretion

    • Functions:

      • receives transport vesicles with materials from the ER

      • modifies the materials

        • ensures newly formed proteins are folded correctly or modified correctly

      • sorts the materials

      • adds molecular tags

      • packages materials into new transport vesicles that exit the membrane via exocytosis

  • Lysosomes: membranous sacs with hydrolytic enzymes

    • functions:

      • hydrolyzes macromolecules in animal cells

      • Autophagy: lysosomes can recycle their own cell’s organic material

        • allows the cell to renew itself

  • Peroxisomes: similar to lysosomes

    • membrane-bound metabolic compartment

      • catalyze reactions that produce H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide)

        • enzymes in peroxisomes then break down H2O2 into water

  • Vacuoles: large vesicles that stem from the ER and Golgi

    • selective in transport

    • Types:

      • Food vacuole: form via phagocytosis (cell eating) and then are digested by lysosomes

      • Contractile vacuole: maintains water levels in cells

      • Central vacuole: found in plants

        • contains inorganic ions and water

        • important for turgor pressure

Energy Organelles:

  • Endosymbiont theory: the theory that explains the similarities mitochondria and chloroplasts have to a prokaryote

    • theory states that an early eukaryotic cell engulfed a prokaryotic cell

      • prokaryotic cell became an endosymbiont (cell that lives in another cell)

        • became one functional organism

    • evidence:

      • double membrane

      • ribosomes

      • circular DNA

      • capable of functioning on their own (they still can’t survive on their own)

  • Mitochondria: site of cellular respiration

    • structure of the double membrane:

      • outer membrane is smooth

      • inner membrane has folds called cristae

        • divides the mitochondria into two internal compartments and increases the surface area

    • Intermembrane: space between inner and outer membrane

    • Mitochondrial matrix: enclosed by inner membrane

      • location for the Krebs cycle

      • contains:

        • enzymes that catalyze cellular respiration and produce ATP

        • mitochondrial DNA

        • ribosomes

    • the number of mitochondria in a cell correlates with metabolic activity

      • cells with high metabolic activity have more mitochondria

        • ex. cells that move/contract

  • Chloroplasts:

    • specialized organelles in photosynthetic organisms

      • site of photosynthesis

      • contains the green pigment chlorophyll

    • inside of its double membrane:

      • thylakoids

        • membranous sacs that can organize into stacks called grana

          • light-dependent reactions occur in grana

    • Stroma: fluid around thylakoids

      • locations for the Calvin cycle

      • contains

        • chloroplast DNA

        • ribosomes

        • enzymes

The Cytoskeleton:

  • network of fibers throughout the cytoplasm

    • gives structural support (especially for animal cells) and mechanical support

      • anchor organelles

      • allow for movement of vesicles and organelles and/or the whole cell

        • movement occurs when the cytoskeleton interacts with motor proteins

    • 3 types of fibers in cytoskeleton:

      • microfilaments: thin solid rods made of the protein actin

        • Functions: maintain cell shape

          • bear tension

        • assist in muscle contraction and cell motility

          • actin works with another protein called myosin to cause a contraction

        • division of animal cells

          • contractile ring of the cleavage furrow

      • microtubules: hollow rod-like structures made of the protein tubulin

        • grows from the centrosome

          • assist in microtubule assembly

        • functions:

          • serve as structural support for the movement of organelles that are interacting with motor proteins

          • assist in the separation of chromosomes during cell division

          • cell motility (ex. cilia and flagella)

      • intermediate filaments:

        • fibrous proteins made up of varying subunits

        • permanent structural elements of cells

        • Functions:

          • maintain cell shape

          • anchor nucleus and organelles

          • form the nuclear lamina

            • lines the nuclear envelope

Unit 2b: Membrane Structure and Function

Plasma Membranes and Membrane Permeability

Plasma Membrane: separates internal cell environment from external environment

  • compromised primarily of phospholipids

  • phospholipids are amphipathic

    • hydrophobic tails and hydrophilic head

    • forms a bilayer

Selective Permeability: the ability of membranes to regulate the substances that enter and exit

  • Hydrophilic head oriented towards aqueous environment

  • Hydrophobic tails are facing inwards away from aqueous environment

Fluid Mosaic Model:

  • a model to describe the structure of cell membranes

    • Fluid: membrane is held together by weak hydrophobic interactions and can therefore move and shift

      • temperature affects fluidity

      • unsaturated hydrocarbon tails help maintain fluidity at low temps

        • kinked tails prevent tight packing of phospholipids

      • cholesterol helps maintain fluidity at high and low temps

        • high temp: reduces movement

        • low temp: reduces tight packing of phospholipids

    • Mosaic: compromised of many macromolecules

Membrane Proteins:

  • 2 major categories of proteins in the membrane:

    • integral proteins: proteins that are embedded into the lipid bilayer

      • aka transmembrane proteins

      • amphipathic

    • peripheral proteins: proteins that are not embedded into the lipid bilayer

      • loosely bonded to the surface

Membrane Carbohydrates:

  • important for cell-to-cell recognition

    • glycolipids: carbohydrates bonded to lipids

    • glycoproteins: carbohydrates bonded to proteins; most abundant

Plant Cells:

  • plants have a cell wall that covers their plasma membranes

    • extracellular structure (not found in animal cells)

      • provides:

        • shape/structure

        • protection

        • regulation of water intake

    • cell wall is composed of cellulose

    • thicker than plasma membranes

    • contain plasmodesmata

      • hole-like structures in the cell wall filled with cytosol that connect adjacent cells

Membrane Transport and Facilitated Diffusion:

Selective Permeability:

  • some substances can cross the membrane more easily than others

  • easy passage across the membrane:

    • small nonpolar, hydrophobic molecules

      • ex. hydrocarbons, CO2, O2, N2

  • difficult passage or protein assisted passage:

    • hydrophilic, polar molecules, large molecules, ions:

      • ex. sugars, water

Transport across the membrane:

  • there are two main types of transport across a membrane: passive and active

    • Passive transport: Transport of a molecule that does not require energy from the cell because a solute is moving with its concentration/electrochemical gradient

      • involved in import of materials and export of waste

      • ex.

