Occurs in
Found in
Occurs when:
Occurs in
Occurs in
Function:
Produces
Produces
Present in
Present in
Present in
Condensation reaction
To form
Condensation Reaction
Results in
Condensation reaction
Results in
Results in
Present in
Present in
Condensation Dehydration Reaction
Present for
Contains
Present in
Transferring electrons
Sharing of electrons
Results in
Present in
Present in
Present in
Example includes:
Present in
Present in
Held together by hydrogen bonds
Has a
Has a
Contains
Protects
Maintains
Has a
Has a
Has a
Inner Cell
Outer cell
3 shapes
An example of a catabolic pathway
The lack of a nucleus in prokaryotes means that transcription/translation are coupled.
Occurs only at transcription level because prokaryotes do not have the spatial difference for transcription and translation
Structure
Causes the hydrophillic phosphate heads to be the exterior while the hydrophobic fatty acid tails are the interior of the bilayer
B-galactosidase is needed to break down glycosidic bonds
Hydrophobic Interactions assist in the formation of cellular membranes.
no capsule= nonpathogenic
Enzymes are used in many different processes in the cell
Proteins can go anywhere in the endomembrfane system
Switches to turn off the G-protein pathway
presence of capsule made it pathogenic
organelle in cellular respiration
organelle in photosynthesis
After a protein is made, it goes to the ER where is has different destinations
DNA base pairing

BIO 311C

Topic 2:
Membranes, Energy, and
Cell Communication

Cell Signaling/ Communication

CL

Long-distance signaling

Seen in hormonal signaling

Local Signaling

Seen in paracrine and synaptic signaling

Physical contact

Communications through gap or plasmodesmata junctions. Physical contact communication can also occur through surface protein and binding of the surface proteins.

Intracellular Receptors

Ligand: Hydrophobic or nonpolar molecule

Ligand will pass through the membrane

Ligand will bond to a receptor protein in the cytoplasm

Hormone-receptor complex will enter the nucleus and binds to specific genes

Bound protein is a transcription factor (controls gene expression) and regulates the transcription of mRNA

mRNA is translated

Thyroid and steroid hormones

Membrane Receptors

Ligand (First Messenger): Hydrophilic

Second messenger

Location: inside the cell

Location: Cell membrane

Ion channel receptor

Ligand binds to a ligand-gated channel receptor

Ligand-gated channel receptor will open and specific ions will flow through the channel

The ions flowing in will change the ion concentration within the cell.

Pertaining to the nervous system: action potential due to the change of voltage across the cellular membrane.

The ligand will unbind from receptor which then closes the ligand-gated ion channel

Tyrosine kinase receptor

dimerize once ligand binds to each of the tyrosine polypeptides

autophosphorylation - activation of the kinase function to transfer phosphate from ATP to the other tyrosine polypeptide

creates the tyrosine-kinase receptor

activated tyrosine-kinase receptor creates a cellular response

Used for cell division

G-protein linked receptor

Reception: Ligand binds to the G protein-coupled receptor. This in turn causes a change of shape of the GPCR for the G-protein to bind to it. Now, GDP converts to GTP to bind to G-protein and activate G-protein.

Transduction: In turn causes a change of shape of the GPCR for the G-protein to bind to it. Now, GDP converts to GTP to bind to G-protein and activate G-protein. , the G-protein detaches from the GPCR and binds to Adenylyl Cyclase. The Adenylyl Cyclase then turns ATP to cAMP (the second messenger).

Transduction (amplifying): cAMP activates Protein Kinase A to transfer ATP to activate another kinases

Cellular response : Will different due to the different GPCR and the cells.

phosphorylation cascade: kinases that phosphorylate and activate each other.

Dephosphorylation: The use of phosphates to inactivate kinases, by removing phosphate groups.

G-protein switch: Phosphodiesterase converts cAMP to AMP. Due to the conversation of cAMP to AMP, there is no secondary messenger to continue in the signaling pathway.

