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Bio Test 2 L

Terms

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Polymer
long molecule consisting of many similar or identical building blocks linked by covalent bonds
Monomers
(aka subunits) molecules covantely bonded together through a condensation rxn
Condensation Rxn
Lose a water molecule
Hydrolysis
Polymers dissassembled into Monomers The addition of a water molecule to break bonds between polymer
Depolymerization Rxn
disrupting covalent bonds to break up a polymer into smaller parts
In order to join an unlinked monomer to a short polymer...
H leaves SP OH leaves unlinked monomer (this process: dehydration)
What is this: HO-R
Polymer...alcohol bc of HO group
Esther Bridge
oxygen joins two molecules together
True or False: Lipids do not consist of polymers
TRUE
True or False: Lipids are hydrophilic
FALSE: lipids are HydroPHOBIC bc they consist mostly of hydrocarbons
Lipids are mainly composed of
hydrocarbons
Types of Lipids
Fats Phospholipids Steriods
Physical states of lipids
Oil Waxes
Fats are composed of
Glycerol & Fatty Acid
Glycerol
alcohol with 3 carbons bearing an OH group
Fatty Acid
Carboxyl group with a carbon skeleton and a hydrocarbon chain
Esther bridges usually form between
OH group and Carboxyl Group
Saturated Fat
NO double bonds between C atoms
Unsaturated Fat
One or more DOUBLE BONDS..creats kink in hydrocarbon chain (Most Animal Fats)
What do kinks cause?
prevent molecules from packing close together and solidfying
Household unsaturated fats
peanut butter margarine
Major Function of Fats
Energy Storage
Phospholipids consist of
2 Fatty Acids & 1 glycerol
What gives Glycerol its negative charge
OH is joined to Phosphate group
Major component of cell membranes
phospholipids
Steroids Composition
carbon skeleton consisting of 4 fused rings
Example of a Steroid
Cholestrol
Basic Sterol Molecule
6-6-6-5 arrangement
True or False: Glycerol is fully saturated
TRUE
Structure of phospholipid
Polar Head: Phosphate Group (PO4) Nonpolar Tail: Fatty Acid
Hydro___ phosphate head
PHILIC
Hydro____ hydrocarbon tail
PHOBIC
All basic biological membranes are made of
phospholipid bilayer
Function of plasma membrane
seperate living cells from non-living surroundings. it is SELECTIVELY PERMEABLE
Amphipathic Molecule
has both a hydrophobic region and a hydrophilic region ex: phospholipid
Fluid Mosaic Model
Membranes are fluid structures with various proteins embedded in or attached to a double layer of phospholipids
Scientist who proposed that cell membranes were made of phospholipid bilayers
Gorter & Grendel
Membrane Fluidity
Held together by hydrophobic interactions. lipids and proteins can drift laterally because they are not covantely bonded bilaterally
What allows membranes to remain fluid
unsaturated hydrocarbons
Types of membrane proteins
Integral Peripheral
Major functions of Membrane Proteins
Transport (channel or shuttle) Enzymatic activity Signal transduction Cell-cell recognition Intercelluar joining Maintain shape by attaching to cytoskeleton and ECM
Cell-cell Recognition
A cell's ability to distinguish one type of neighboring cell from another (crucial to immune system)
Glycolipids
Membrane carbohydrates bonded to lipids that function as markers
Glycoproteins
Membrane carbohydrates bonded to proteins
Supramolecular Structure
Many molecules ordered into a higher level of organizaiton
Give examples of: steady traffic of small molecules and ions move across plasma membrane
nutrients enter cell while waste products exit O2 enters CO2 exits
Permeability
hydrophobic nonpolar molecules dissolve in the lipid bilayer and cross w/ ease by simple diffusion Polar Molecules pass slowly and rely on transport proteins
Diffusion
the tendency of molecules of any substance to move from an area of high concentration to low concentration
Passive Transport
Moves down concentration gradient: Diffusion Osmosis Facilitated Diffusion
Aquaporins
Allow water to rapidly diffuse across the membranes of certain cells
Tonicity
The ability of a soln to cause a cell to gain or lose water. depends on concentration of solutes that CANT cross membrane relative to that in the cell
Isotonic
zero net movement of water volume. Animal cell = Stable Plant cell = flaccid
Hypotonic
Animal Cell = Lysed Plant Cell = Turgid/Stable
Hypertonic
Animal cell: Shriveled Plant Cell: Plasmolyzed
Lyse
when a cell overflows with water and bursts
Osmoregulation
control of water balance
Turgid
very firm, healthy state for plant cells
Flaccid
Limp, no net tendency for water to enter
Plasmolysis
Plasma membrane pulls away from cell wall
Facilitated Diffusion