        • diffusion: spontaneous process resulting from constant motion of molecules; substances move from high to low concentration (down the concentration gradient)

          • occurs directly across membrane; different rates of diffusion for different molecules

        • osmosis: diffusion of water down its concentration gradient across a selectively permeable membrane (diffusion of water from low solute concentration to high solute concentration)

        • facilitated diffusion: diffusion of molecules through the membrane via transport proteins (down gradient)

          • increases rate of diffusion for small ions, water, and carbohydrates

          • 2 types of transport proteins (each is specific for their substances)

            • channel: channel for molecules and ions to pass; hydrophilic; many are gated channels, that only allow passage when there’s a stimulus

              • Aquaporins: specific channel protein for water

            • carrier: undergo conformational changes for substances to pass

    • Active transport: transport of a molecule that requires energy (ATP); usually energy’s required b/c it moves a solute against concentration gradient

      • types of active transport:

        • pumps: moves substances against concentration gradient and use ATP for the energy to do so; aka “primary active transport”; involved in membrane potential (unequal concentrations of ions across membrane that results in an electrical charge (electrochemical gradient)

          • sodium potassium pumps: animal cells will regulate their relative concentration of Na+ and K+ (3 NA+ get pumped out of cell, 2 K+ gets pumped into cell—> +1 net charge to extracellular fluid)

          • proton pump: integral membrane protein; builds up proton gradient across membrane; aka hydrogen ion gradient/hydrogen ion pump

        • cotransport: coupling of a favorable movement of one substance with an unfavorable movement of another substance; favorable movement (downhill diffusion), unfavorable movement (uphill diffusion)

        • exocytosis: secretion of molecules via vesicles that fuse to the plasma membrane; once fused, contents of vesicle are released to the extracellular fluid

        • endocytosis: the uptake of molecules from vesicles fused from the plasma membrane

          • phagocytosis: when a cell engulfs particles to be later digested by lysosomes

          • pinocytosis: nonspecific uptake of extracellular fluid containing dissolved molecules

          • receptor mediated endocytosis: specific uptake of molecules via solute binding to receptors on the plasma membrane

Unit 3a: Energy and Enzymes

Metabolism

metabolism: all of the chemical reactions in an organism

Metabolic pathways: series of chemical reactions that either build or break down complex molecules; two types of pathways

  • Catabolic pathways: pathways that release energy by breaking down complex molecules into simpler compounds

  • Anabolic pathways: pathways that consume energy to build complicated molecules from simpler compounds

Energy:
  • Energy: the ability to do work

  • organisms need energy to survive and function

    • a loss in energy flow results in death

  • Kinetic energy: energy associated with motion

    • thermal energy: energy associated with the movement of atoms or molecules

  • Potential energy: stored energy

    • Chemical energy: potential energy available for release in a chemical reaction

Laws of Thermodynamics:

The study of energy transformations in matter is called thermodynamics; the laws apply to the universe as a whole

  • 1st Law:

    • energy cannot be created or destroyed

    • energy can be transferred or transformed

  • 2nd Law:

    • energy transformation increases the entropy (disorder) of the universe

    • during energy transfers or transformations, some energy is unusable and often lost as heat

Free Energy: scientists use this concept to determine the likelihood of reactions in organisms, or determine if the reactions are energetically favorable

  • ΔG = ΔH - TΔS

    • ΔG (delta G): change in free energy

    • ΔH: total change in energy

    • T: absolute temp. (K)

    • ΔS: change in entropy

  • free energy change reactions determine whether or not the reaction occurs spontaneously (no outside input of energy is required)

  • based on free energy changes, chemical reactions can be classified as exergonic or endergonic

    • exergonic reactions: reactions that release energy; ΔG<0

      • ex. cellular respiration

    • endergonic reactions: reactions that absorb energy; ΔG>0

      • ex. photosynthesis; reaction is not spontaneous, absorbs free energy

Cells and Energy:

  • living cells have a constant flow of materials in and out of the membrane

    • cells are not at equilibrium

  • cells perform 3 kinds of work:

    • mechanical: movement; ex, beating cilia, movement of chromosomes, contraction of muscles)

    • transport: pumping substances across membranes against spontaneous movement

    • chemical: synthesis of molecules; ex, building polymers from monomers

ATP:

  • Adenosine triphosphate: molecule that organisms use as a source of energy to perform work

  • ATP couples exergonic reactions to endergonic reactions to power cellular work

    • exergonic process drives the endergonic process

  • organisms obtain energy by breaking the bond between the 2nd and 3rd phosphate in a hydrolysis reactions

    • ATP —> ADP

  • phosphorylation: the released phosphate moves to another molecule to give energy

  • hydrolysis of ATP: water + ATP = ADP + Pi

  • ADP can be regenerated to ATP via the ATP cycle:

    • ATP +H2O +energy from cellular work —> ADP + Pi

    • ADP + Pi + energy from exergonic process —> ATP + H2O

Rate of Metabolic Reactions:

  • laws of thermodynamics tells us if a reaction is spontaneous, but it doesn’t describe the rate of the reaction

Enzymes:

  • macromolecules that catalyze (speed up) reactions by lowering the activation energy

    • aren’t consumed by the reaction

    • type of protein

    • all enzyme names end in -ase

Enzyme Structure:

  • the enzyme acts on a reactant called a substrate

    • active site: area substrate binds to

Enzyme Function:

  • Induced Fit: enzymes change shape of their active site to allow the substrate to bind better

  • enzyme catabolism: helps break down complex molecules

  • enzyme anabolism: helps build complex molecules

Effects on Enzymes:

  • Efficiency can be affected by different factors such as (change in shape = change in function):

    • temperature: rate of enzyme activity increases with temperature up to a certain point, after that point, the enzyme will denature

    • pH levels: enzymes function best a specific pH; varies upon location; pH level outside or normal level can cause hydrogen bonds to break (changing the shape of enzyme)

    • chemicals

Enzyme Cofactors:

  • Cofactors: non protein molecules that assist enzyme function

    • inorganic cofactors: metals

    • Holoenzyme: an enzyme with a the cofactor attached

  • Coenzyme: organic cofactors, such as vitamins

Enzyme Inhibitors:

  • Competitive Inhibitors: reduce enzyme activity by blocking substrates from binding to active site

    • can be reversed with increased substrate concentration

  • Noncompetitive inhibitors: bind to allosteric site, which changes shape of active site, preventing substrates from binding

    • type of allosteric inhibition

Regulation of Chemical Reactions:

  • cells must be able to regulate its metabolic pathways

    • control where and when enzymes are active

    • switch gene that code enzymes on or off

Allosteric Regulation:

  • Allosteric enzymes have 2 binding sites:

    • 1 active site

    • 1 allosteric site (regulatory site/other than the active site)

    • Molecules bind (noncovalent interactions) to an allosteric site which changes shape and function of active site

      • can result in inhibition (by inhibitor) or stimulation (by activator) of enzymes activity

Allosteric Regulation: Activator;

  • Allosteric activator: it binds to allosteric site and stabilizes shape of enzyme so the active sites remain open

Allosteric Regulation: Inhibitor;

  • Allosteric inhibitor: binds to allosteric site and stabilizes enzyme shape so the active sites are closed (inactive form)

Allosteric Regulation: Cooperativity;

  • cooperativity: substrate binds to one active site (on an enzyme with >1 active site) which stabilizes active form

Unit 3b: Cellular Respiration

Cellular Respiration

Cells harvest chemical energy stored in organic molecules and use it to generate ATP;

  • chemical equation: organic molecules + O2 —> CO2 + H2O + energy

Glycogen is the major source of fuel for animals (starch for plants)

  • breaks down into glucose

    • catabolic breakdown: C6H12O6 + 6O2 —> 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy (ATP and Heat)

      • C6H12O6 is oxidized to 6CO2

        • oxidation: loss of electrons; becomes more positive

      • 6O2 is reduced to 6H2O

        • reduction: gain of electrons; becomes more negative

    • oxidation of glucose transfers e- ‘s to a lower energy state, releasing energy to be used in ATP synthesis

Path of Electrons in Energy Harvest:

Most electrons will follow this downhill exergonic path (for cellular respiration):

glucose (typical starting point) —> NADH (high energy electron carrier) —> ETC (Electron Transport Chain) —> oxygen (final electron acceptor)

  • glucose is broken down in steps to harvest energy

    • electrons are removed from glucose at different steps

    • each e- removed also has a H+ removed with it

    • e- must be taken up by specific acceptors (oxidizing agents) such as NAD+ (turns into NADH) and FAD (turns into FADH2)

    • example:

      • 2e- and 1 proton are transferred to coenzyme NAD+, reducing it to NADH (stores the energy)

      • other proton is released into surrounding solution as H+ (hydrogen ion)

      • NADH carries and transfers the 2 high energy e- ‘s to the ETC and releases another proton

  • Electron Transport Chain (ETC): sequence of membrane proteins that shuttle electrons down a series of oxidation-reduction reactions (redox reactions)

    • releases energy used to make ATP

    • ETC transfers e-’s to oxygen (final electron acceptor) to make H2O

      • releases energy

3 Stages of Cellular Respiration:

  • Stage 1: Glycolysis; starting point of cellular respiration (in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes)

    • occurs in the cytosol (in both types of cells)

    • splits glucose (6C) into 2 pyruvates (3C)

    • glycolysis is an aerobic process (requires no oxygen)

    • 2 stage process:

      • Energy investment stage: cell uses 2 ATPs to phosphorylate compounds of glucose

      • Energy payoff stage: energy is produced by substrate level phosphorylation & makes 4 ATPs (however 2 are used, so net yield of 2)and 2 NADHs

        • net energy yield per 1 glucose:

          • 2 ATP

          • 2 NADH

        • Summary:

          • Energy Investment: 2 ATP —> 2 ADP + Pi

          • Energy Payoff: 4 ADP + Pi —> 4 ATP

            • 2 NAD+ + 4 e- + 4H+ —> 2 NADH + 2 H+

          • Net: 2 ATP, 2 NADH + 2 H+, 2 Pyruvates

  • Stage 2a: Pyruvate Oxidation; when oxygen is present, pyruvate enters the mitochondria (eukaryotes) (this stage in prokaryotes still occurs in the cytosol)

    • pyruvate is oxidized into Acetyl CoA

      • Acetyl CoA is used to make citrate in the citric acid cyle (next stage)

DP

AP Biology Study Guide

Unit 1: Chemistry of Life

Structure of Water and Hydrogen Bonding

Chemistry Review

  • Matter: anything that takes up space and has mass

  • Elements: a substance that cannot be broken down into other substances by chemical reactions

    • 92 elements occur naturally in nature

  • Compounds: a substance consisting of two or more different elements combined in a fixed ratio

    • H2O

    • NaCl

  • CHOPN: Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorous, Nitrogen; makes up 92% of living matter

  • Essential Elements: of the 92 naturally occurring elements, 20-25% are essential to survive and reproduce

  • Trace Elements: of the 92 naturally occurring elements, these are required by an organism in very small quantities

  • Atomic Number: number of protons (and electrons)

  • Atomic Mass: sum of protons and neutrons averaged over all isotopes

  • Group: vertical columns on Periodic Table; elements in the same group have the same amount of valence electrons

  • Period: horizontal rows on Periodic Table; elements in the same period have the same total number of shells

  • Bohr Model: shows electrons orbiting the nucleus of an atom

    • Electrons are placed on shells outside the nucleus

    • Each shell has a different energy level and can hold up to a certain number of electrons (formula to find e- on each shell is 2n^2, where n is the shell number)

      • 1st shell: 2 e- (electrons); ex. 2(1)^2

      • 2nd shell: 8 e- (electrons); ex. 2(2)^2

      • 3rd shell: 18 e- (electrons); ex. 2(3)^2

  • Lewis Dot Model: simplified Bohr’s diagram

    • Does not show energy levels

    • Only shows electrons in the valence shell (outermost shell)

    • Electrons as dots are placed around the element symbol in N/S/E/W directions

    • First time around the element symbol is single dots then the second time around you pair the dots

Types of Bonds:

  • Elements want to be stable

    • achieve this by forming chemical bonds with other elements

    • Octet rule: elements will gain, lose, or share electrons to complete their valence shell (8 electrons) and become stable (like a noble gas)

  • Chemical Bonds: an attraction between two atoms, resulting from the sharing or transferring of valence electrons

  • Electronegativity: the measure of an atom’s ability to attract electrons to itself

    • electronegativity decreases as you go down the Periodic Table

    • electronegativity increases as you go to the right of the Periodic Table

  • Covalent Bonds: when two or more atoms share electrons (usually between two nonmetals)

    • forms molecules and compounds

      • Single bond: 1 pair of shared e-

      • Double bond: 2 pairs of shared e-

      • Triple bond: 3 pairs of shared e-

    • There are two types of covalent bonds…

      • Nonpolar covalent: electrons are shared equally between two atoms (e.g. O2)

      • Polar covalent: electrons are not shared equally between two atoms (e.g. H2O)

        • unequal sharing of electrons results in partial charges on oxygen and hydrogen

  • Ionic Bonds: the attraction between oppositely charged atoms (ions)

    • usually between nonmetal and metal (metal transfers electrons (e-) to nonmetal)

    • forms ionic compounds and salts

      • NaCl (Sodium Chloride)

      • LiF (Lithium Chloride)

    • occurs when there is a transfer of electrons from one atom to another atom forming ions

      • cation: positively charged ion

      • anion: negatively charged ion

  • Hydrogen Bonds: the partially positive hydrogen atom in one polar covalent molecule will be attracted to an electronegative atom in another polar covalent molecule

    • Intermolecular Bond: bond that forms between molecules

  • Why does this happen?