Signaling molecules that use GPCR: epinephrine, hormones, and neurotransmitters

Metabolism

KB

Catablic Pathways

Anabolic Pathways

Cellular Respiration & Photosynthesis

AM

Topic 1:
Chemical Bonds, Cell
Structure and Function

Prokaryotes

AM

Structure

Shape

Coccus

Spherical Shape

Basillus

Rod Shape

Spirilla

Spiral Shape

Cell Surface Structures

Cell Wall

Shape

Cell

Peptidoglycan

Gram Positive

Thick Layer of Peptidoglycan

Gram Negative

Thin Layer of peptidoglycan

Fimbriae & Pili

Attachment to surfaces

Bacterial Mating

Flagella

Movement

Bacterial Flagella

3 Main Parts

Motor

Hook

Filament

Powered by H+ Flow

Archaeal Flagella

Powered by ATP

Capsule & Slime layers

Resistance

Phagocytosis

Adherence

Plasma membrane

Permeable Barrier

Functions

Protection from environment

Waste Transport

Nutrient Transport

Internal Cell Structures

Nucleiod

contains DNA

Ribosomes

protein synthesis

Periplasmic Space

Contains hydrolytic enzymes and binding proteins

nutrient processing and uptake

Classifications

Archea

Extremophiles

Extreme Halophiles

Highly Saline Environments

Extreme Thermophiles

Extreme Temperaters

Methanogens

Swamps

Produce methane as a waste product

Bacteria

Topic 3:
DNA Structure, Replication,
Regulation, and Expression

DNA Structure & Replication

AM

3 experiments

Griffith

Injected mice with

S. pneumoniae

"smooth"
presence of
capsule

Pathogenic

R. pneumoniae

"rough"
no capsule

Nonpathogenic

Experiment

Living S

Mouse dies

S. strain found to be
pathogenic

Living R

Mouse healthy

R. strain found to be
nonpathogenic

Heat-killed S

Mouse healthy

Heat-killed S
& Living R

Mouse dies

S. components entered
live R. and changed the
genetic makeup of R to S

Hershey & Chase

One tube of Radioactive
Phosphorus (32P)

Labeled DNA

Mixed

Shook tube to release
bacteriophages from
bacterial surface

Centrifuged

Recovered radioactivity
inside bacterial cells

One tube of Radioactive
Sulfur (35S)

Labeled Proteins

Mixed

Shook tube to release
bacteriophages from
bacterial surface

Centrifuged

Asked what was the component
that was injected by bacteriophages
inside bacterial cells, DNA or Protein?

Determined DNA was injected

Determined DNA
carried genes

Messleson &
Stahl

Bacteria in 15N

"Heavy"

Bacteria in 14N

"Light"

Found from
density bands that
DNA replicates
semiconservatively

DNA structure

Chargaff's Rule

Adenine=
Thymine

Guanine=
Cytosine

A+G=
T+C

Sugar phosphate
backbone

Phosphate group

Sugar

Nitrogenous bases

Thymine (T)

Guanine (G)

Cytosine (C)

Adenine (A)

Nuceotide

Phosphate Group

Sugar

Nitrogenous base

Bond connecting
each nucleotide=
phosphodiester
bond

Double Stranded
Helix

Purine+Pyrimidine

Adenine(A)+Thymine(T)

Guanine(G)+Cytosine(C)

Complementary base pairing

DNA Replication

3 Models of DNA Replication

Conservative

Two parent strands
reassociate after
acting as template
strands and restore the
parental double helix

First Replication

One parent helix

One new helix

Second Replication

3 daughter helices

One parent helix

Semiconservative

Two parent strands
separate and each
functions as a template
for a new complementary
strand

First Replication

Two helix

Each helix contains
one parent strand
and one new strand

Second Replication

2 new complementary
helices

2 helices

Contain one parental
strand and one new
strand

Dispersive

Each strand of both
daughter molecules
contains a mixture of old
and new synthesized DNA

First Replication

2 helices

Contain pieces of
parental strand
and pieces of new
DNA

Second Replication

4 helices

Contain pieces of
parental strand
and pieces of new
DNA

Replication process

Needs origin of
replication (ORI)