    • when a hydrogen atom is bonded to an Oxygen or Nitrogen, the electrons are drawn mostly away from the Hydrogen and toward the electronegative atom (Don’t forget that this is a polar covalent bond)

      • this causes the hydrogen to have a partial positive charge and the electronegative atom (N or O) to have a partial negative charge

Properties of Water

  • Polarity: unequal sharing of the electrons makes water a polar molecule

  • Cohesion: attraction of molecules for other molecules of the same kind (H2O molecules stick to each other)

    • hydrogen bonds between H2O molecules hold them together and increase cohesive forces

    • allows for the transport of H2O and nutrients against gravity in plants

    • responsible for surface tension (property of allowing liquid to resist external force)

  • Adhesion: the clinging of one molecule to a different molecule (H2O molecules stick to something else—like a cell wall)

    • because of the polarity of H2O

      • in plants, this allows water to cling to the cell walls to resist the downward pull of gravity

  • Capillary Action: the upward movement of water due to the forces of cohesion, adhesion, and surface tension (moves water upwards)

    • occurs when adhesion is greater than cohesion

      • important for the transport of water and nutrients in plants

  • Temperature Control:

    • High specific heat: H2O resists changes in temp. by…

      • hydrogen bonds

        • heat must be absorbed to break hydrogen bonds, but heat is released when hydrogen bonds are formed

      • Importance of High Specific Heat:

        • moderates air temp

          • large bodies of water can absorb heat in the daytime and release heat at night

        • stabilizes ocean temp

          • benefits marine life

        • organisms can resist change in their own internal temp

    • Evaporative Cooling: water has a high heat of vaporization

      • the molecules with the highest kinetic energy leave as a gas

      • Importance of Evaporative Cooling:

        • Moderates Earth’s climate

        • Stabilizes temp in lakes and ponds

        • Prevents terrestrial organisms from overheating (e.g. sweating in humans)

        • Prevents leaves from becoming too hot in the sun

  • Density (floating ice): as water solidifies it expands and becomes less dense

    • due to the hydrogen bonds:

      • when cooled, H2O molecules move too slowly to break the bonds

        • allows marine life to survive under floating ice sheets

      • with lower temps, hydrogen bonds cause water molecules to form a crystalline structure

  • Solvent: dissolving agent in a solution

    • water is a versatile solvent (could also be referred to as a universal solvent)

      • the polar molecules are attracted to ions and other polar molecules water can form hydrogen bonds with

    • water can interact with sugars or proteins containing many oxygens and hydrogens

    • water will form hydrogen bonds with the sugars or proteins to dissolve it

  • Ionic Compounds: dissolves ions

    • partially negative oxygen in water will interact with a positive atom

    • partially positive hydrogen in water will interact with a negative atom

Elements of Life:

  • Organic Chemistry: the study of compounds with covalently bonded carbon

  • Organic Compounds: compounds that contain carbon and hydrogen

Carbon: can form single, double, or triple covalent bonds

  • a single carbon can form up to 4 covalent bonds

    • can form long chains

  • most commonly formed with hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen

    • the type and number of covalent bonds carbon forms with other atoms affects the length of the carbon shape and the shape of the molecule

Carbon Chains: carbon can use its valence electrons to form covalent bonds to other carbons

  • this links the carbons into a chain

  • Hydrocarbons: organic molecules consisting of only hydrogen and carbon (simple framework for more complex organic molecules)

  • Carbon chains form the skeletons of most organic molecules

    • skeletons can vary in length, branching, double bond position, and presence of rings

  • many regions of a cell’s organic molecules contain hydrocarbons

Functional Groups: chemical groups attached to the carbon skeleton that participate in chemical reactions

  • Hydroxyl group: -OH

  • Carbonyl group: -C=O

  • Carboxyl group: —COOH

  • Amino group: -NH2

  • Sulfhydryl group: -SH

    H

  • Methyl group: -C-H

    H

  • Phosphate group: -OPO²-3 (2 of the 3 Oxygens are negative)

Introduction to Biological Macromolecules

Molecular Diversity due to Carbon

  • variations in carbon skeletons allow for molecular diversity

  • carbon can form large molecules known as macromolecules

    • four classes of macromolecules (molecules made of smaller subunits)

      • Carbohydrates (Polymer): CHO; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen

      • Proteins (Polymer): CHONS; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Sulfur

      • Nucleic acids (Polymer): CHOPN; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Phosphorus, Nitrogen

        • along with carbon, nitrogen is an important element for building proteins and nucleic acids

      • Lipids (doesn’t include true polymers and are hydrophobic molecules): CHONP; Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorus

        • phosphorus is important for building nucleic acids and some lipids

Formation and Breakdown of Macromolecules

  • Monomers: the repeating units that make up a polymer

  • Polymers: chain-like macromolecules of similar or identical repeating units that are covalently bonded together (multiple monomers covalently bonded together)

  • Dehydration reaction: bonds 2 monomers with the loss of H2O

    • the -OH of one monomer bonds to the -H of another monomer forming H2O, which is then released

      • Ex. glucose and sucrose lose an H2O molecule and then bind together to form sucrose (a polymer, polysaccharide)

  • Hydrolysis: breaks the bonds in a polymer by adding H2O

    • One of the -H of the H2O bonds to one monomer and the remaining -OH of the H2O attaches to the other monomer

      • Ex. adding water to sucrose splits it into glucose (a monomer, monosaccharide) and fructose (a monomer, monosaccharide)

Biological Macromolecules

Carbohydrates: includes sugars and polymers of sugars (CHO)

  • contains a carbonyl group (-C=O) and many hydroxyl groups (-OH)