Enzymes

Helicase

Unwinds parental
double helix at
replication forks

Single Strand
Binding (SSB)

Binds and stabilizes
single stranded DNA
and prevents it from
rebinding

Topoisomerase

Relieves overwinding strain
ahead of replication forks
by rejoining DNA strands

Primase

Makes RNA primers
at 5' end of leading strands
and each Okazaki fragment

DNA Polymerase
III

Synthesizes new DNA
5' to 3' by using the
parental DNA as a template

Nucleotides connect
through phosphodiester
bonds using
dehydration reaction

DNA Polymerase I

Removes RNA
nucleotides and replaces
them with DNA nucleotides

DNA Ligase

Joins DNA together

Occurs in one direction

5' to 3'

Transcription

NM

Prokaryotes

Occurs in the Cytoplasm
(Coupled with Translation, mRNA is made and immediately translated)

Stages of Transcription

Initiation
- The beginning of transcription that occurs when the enzyme RNA polymerase binds to the promoter. (RNA Polymerase)

RNA Polymerase
- The RNA polymerase seen in prokaryotes. (Makes new strand of mRNA in 5' to 3' direction)

Elongation
- This step follows initiation as RNA polymerase moves downstream, unwinding the DNA and elongating the RNA transcript in the direction of 5' to 3'. (Uses condensation/ dehydration reactions)

Termination
-This step occurs when the RNA transcript is released, and the polymerase detaches from the DNA. This happens once the RNA polymerase reaches the termination site on the DNA.

Location of Transcription

Template Strand
- The DNA strand that is used to form the new RNA strand. (Template strand is in the 3' to 5' direction because transcription occurs in the 5' to 3' direction.)

Transcription Start Point
- The nucleotide in DNA where transcription starts.

Upstream
- To the left of the transcription start site, nucleotides are numbered by negative numbers.

Promoter
- Region on the DNA upstream of the start site where RNA polymerases bind to.

Downstream
- To the right of the transcription start site, nucleotides are numbered by positive numbers.

Eukaryotes

Occurs in the Nucleus
(Not coupled with Translation, translation occurs in the cytoplasm.)

Stages of Transcription

Initiation
- The beginning of transcription that occurs when the enzyme RNA polymerase binds to the promoter. (RNA Polymerase II)

TATA Box
- A eukaryotic promoter commonly includes a TATA box, which is a nucleotide sequence containing TATA that is about 25 nucleotides upstream from the transcription start point.

Transcription Factors
- In eukaryotes, the addition of these proteins is required in order for RNA polymerase II to bind to the promoter. One recognizes the TATA box and binds to the promoter.

RNA Polymerase II
- The RNA polymerase seen in eukaryotes which is used to produce pre mRNA, snRNA, and micro RNA. (Makes new strand of mRNA in 5' to 3' direction)

Transcription Initiation Complex
- Additional transcription factors bind to the DNA along with RNA polymerase II, forming this complex. RNA synthesis can now begin at the start point on the template strand.

Elongation
- This step follows initiation as the transcription initiation complex moves downstream, unwinding the DNA and elongating the RNA transcript in the direction of 5' to 3'. (Uses condensation/ dehydration reactions)

Termination
- This step occurs in eukaryotes differently as an AAUAAA sequence signals the cell to make a cut in the newly formed pre mRNA and release it from the DNA.

Ribonuclease
- The enzyme that makes the cleavage to form the pre-mRNA.

pre-mRNA Processing

5' Cap
- A modified guanine (G) nucleotide added to the 5' end of the pre-mRNA that will be used for translation.

Poly A Tail
- A tail of 100-200 A's that is added to the 3' end of pre-mRNA, near the AAUAAA sequence. This poly A tail helps with the stability of the mRNA.

Poly A Polymerase
- The enzyme that adds the poly A tail to the pre-mRNA. (Requires ATP)

RNA Splicing

Introns
- Non-coding sequences that are removed during RNA splicing.

Spliceosomes
- Complexes of RNA and proteins that bind junctions of the introns and makes cuts to release introns from the DNA. The exons are then joined together.

Alternative Splicing
- Due to the presence of introns, different combinations of exons can be generated through the removal of different introns to form different mRNAs.

Exons
- Coding sequences of mRNA that are used to encode proteins.

Translation

KB

Gene Regulation

CL

Regulating which genes are expressed and when they are expressed

Eukaryotes

DNA material present in the nucleus

DNA wraps around histones to form nucleosomes and further coil into the chromatids of chromosomes.

Transcription

Transcription Factors

Specific

Changes level of transcription by increasing or decreasing

Repressor

Activator

Distal control elements

upstream or downstream of DNA

proximity to the gene they regulate can vary

Enhancers

If activator was to bind to enhancers: The activator proteins are brought to be near the promoter by a DNA-bending protein. With this the activators then can also bind to more (mediator) proteins that form an initiation complex. Through these interactions and the development of the complex, it assists RNA polymerase II to bind to the promoter in order to increase the level of transcription.

If repressors were to bind to an enhancer: The main goal of a repressor is to block or decrease the probability the RNA polymerase II can bind to the promoter. By decreasing the effectiveness, it decreases levels of transcription of the pre-mRNA

Combinatorial control of gene expression

Liver and cell cells expressing different levels of the albumin and crystallin genes.

General

Bring transcription levels to background or basal (meaning lower)

Proximal control elements

Regulation can also occur at RNA processing, translation, and protein activity or modifications.

Prokaryotes

Only at transcription level

Examples seen through the Lac Operon

decreases gene expression to a basal level

Lac operon with no lactose present: Repressor is bound to the operator thus lacZ, lacY, and lacA are not transcribed for Beta-glactosidase, permease, and transacetylase. Operon is off as the activated repressor blocks the binding of the RNA polymerase to the promoter.

Lac operon with glucose present, regardless if there is lactose: Glucose blocks the function of adenylyl cyclase, meaning no cAMP can be generated. Due to this, CAP is not activated to then also activate RNAP. If RNAP is not activated, it cannot bind to the promoter to bring about the high level of transcription. This means the operon is off as it cannot transcribe its structural genes (lacZ, lacY, and lacA).

increases gene expression level

Lactose present: The lac repressor from LacI (which is constitutively expressed, meaning continuously expressed) will bind to the lactose instead of the operator. RNAP is activated by cAP (which is activated by cAMP, a product of adenylyl cyclase) and binds to the promoter to increase the level of transcription for proteins that will break down lactose to a high level. The operon is on.

Negative regulation repressors while positive regulation is associated with activators

operons (genes), operators (sequences of DNA), activators/repressors, promoters, mRNA, and proteins

The genes are grouped in operons. Several sequences of DNA are operators that can turn on or off the gene expression.

Bonds

Intermolecular (between)

Van Der Waals

More apparent in nonpolar molecules

Hydrophobic Interactions

Tertiary structure of proteins

Phospholipid bilayer/membrane

Dipole-dipole

Strong interactions between polar molecules

Hydrogen Bonds (H to O, N, or F)

Complementary base pairing

Water molecules

Water properties

Secondary structure of proteins

r

forms the alpha helix and beta sheets of the one protein and occurs in the main chain only.

Dipole-ion

Between ions and polar molecules

Intramolecular (within)

Covalent

Disulfide Bonds

Tertiary structure of proteins:
Cysteine (R-group)

Glycosidic Bond/Linkage

Monosaccharides to form polysaccharides

Beta glycosidic linkages

Cellulose

Alpha glycosidic linkages

Starch, Dextran, Glycogen,
Amylose, and Amylopectin

Polar

Slight/ partial charges

Nonpolar

Non-charged

Peptide Bonds

Between the amino and carboxyl group

Primary structure of protein

Phosphodiester Linkage

Between the phosphate group and sugar of 2 nucleotides

Sugar phosphate backbone

Ester Linkage

bond between a glycerol and fatty acid

Hydrocarbon chains

Double Covalent: Unsaturated Fats

Ionic

Ionic Compounds

Acidic/Basic R-groups in
Tertiary and Quaternary structures of proteins

Ether linkages

Membranes of Archaea
(branched)