  • Monosaccharides: simple sugars

    • molecular formulas with multiples of the unit CH2O

    • most common is glucose

      • nutrients and fuel for cells

      • used in cellular respiration

    • can serve as building blocks for amino acids, or as monomers for disaccharides and polysaccharides

  • Disaccharides: 2 monosaccharides joined together by covalent bonds

    • most common is sucrose

      • monomers of sucrose: glucose and fructose

      • plants transfer carbohydrates from leaves to other parts of the plant in the form of sucrose

  • Polysaccharides: polymer with many sugars joined via dehydration reactions

    • storage polysaccharides

      • plants store starch (polymer of glucose monomers)

        • allows plants to store excess glucose

      • animals store glycogen (polymer of glucose)

        • stored in liver and muscle cells

    • structural polysaccharides:

      • cellulose: tough substance that forms plant cell walls

      • chitin: forms exoskeleton of arthropods

Protein: molecule consisting of polypeptides (polymer of amino acids) folded into a 3D shape (CHONS)

  • Formation: amino acids→peptide→polypeptide→protein

  • shape determines function

  • Amino Acids: molecules that have an amino group and a carboxyl group (—COOH)

    • 20 different amino acids

    • general structure: amino group on the left side, R group (variable side chain) in the middle, and carboxyl group on the right side

    • each amino acid (AA) has a unique side chain

      • unique aspects of the AA are based on the side chain’s physical and chemical properties

      • side chains can be grouped as

        • nonpolar (hydrophobic)

        • polar (hydrophobic)

        • charged/ionic (hydrophilic)

      • side chains interact, which determines the shape and function of the protein

  • Formation of peptide bonds: to form a peptide bond, the carboxyl group of one AA must be positioned next to the amino group of another AA

  • Polypeptides: many AA linked by peptide bonds

    • each polypeptide has a unique sequence of AAs and directionality

      • each end is chemically unique

        • one end is a free amino group (N-terminus)

        • one end is a free carboxyl group (C-terminus)

      • the sequence of AAs determines the 3D shape (shape determines function)

        • when a polypeptide twists and folds (b/c of R group interaction) it forms a protein

  • Functions of Proteins:

    • Antibody: help protect the body from disease

    • Enzyme: carry out chemical reactions or assist in creating new molecules

    • Messenger: transmit signals (ie hormones)

    • Structural: provide structure and support

    • Transport/storage: bind to and carry small atoms and molecules through the body

  • Levels of Protein Structure:

    • Primary: linear chain of AA

      • determined via genes

      • dictates secondary and tertiary forms

    • Secondary: coils and folds due to hydrogen bonding within the polypeptide backbone

      • pleated sheet: hydrogen bonds between polypeptide chains lying side by side

      • helix: hydrogen bonding between every 4th AA

    • Tertiary: 3D folding due to interactions between the side chains of the AAs

      • reinforced by hydrophobic interactions and disulfide bridges of the side chains

      • the covalent bond formed between sulfur atoms and two cysteine monomers

    • Quaternary: association of 2+ polypeptides

      • found in only some proteins

Nucleic Acids: polymers made of nucleotide monomers (CHONP)

  • Function to: store, transmit, and express hereditary information

    • 2 forms:

      • DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid

      • RNA: ribonucleic acid

  • Components: nucleotides→polynucleotides→nucleic acids

  • Nucleotide: each nucleotide is comprised of a…

    • Nitrogenous base: 2 types…

      • pyrimidines: one ring with 6 atoms

        • cytosine

        • thymine (only found in DNA)

        • uracil (only found in RNA)

      • purines: one ring with 6 atoms bonded to one ring with 5 atoms

        • adenine and guanine

    • Five Carbon Sugar: a sugar is bonded to the base

      • DNA: sugar is deoxyribose (b/c one less OH in the base)

      • RNA: sugar is ribose (b/c one more OH than DNA in the base)

        • they both differ in structure and function

    • Phosphate Group: added to the 5’ carbon of the sugar (which is attached to the base) to form a nucleotide

      • nucleoside: portion w/o phosphate group

  • Polynucleotides: phosphate groups link adjacent nucleotides

    • phosphodiester linkage

    • directionality: 5’ phosphate end to 3’ hydroxyl (-OH) end (nucleotides get added to 3’)

    • sequence of bases along the DNA or mRNA is unique for each gene

      • dictates AA sequence

        • dictates primary structure of protein

          • dictates 3D structure of a protein

    • DNA: consists of 2 polynucleotides

      • forms a double helix

        • strands are antiparallel (5’ to 3’ and 3’ to 5’)

        • held together by hydrogen bonds between bases (adenine to thymine, cytosine to guanine)

    • RNA: single-stranded polynucleotide

      • variable in shape

        • due to base pairing within RNA

          • adenine bonds to uracil

          • cytosine bonds to guanine

Lipids: class of molecules that do not include true polymers (CHOP)

  • generally small in size

  • often not considered to be a macromolecule

  • lipids are nonpolar-hydrophobic

  • types of lipids:

    • fats: composed of glycerol (alcohol, hydroxyl groups) and fatty acids (long carbon chains, carboxyl groups at one end)

      • 3 fatty acids join to a glycerol via ester linkage

      • bond between a hydroxyl and carboxyl group

        • classified as either a:

          • saturated fatty acid: no double bonds between carbons in the carbon chain = more hydrogen (saturated w/ hydrogen)

          • an unsaturated fatty acid: contains one or more double bonds

  • phospholipids major component of cell membranes

    • 2 fatty acids attached to a glycerol and a phosphate

    • assembles as a bilayer in H2O

      • tails (fatty acids) are hydrophobic

      • head (phosphate and glycerol) is hydrophilic

  • steroids: lipids that have four fused rings

    • unique groups attached to the ring determine the type of steroid

Unit 2a: Cell Structure and Function

Subcellular Components and Compartmentalization

Cells:

  • the basic structural and functional units of every organism

    • all cells:

      • are bound by a plasma membrane

      • contain cytosol

      • contain chromosomes

      • contain ribosomes

  • 2 types of cells:

    • Prokaryotes:

      • domains bacteria and archaea

      • DNA is in the nucleoid region

      • generally smaller in size than eukaryotes

    • Eukaryotes:

      • protists, fungi, plants, animals

      • DNA is in the nucleus

      • contains membrane-bound organelles

Organelles & Other Features:

  • Organelles: membrane-bound structures in eukaryotes; there are 2 categories

    • Endomembrane organelles:

      • nuclear envelope

      • endoplasmic reticulum

      • golgi complex

      • lysosomes

      • vesicles/vacuoles

      • plasma membrane

    • Energy organelles:

      • mitochondria

      • chloroplasts

  • Other features: not membrane-bound but critically important in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes

    • ribosomes: distinct differences between prokaryotes and eukaryotes

    • cytoskeleton:

      • microtubules

      • microfilaments

      • intermediate filaments

Organelles:

  • Compartmentalization: in organelles allows for different metabolic reactions to occur in different locations

    • increases surface area for reactions to occur

    • prevents interfering reactions from occurring in the same locations

  • Unique cell components: plant cells and animal cells have certain organelles that only belong to either the plant or animal cell

    • Plants:

      • chloroplasts

      • central vacuole

      • cell wall plasmodesmata (or plasmodesma)

    • Animals:

      • lysosomes

      • centrosomes

      • flagella

Endomembrane Organelles:

  • Nucleus: contains chromosomes (genetic information)

    • enclosed by the nuclear envelope

      • double membrane

    • has pores

      • pores regulate entry and exit of materials from the cell

    • contains a nucleolus

      • dense region of the nucleus where ribosomal RNA (rRNA) is synthesized

        • rRNA is combined with proteins to form large and small subunits of ribosomes

        • subunits exit via nuclear pores

          • assembles into ribosomes

            • ribosomes translate messages found on mRNA (messenger RNA) into the primary structure of polypeptides

  • Ribosomes: compromised of ribosomal RNA and protein (some texts don’t classify them as organelles because they are not membrane-bound)

    • functions: synthesize proteins

    • can be found in 2 locations:

      • cytosol

        • proteins produced here generally function only within the cytosol (ex. enzymes)

        • known as free ribosomes (not bound to anything)

      • bound to the endoplasmic reticulum or nuclear envelope

        • proteins produced here can be secreted from the cell

          • leave via transport vesicles

  • Endoplasmic Reticulum: a network of membranous sacs and tubes

    • Functions:

      • synthesizes membranes

      • compartmentalize the cell to keep proteins formed in the rough ER separate from those of free ribosomes

    • 2 types:

      • rough ER:

        • contains ribosomes bound to the ER membrane

      • smooth ER:

        • contains no ribosomes

        • synthesizes lipids, metabolizes carbohydrates, and detoxifies the cell

  • Golgi Complex: contains flattened membranous sacs called cisternae

    • separate the sacs from the cytosol

    • each cisternae is not connected

    • has directionality

      • cis face: receives vesicles from the ER

      • trans face: sends vesicles back out into the cytosol to other locations or to the plasma membrane for secretion

    • Functions:

      • receives transport vesicles with materials from the ER

      • modifies the materials

        • ensures newly formed proteins are folded correctly or modified correctly

      • sorts the materials

      • adds molecular tags

      • packages materials into new transport vesicles that exit the membrane via exocytosis

  • Lysosomes: membranous sacs with hydrolytic enzymes

    • functions:

      • hydrolyzes macromolecules in animal cells

      • Autophagy: lysosomes can recycle their own cell’s organic material

        • allows the cell to renew itself

  • Peroxisomes: similar to lysosomes

    • membrane-bound metabolic compartment

      • catalyze reactions that produce H2O2 (hydrogen peroxide)

        • enzymes in peroxisomes then break down H2O2 into water

  • Vacuoles: large vesicles that stem from the ER and Golgi

    • selective in transport

    • Types:

      • Food vacuole: form via phagocytosis (cell eating) and then are digested by lysosomes

      • Contractile vacuole: maintains water levels in cells

      • Central vacuole: found in plants

        • contains inorganic ions and water

        • important for turgor pressure

Energy Organelles:

  • Endosymbiont theory: the theory that explains the similarities mitochondria and chloroplasts have to a prokaryote

    • theory states that an early eukaryotic cell engulfed a prokaryotic cell

      • prokaryotic cell became an endosymbiont (cell that lives in another cell)

        • became one functional organism

    • evidence:

      • double membrane

      • ribosomes

      • circular DNA

      • capable of functioning on their own (they still can’t survive on their own)

  • Mitochondria: site of cellular respiration

    • structure of the double membrane:

      • outer membrane is smooth

      • inner membrane has folds called cristae

        • divides the mitochondria into two internal compartments and increases the surface area

    • Intermembrane: space between inner and outer membrane

    • Mitochondrial matrix: enclosed by inner membrane

      • location for the Krebs cycle

      • contains:

        • enzymes that catalyze cellular respiration and produce ATP

        • mitochondrial DNA

        • ribosomes

    • the number of mitochondria in a cell correlates with metabolic activity

      • cells with high metabolic activity have more mitochondria

        • ex. cells that move/contract

  • Chloroplasts:

    • specialized organelles in photosynthetic organisms

      • site of photosynthesis

      • contains the green pigment chlorophyll

    • inside of its double membrane:

      • thylakoids

        • membranous sacs that can organize into stacks called grana

          • light-dependent reactions occur in grana

    • Stroma: fluid around thylakoids

      • locations for the Calvin cycle

      • contains

        • chloroplast DNA

        • ribosomes

        • enzymes

The Cytoskeleton:

  • network of fibers throughout the cytoplasm

    • gives structural support (especially for animal cells) and mechanical support

      • anchor organelles

      • allow for movement of vesicles and organelles and/or the whole cell

        • movement occurs when the cytoskeleton interacts with motor proteins

    • 3 types of fibers in cytoskeleton:

      • microfilaments: thin solid rods made of the protein actin

        • Functions: maintain cell shape

          • bear tension

        • assist in muscle contraction and cell motility

          • actin works with another protein called myosin to cause a contraction

        • division of animal cells

          • contractile ring of the cleavage furrow

      • microtubules: hollow rod-like structures made of the protein tubulin

        • grows from the centrosome

          • assist in microtubule assembly

        • functions:

          • serve as structural support for the movement of organelles that are interacting with motor proteins

          • assist in the separation of chromosomes during cell division

          • cell motility (ex. cilia and flagella)

      • intermediate filaments:

        • fibrous proteins made up of varying subunits

        • permanent structural elements of cells

        • Functions:

          • maintain cell shape

          • anchor nucleus and organelles

          • form the nuclear lamina

            • lines the nuclear envelope

Unit 2b: Membrane Structure and Function

Plasma Membranes and Membrane Permeability

Plasma Membrane: separates internal cell environment from external environment

  • compromised primarily of phospholipids

  • phospholipids are amphipathic

    • hydrophobic tails and hydrophilic head

    • forms a bilayer

Selective Permeability: the ability of membranes to regulate the substances that enter and exit