Macromolecules

KB

Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Carbon, Phosphorus

Dehydration Synthesis

Removal of H2O

Forms Glycosidic Linkage

Forms Ester bonds

Forms Phosphodiester Bond

Forms Peptide Bond

Glucose

β Beta Glucose (OH on top)

α Alpha Glucose (OH on bottom)

Fructose

Sucrose

Triglycerides

Phospholipids

Cholesterol

Saturated

Unsaturated

Four Rings

LDL

HDL

DNA

RNA

Deoxyribose

Ribose

Nucleobase

Solid @room temp.

Liquid @room temp.

No double bonds

Has double bonds (kinks)

Cis

Trans

Hydrogen atoms are on the same side

Hydrogen atoms are across

Bonds phosphate group

With sugar

Amino Acid

Amine Group

Carboxyl Group

Hydrogen

R-Group

Polypeptide

Primary Structure

Secondary Structure

Single strand of Amino acids

Tertiary Strucrure

Quaternary Structure

Form Structures

H bonds form between the polypeptides

Beta Pleaded Sheet

R-Groups Interact

Alpha Helix

3-D Shape

Multiple 3° with R-Group Interactions

Multiple Structures

Function

Realease Energy

Consume Energy

Energy

Laws Of Thermodynamics

Energy cannot be created or destroyed

Energy trasnfer increases entropy

Gibbs Free Energy

Equation: ΔG=ΔH-TΔS

G=Gibbs

H=Enthalpy

S=Dissorder

Δ=Change

T=Temperature (kelvin)

ΔG can be

Endergonic

Exergonic

Realease of free energy (-#)

Absorb of free enery (+#)

Reactants have more free energy

Products have more free energy

ΔG<0

ΔG>0

Reaction can occur Spontaneously

Reaction can cannot occur spontaneously

ΔG=0

System is at equillibrium

Make Coupler Reactions

Reactions Have

Enzymes

Lower activation Energy

Speeds Up Reactions

ΔG is not affected

Enzyme/Substrate

Denatures by

High Temperatures

Change of preffered pH

Inhibition

Competitive

Noncompetive

Allosteric Regulation

Cooperativity

Feedback

mimics substrate

competes for active site

binds away from active site

alters shape pf enzyme

inhibitor or activator

Binds to protein at one site

Affects proteins function at another site

Binds to one active site

Locks all subunits

End product is inhibitor

Pathway is halted

mRNA

tRNA

Codon

Anti-codon

Initiation

Elongation

Termination

small ribosome bind tRNA and mRNA from 5'

tRNA is in P site

tRNA carries correct amino acid

Amino acid goes to the A site

Peptidyl Transferase

Forms peptide bonds between amino acids

mRNA is read from 5' --> 3'

amino acids added from N to C

tRNA moves when P site is empty

tRNA moves to E site to be released

A new tRNA comes to the A site

Release factor

empties A site and causes everything to fall apart

Protein is released in the ER lumen.

Signal peptidase

Enzyme that cleaves the signal peptide

Protein is now in the ER

Protein gets shipped out through vesicles and then fuze onto the first phase of Golgi

Protein has different destinations

Secretion

Membrane Protein

Lysosomes

Back to ER

Eukaryotes

Intracellular Organelles

Ribosomes
- Comprised of ribosomal RNA and protein. Produces proteins

Free Ribosomes
- Ribosomes suspended in the cytosol

Bound Ribosomes
- Ribosomes that are on the outside of the ER

Nucleus
- Storage site for DNA

Chromosome
- One long DNA molecule that forms when a cell is prepared to divide (CONDENSED Chromatin)

Chromatin
- Material consisting of DNA and histone proteins

Nucleolus
- Site of ribosomal RNA synthesis

Nuclear Envelope
- Double membrane enclosing the nucleus; continuous with the ER

Nuclear Pores
- Small openings lined with porin proteins that assist in transport

Lamina
- Protein filament meshwork that lines the inner surface of nuclear envelope and keeps its structure