  • Hydrophilic head oriented towards aqueous environment

  • Hydrophobic tails are facing inwards away from aqueous environment

Fluid Mosaic Model:

  • a model to describe the structure of cell membranes

    • Fluid: membrane is held together by weak hydrophobic interactions and can therefore move and shift

      • temperature affects fluidity

      • unsaturated hydrocarbon tails help maintain fluidity at low temps

        • kinked tails prevent tight packing of phospholipids

      • cholesterol helps maintain fluidity at high and low temps

        • high temp: reduces movement

        • low temp: reduces tight packing of phospholipids

    • Mosaic: compromised of many macromolecules

Membrane Proteins:

  • 2 major categories of proteins in the membrane:

    • integral proteins: proteins that are embedded into the lipid bilayer

      • aka transmembrane proteins

      • amphipathic

    • peripheral proteins: proteins that are not embedded into the lipid bilayer

      • loosely bonded to the surface

Membrane Carbohydrates:

  • important for cell-to-cell recognition

    • glycolipids: carbohydrates bonded to lipids

    • glycoproteins: carbohydrates bonded to proteins; most abundant

Plant Cells:

  • plants have a cell wall that covers their plasma membranes

    • extracellular structure (not found in animal cells)

      • provides:

        • shape/structure

        • protection

        • regulation of water intake

    • cell wall is composed of cellulose

    • thicker than plasma membranes

    • contain plasmodesmata

      • hole-like structures in the cell wall filled with cytosol that connect adjacent cells

Membrane Transport and Facilitated Diffusion:

Selective Permeability:

  • some substances can cross the membrane more easily than others

  • easy passage across the membrane:

    • small nonpolar, hydrophobic molecules

      • ex. hydrocarbons, CO2, O2, N2

  • difficult passage or protein assisted passage:

    • hydrophilic, polar molecules, large molecules, ions:

      • ex. sugars, water

Transport across the membrane:

  • there are two main types of transport across a membrane: passive and active

    • Passive transport: Transport of a molecule that does not require energy from the cell because a solute is moving with its concentration/electrochemical gradient

      • involved in import of materials and export of waste

      • ex.

        • diffusion: spontaneous process resulting from constant motion of molecules; substances move from high to low concentration (down the concentration gradient)

          • occurs directly across membrane; different rates of diffusion for different molecules

        • osmosis: diffusion of water down its concentration gradient across a selectively permeable membrane (diffusion of water from low solute concentration to high solute concentration)

        • facilitated diffusion: diffusion of molecules through the membrane via transport proteins (down gradient)

          • increases rate of diffusion for small ions, water, and carbohydrates

          • 2 types of transport proteins (each is specific for their substances)

            • channel: channel for molecules and ions to pass; hydrophilic; many are gated channels, that only allow passage when there’s a stimulus

              • Aquaporins: specific channel protein for water

            • carrier: undergo conformational changes for substances to pass

    • Active transport: transport of a molecule that requires energy (ATP); usually energy’s required b/c it moves a solute against concentration gradient

      • types of active transport:

        • pumps: moves substances against concentration gradient and use ATP for the energy to do so; aka “primary active transport”; involved in membrane potential (unequal concentrations of ions across membrane that results in an electrical charge (electrochemical gradient)

          • sodium potassium pumps: animal cells will regulate their relative concentration of Na+ and K+ (3 NA+ get pumped out of cell, 2 K+ gets pumped into cell—> +1 net charge to extracellular fluid)

          • proton pump: integral membrane protein; builds up proton gradient across membrane; aka hydrogen ion gradient/hydrogen ion pump

        • cotransport: coupling of a favorable movement of one substance with an unfavorable movement of another substance; favorable movement (downhill diffusion), unfavorable movement (uphill diffusion)

        • exocytosis: secretion of molecules via vesicles that fuse to the plasma membrane; once fused, contents of vesicle are released to the extracellular fluid

        • endocytosis: the uptake of molecules from vesicles fused from the plasma membrane

          • phagocytosis: when a cell engulfs particles to be later digested by lysosomes

          • pinocytosis: nonspecific uptake of extracellular fluid containing dissolved molecules

          • receptor mediated endocytosis: specific uptake of molecules via solute binding to receptors on the plasma membrane

Unit 3a: Energy and Enzymes

Metabolism

metabolism: all of the chemical reactions in an organism

Metabolic pathways: series of chemical reactions that either build or break down complex molecules; two types of pathways

  • Catabolic pathways: pathways that release energy by breaking down complex molecules into simpler compounds

  • Anabolic pathways: pathways that consume energy to build complicated molecules from simpler compounds

Energy:
  • Energy: the ability to do work

  • organisms need energy to survive and function

    • a loss in energy flow results in death

  • Kinetic energy: energy associated with motion

    • thermal energy: energy associated with the movement of atoms or molecules

  • Potential energy: stored energy

    • Chemical energy: potential energy available for release in a chemical reaction

Laws of Thermodynamics:

The study of energy transformations in matter is called thermodynamics; the laws apply to the universe as a whole

  • 1st Law:

    • energy cannot be created or destroyed

    • energy can be transferred or transformed

  • 2nd Law:

    • energy transformation increases the entropy (disorder) of the universe

    • during energy transfers or transformations, some energy is unusable and often lost as heat

Free Energy: scientists use this concept to determine the likelihood of reactions in organisms, or determine if the reactions are energetically favorable

  • ΔG = ΔH - TΔS

    • ΔG (delta G): change in free energy

    • ΔH: total change in energy

    • T: absolute temp. (K)

    • ΔS: change in entropy

  • free energy change reactions determine whether or not the reaction occurs spontaneously (no outside input of energy is required)

  • based on free energy changes, chemical reactions can be classified as exergonic or endergonic

    • exergonic reactions: reactions that release energy; ΔG<0

      • ex. cellular respiration

    • endergonic reactions: reactions that absorb energy; ΔG>0

      • ex. photosynthesis; reaction is not spontaneous, absorbs free energy

Cells and Energy:

  • living cells have a constant flow of materials in and out of the membrane

    • cells are not at equilibrium

  • cells perform 3 kinds of work:

    • mechanical: movement; ex, beating cilia, movement of chromosomes, contraction of muscles)