Endomembrane System
- Regulates protein traffic and performs metabolic functions

Lysosomes
- Organelles packed with enzymes that promote the hydrolysis of biological molecules

Phagocytosis
- Extending a cell's membrane to engulf a foreign cell or food particle

Autophagy
- A process that uses hydrolysis enzymes to recycle cell's own organic material

Vacuoles
- Large vesicles that are meant to store substances

Food Vacuoles
- Formed when cells engulf food or other particles

Contractile Vacuoles
- Pump excess water out of cells

Central Vacuoles
- Found in plant cells and serves as a repository for inorganic ions and water

Endoplasmic Reticulum

Rough ER
- Secretes glycoproteins, distributes transport vesicles, and is considered the membrane factory of the cell

Smooth ER
- Synthesizes lipids, metabolizes carbohydrates, detoxifies drugs and poisons, and stores calcium ions

Golgi Apparatus
- Modifies products of the ER and moves them to their final destination

Trans Face
- Releases cargo after making changes

Cis Face
- Receives cargo shipped out by ER

Plasma Membrane
- To protect the cell from the surrounding environment and regulate the materials that enter and exit from the cell

Endosymbiont Theory
- Origins of mitochondria and chloroplasts. Prokaryotic (non-photosynthetic and photosynthetic) cells engulfed by eukaryotic cells and formed symbiotic relationships with them. (Energy)

Mitochondria
- A double membrane organelle that produces ATP through cellular respiration

Cristae
- Folds within the mitochondria

Intermembrane Space
- Space between inner and outer membranes

Matrix
- Space inside the inner membrane where DNA is

Chloroplast
- A double membrane organelle that synthesizes food through photosynthesis

Granum
- Stack of thylakoids

Thylakoid
- Membranous sac

Stroma
- Internal fluid

Peroxisomes
- A single membrane organelle that is packed with enzymes that produces various metabolic functions like extracting hydrogen from certain molecules and adding them to oxygen to form hydrogen peroxide, which is then turned to water.

The Cytoskeleton

Microtubules
- Thickest of the three, hollow rods made of a protein called tubulin. Grow in length by adding tubulin dimers; very dynamic

Functions:
- Maintenance of Cell Shape
- Cell Motility
- Chromosomal Movement in Cell Division
- Organelle Movement

Flagella
- Mobility structure that is limited to one or few per cell. (Cell motility, composed of microtubules (9 doublets surrounding 2 microtubules))

Cilia
- Mobility structure that occurs in large numbers on cell surface. (Cell motility, composed of microtubules (9 doublets surrounding 2 microtubules))

Centrosomes
- "Microtubule organizing center" that helps with cell division. (Composed of 9 sets of triplet microtubules)

Intermediate Fibers
- Intermediate diameter compared to the three, very diverse and made up of different proteins. These structures are more permanent (Ex: Nuclear Lamina)

Function:
- Maintenance of cell shape
- Anchorage of nucleus and certain organelles
- Nuclear Lamina

Microfilaments/Actin Fibers
- Thinnest of the three, two thin intertwined strands of actin

Function:
- Maintenance of Cell Shape
- Muscle Contraction
- Cellular Movement/ Amoeboid Movement
- Cytoplasmic Streaming

Extracellular Components

Cell Junctions

Plasmodesmata
- Channels present between plant cells that go through cell walls, allowing the transfer of water and other nutrients (Plant)

Tight Junctions
- Membranes of adjacent cells tightly connected with proteins preventing the movement of any fluid or substance (Animal)

Desmosomes
- Connections between cells through proteins that allow some substances to go between cells (Animal)

Gap Junctions
- Allows everthing to move between cells (Animal)

Cell Wall
- Provides structure for plant cell

Primary Cell Wall
- Relatively thin and flexible

Middle Lamella
- Thin layer between the primary walls of adjacent cells

Secondary Cell Wall
- (In some cells) added between the plasma membrane and primary cell wall

Extracellular Matrix
- Comprises of a lot of different proteins and is a network that provides structure for animal cells

Plant Cell Structures

Animal Cell Structures

Cell Membrane and Structure

Structure

Fluid Mosaic Model
- Describes phospholipids as a fluid component of the membrane while different types of proteins (mosaic) are present in the bilyaer.

Phospholipids
- An amphipathic molecule that is contains a hydrophilic head and two hydrophobic tails. Hydrophilic heads are positioned to be in contact with extracellular and intracellular fluids while hydrophobic tails orient themselves inside the bilayer.

Membrane Fluidity

Temperature
- Temperature affects membrane fluidity. Above specific phase transition temperature, the lipid is in a liquid crystalline phase and below the lipid is in a gel phase.

Cholesterol
- Cholesterol also affects membrane fluidity. Its presence between phospholipids reduces movement at moderate temperatures and prevents phospholipids from packing tightly at low temperatures.

Hydrocarbon Tails
- The type of hydrocarbon tails affects membrane fluidity. Unsaturated fatty acids allow the membrane to more freely and saturated fatty acids pack tightly so the membrane cannot move as much.

Membrane Proteins

Peripheral Proteins
- Proteins that are anchored to the membrane.

Integral Proteins
- Proteins that are partially or fully inserted into the membrane.

Transmembrane Proteins
- Proteins spanning the entire membrane. N-terminus on extracellular side and C-terminus on intracellular side.

Function

Functions of Membrane Proteins
- Transport
- Enzymatic Activity
- Signal Transduction
- Cell-Cell Recognition
- Intercellular Joining
- Attachment to Cytoskeleton and ECM

Selective Permeability
- The ability for a cell membrane to control which molecules can pass through it.

Passive Transport
- Membrane transport that does not require energy and utilizes a concentration gradient to exchange small nonpolar and small uncharged polar molecules across the membrane. (With Concentration Gradient)

Osmosis
- The diffusion of free water across a selectively permeable membrane, going from an area of higher solute concentration to an area of lower solute concentration.

Tonicity
- The ability of a surrounding solution to cause a cell to gain or lose water.

Animal Cells
- Due to no cell wall, animal cells fare best in isotonic environments unless they have special adaptations.

Hypertonic Solution
- Solute concentration is greater than that inside the cell; cell loses water. (Shriveled)

Isotonic Solution
- Solute concentration is the same as the inside of the cell, no net water movement. (Normal)

Hypotonic Solution
- Solute concentration is less than that inside the cell; cell gains water. (Lysed)

Plant Cells
- Cell walls in plant cells help maintain water balance.

Hypertonic Solution
- Solute concentration is greater than that inside the cell; cell loses water. (Plasmolyzed)

Isotonic Solution
- Solute concentration is the same as the inside of the cell, no net water movement. (Flaccid)

Hypotonic Solution
- Solute concentration is less than that inside the cell; cell gains water. (Turgid)

Diffusion
- The tendency for molecules of any substance to spread out evenly into the available space because of thermal motion, moving from an area of high concentration to an area of low concentration.

Facilitated Diffusion
- Membrane transport that does not require energy but does utilize a transport protein and a concentration gradient to exchange large, uncharged molecules across the membrane. (With Concentration Gradient)

Channel Proteins
- Proteins that provide corridors or channels that allow a specific molecule or ion to cross the membrane

Aquaporin
- A channel protein that is present in the membrane that helps facilitate water through the membrane by use of aqua pores.

Carrier Proteins
- Proteins that undergo a subtle change in shape, alternating between two shapes. The shape change may be triggered by the binding and release of the transported molecule.

Active Transport
- Membrane transport that utilizes energy to move ions against their concentration gradients.

Electrogenic Pump
- A transport protein that helps create a voltage difference across membranes.

Sodium-Potassium Pump
- Typically, the outside of the cell has an abundance of Na+ and the inside of the cell has an abundance of K+, so if the cell needs to take out more Na+ or bring in more K+ it needs to do it against the concentration gradient. For every 3 Na+ transported outside the cell, 2 K+ ions are transported inside. (Requires ATP)

Proton (H+) Pump
- A pump that transports H+ against its concentration gradient. As positive charge leaves the cell, we see a slight negative charge develop inside the cell and a slight positive charge develop outside the cell.