    • transport: pumping substances across membranes against spontaneous movement

    • chemical: synthesis of molecules; ex, building polymers from monomers

ATP:

  • Adenosine triphosphate: molecule that organisms use as a source of energy to perform work

  • ATP couples exergonic reactions to endergonic reactions to power cellular work

    • exergonic process drives the endergonic process

  • organisms obtain energy by breaking the bond between the 2nd and 3rd phosphate in a hydrolysis reactions

    • ATP —> ADP

  • phosphorylation: the released phosphate moves to another molecule to give energy

  • hydrolysis of ATP: water + ATP = ADP + Pi

  • ADP can be regenerated to ATP via the ATP cycle:

    • ATP +H2O +energy from cellular work —> ADP + Pi

    • ADP + Pi + energy from exergonic process —> ATP + H2O

Rate of Metabolic Reactions:

  • laws of thermodynamics tells us if a reaction is spontaneous, but it doesn’t describe the rate of the reaction

Enzymes:

  • macromolecules that catalyze (speed up) reactions by lowering the activation energy

    • aren’t consumed by the reaction

    • type of protein

    • all enzyme names end in -ase

Enzyme Structure:

  • the enzyme acts on a reactant called a substrate

    • active site: area substrate binds to

Enzyme Function:

  • Induced Fit: enzymes change shape of their active site to allow the substrate to bind better

  • enzyme catabolism: helps break down complex molecules

  • enzyme anabolism: helps build complex molecules

Effects on Enzymes:

  • Efficiency can be affected by different factors such as (change in shape = change in function):

    • temperature: rate of enzyme activity increases with temperature up to a certain point, after that point, the enzyme will denature

    • pH levels: enzymes function best a specific pH; varies upon location; pH level outside or normal level can cause hydrogen bonds to break (changing the shape of enzyme)

    • chemicals

Enzyme Cofactors:

  • Cofactors: non protein molecules that assist enzyme function

    • inorganic cofactors: metals

    • Holoenzyme: an enzyme with a the cofactor attached

  • Coenzyme: organic cofactors, such as vitamins

Enzyme Inhibitors:

  • Competitive Inhibitors: reduce enzyme activity by blocking substrates from binding to active site

    • can be reversed with increased substrate concentration

  • Noncompetitive inhibitors: bind to allosteric site, which changes shape of active site, preventing substrates from binding

    • type of allosteric inhibition

Regulation of Chemical Reactions:

  • cells must be able to regulate its metabolic pathways

    • control where and when enzymes are active

    • switch gene that code enzymes on or off

Allosteric Regulation:

  • Allosteric enzymes have 2 binding sites:

    • 1 active site

    • 1 allosteric site (regulatory site/other than the active site)

    • Molecules bind (noncovalent interactions) to an allosteric site which changes shape and function of active site

      • can result in inhibition (by inhibitor) or stimulation (by activator) of enzymes activity

Allosteric Regulation: Activator;

  • Allosteric activator: it binds to allosteric site and stabilizes shape of enzyme so the active sites remain open

Allosteric Regulation: Inhibitor;

  • Allosteric inhibitor: binds to allosteric site and stabilizes enzyme shape so the active sites are closed (inactive form)

Allosteric Regulation: Cooperativity;

  • cooperativity: substrate binds to one active site (on an enzyme with >1 active site) which stabilizes active form

Unit 3b: Cellular Respiration

Cellular Respiration

Cells harvest chemical energy stored in organic molecules and use it to generate ATP;

  • chemical equation: organic molecules + O2 —> CO2 + H2O + energy

Glycogen is the major source of fuel for animals (starch for plants)

  • breaks down into glucose

    • catabolic breakdown: C6H12O6 + 6O2 —> 6CO2 + 6H2O + energy (ATP and Heat)

      • C6H12O6 is oxidized to 6CO2

        • oxidation: loss of electrons; becomes more positive

      • 6O2 is reduced to 6H2O

        • reduction: gain of electrons; becomes more negative

    • oxidation of glucose transfers e- ‘s to a lower energy state, releasing energy to be used in ATP synthesis

Path of Electrons in Energy Harvest:

Most electrons will follow this downhill exergonic path (for cellular respiration):

glucose (typical starting point) —> NADH (high energy electron carrier) —> ETC (Electron Transport Chain) —> oxygen (final electron acceptor)

  • glucose is broken down in steps to harvest energy

    • electrons are removed from glucose at different steps

    • each e- removed also has a H+ removed with it

    • e- must be taken up by specific acceptors (oxidizing agents) such as NAD+ (turns into NADH) and FAD (turns into FADH2)

    • example:

      • 2e- and 1 proton are transferred to coenzyme NAD+, reducing it to NADH (stores the energy)

      • other proton is released into surrounding solution as H+ (hydrogen ion)

      • NADH carries and transfers the 2 high energy e- ‘s to the ETC and releases another proton

  • Electron Transport Chain (ETC): sequence of membrane proteins that shuttle electrons down a series of oxidation-reduction reactions (redox reactions)

    • releases energy used to make ATP

    • ETC transfers e-’s to oxygen (final electron acceptor) to make H2O

      • releases energy

3 Stages of Cellular Respiration:

  • Stage 1: Glycolysis; starting point of cellular respiration (in both eukaryotes and prokaryotes)

    • occurs in the cytosol (in both types of cells)

    • splits glucose (6C) into 2 pyruvates (3C)

    • glycolysis is an aerobic process (requires no oxygen)

    • 2 stage process:

      • Energy investment stage: cell uses 2 ATPs to phosphorylate compounds of glucose

      • Energy payoff stage: energy is produced by substrate level phosphorylation & makes 4 ATPs (however 2 are used, so net yield of 2)and 2 NADHs

        • net energy yield per 1 glucose:

          • 2 ATP

          • 2 NADH

        • Summary:

          • Energy Investment: 2 ATP —> 2 ADP + Pi

          • Energy Payoff: 4 ADP + Pi —> 4 ATP

            • 2 NAD+ + 4 e- + 4H+ —> 2 NADH + 2 H+

          • Net: 2 ATP, 2 NADH + 2 H+, 2 Pyruvates

  • Stage 2a: Pyruvate Oxidation; when oxygen is present, pyruvate enters the mitochondria (eukaryotes) (this stage in prokaryotes still occurs in the cytosol)

    • pyruvate is oxidized into Acetyl CoA

      • Acetyl CoA is used to make citrate in the citric acid cyle (next stage)