Cotransport
- When active transport of a solute indirectly drives transport of other substances. (Ex: H+/Sucrose Cotransporter)

Bulk Transport
- The use of vesicles to move large molecules such as polysaccharides and proteins in bulk cross the membrane .

Exocytosis
- Transport vesicles migrate to the membrane, fuse with it, and release their contents.

Endocytosis
- Contents collect onto the plasma membrane, and they fuse into a transport vesicle where the contents travel within the cell.

Phagocytosis
- When a cell engulfs large food particles by extending part of its membrane out. The ingested particle is now in a food vacuole where it will fuse with lysosomes and be digested.

Pinocytosis
- When a cell takes in extracellular fluid from outside in vesicles. This allows the cell to take in any dissolved molecules.

Receptor-Mediated Endocytosis
- A very specialized form of pinocytosis that allows the cell to acquire bulk quantities of a specific substance. This can occur due to the presence of receptors on the plasma membrane which allow for the binding of specific solutes.

Cellular Respiration

Stages

Glycolysis

Occurs in cytoplasm

Two Phases

Energy Investment

2 ATP -> 2 ADP +2 Pi

Energy Payoff

4 ADP +4Pi

2 NAD+ +4 electrons +4 H+->
2 NADH +2H+ & 2 Pyruvate + 2 H2O

Net

2 Pyruvate + 2H2O
2 ATP
2 NADH + 2H+

Pyruvate Oxidation
& Citric Acid Cycle

Pyruvate Oxidation

1 Acetyl CoA per pyruvate

Citric Acid Cycle

8 Steps

1 Cycle

1 ATP
3 NADH
1 FADH2

2 Cycles

2 ATP
6 NADH
2 FADH2

Oxidative Phosphorylation

ETC

Transfer of electrons and release
of energy at each step rather than
all at once

Proton Pumps

NADH and FADH2
carry electrons

creates H+ gradient
across the membrane

Chemiosmosis

ATP synthesis

powered by the flow of H+
back across the membrane

ATP synthase

Prokaryotes

Cytoplasm
& Inner face of plasma
membrane

Eukaryotes

Outside and inside the
mitochondria

Chemical Formula

C6H1206 + 6O2 -> 6 H2O + Energy

Glucose becomes oxidized

loses electrons

O2 becomes reduced

gains electrons

ATP yield

1st stage

2 ATP

2nd stage

2 ATP

3rd stage

around 26 or 28 ATP

TOTAL:
30 or 32 ATP

Fermentation

absence of oxygen

Alcohol Fermentation

Glycolysis

2 Pyruvate

2 Ethanol

Lactic Acid Fermentation

Glycolysis

2 Pyruvate

2 Lactate

Photosynthesis

Chemical Formula

6CO2 +6H2O + Light Energy ->
C6H12O6 +6O2

6H2O extracted from
soil

6 O2 released

ENTIRE PROCESS

6CO2+ 18 ATP+12 NADPH +12 H2O->
C6H12O6+18 ADP +18 Pi+12 NADPH
+6O2 +6H2O+ 12 H+

Chloroplasts

cells of mesophyll

interior tissue of the leaf

1 mesophyll contains
30-40 chloroplasts

Stomata

Where CO2 enters
and O2 exits

Microscopic pores

2 Stages

Stage 1

Solar to chemical energy

H2O is split for protons

O2 is released

Photophosphorylation

ATP is generated by adding
a phosphate group to ADP

Stage 2

Calvin Cycle produces sugar
from CO2 with NADPH and ATP

ATP provides energy

NADPH provides electrons to
reduce CO2

Carbon Fixation

CO2 is incorporated into an
organic molecule

Photosystems

Photosystem I

chlorophyll a absorbs
at 680 nm

Photosystem II

chlorophyll a absorbs
at 700 nm

Thylakoid Membrane

Non Cyclic (Linear)

Photosystems I and II

Produces both ATP
and NADPH

Cyclic

Photosystem I

only produces
ATP