Polar molecules & ions impeded by the LB of membrane, diffuse passively with the help of transport proteins
Channel Protein Types
Aquaporins Ion/Gated
Active Transport
movement of a substance across a membrane AGAINST its concentration or electrochemical gradient
What supplies energy is active transport
ATP
What does active transport allow
enables cell to maintain internal concentrations of small molecules that differ from concentrations in its enviornment
Electrochemical Gradient
Chemical & electrical forces act upon ions
electrogenic pump
transport protein that generates voltage across membrane examples: Sodium-Potassium Pump Proton Pump
Cotransport
indirectly drive the active transport of several other solutes in a mechanism
Exocytosis
cell seperates macromolecules
Endocytosis
cell absorbs macromolecules types: phagocytosis pinocytosis receptor mediated
Phagocytosis
Cellular Eating
Pinocytosis
Cellular Drinking
Net Flux
# molecules moving across - # moving back
concentration
solute/solvent
Equilibrium
when magnitude = 0 and net flux = 0
Factors that determine permeability
molecular size ions polarity
3 C Rule
Organic molecule with more than 3 carbons will not pass through a biological membrane
Primary Energy Source of Passive Transport
Brownian Motion
Modifying the membrane to create alternate routes or doors
Facilitated Diffusion
____ & _____ typically occur at the same time
osmosis & diffusion
Molecular Doors
Proteins/Peptides
Channel Proteins
participate in facilitated diffusion gated- something must trigger door to open/close ungated- tunnel
Transport Proteins
Participate in active transport
Ways to differentiate life based on structure
Unicellular vs Multicellular Prokaryotic vs Eukaryotic
What differentiates unicellular organisms and multicelluar organisms?
Multicelluar organisms have division of labor/ specialization of functions
Endomembrane System consists of
plasma membrane, nuclear envelope, endoplasmic reticulum, golgi appartatus, lysosomes & various vacuoules
All Cells have:
plasma membrane filled with cystol & organelles, chromosomes and ribosomes
Prokaryotic Cells
Dna is concentrated in nucleoid: no membrane seperates this region from rest of cell
Eukaryotic Cells
Nucleus Membrane bound organelles larger than PC
What imposes limitations of the size of a cell
metabolic requirements. the smaller the object, the greater its ratio of surface area to volume
Plant Cells
cholorplasts central vacuoule tonoplast cell wall plasmodesmata
Animal Cells
lysosomes centrioles flagella
which two organelles are involved in the genetic control of a cell:
nucles & ribosomes
Function of Endomembrane System
synthesis of proteins and their transport into and out of membranes & organelles metabolism movement of lipids detoxificaton of poisons
Endoplasmic Reticulum
network of cisternae. Smooth & Rough ER
Smooth ER
Outer surface lacks ribosomes functions: synthesis of lipids, metabolism of carbs and detox of poisons
Rough ER
ribosomes stud surface Functions: synthesis and packaging of proteins
Golgi Apparatus
manufacturing, storage, sorting & shipping
Lysosomes
membranous sac of hydrolytic enzymes that an animals cell uses to digest all kinds of macromolecules
Types of vacuoles
food contractile central
Brownian Motion
a phenomena whereby small particles suspended in a liquid tend to move in random or stochastic paths
Light Microscopes
first microscopes used: 1590 effectively magnify 1000 times
Discovery of cells
Robert Hooke 1665
Discovery of organelles
1950
Electron Microscope
focuses a beam of electrons through the specimen or onto ints surface 100 micrometers to 0.1 nanometer
Useful for detailed study of the surface of a specimen
Scanning Electron Microscope
Used to study the internal ultrastructure of cells
Transmission Electron Microscope
Human Eye can see (clearly)
10m to 1mm
Cell fractionation
take cells apart and seperate the major organelles from one another using a centrifuge
Cytology
the study of cell structure
Thermodynamic Laws
Law of consistancy Law of transformity
Free Energy
amount of energy that is available to do work
Efficiency
= Free Energy + Wasted/Lost Energy
We live at the expense of ____ energy
solar
Of the total solar energy, living things have an efficiency of ___ to capture that energy
1%
Photosynthetic autotrophs are able to convert ___% of the solar energy they absorb into usable energy
100
this kind of organism captures more than 50% of the energy we use
cyanobacteria
Energy Plot Diagrams
A + B + Energyin --> AB + Energyout
Enet
Ein-Eout
Slope in Eplot tells you
+ endergonic - exergonic
What can be used to reduce the activation energy required
catalyst (enzyme)
Bombcalorimeter
determines how much energy something has
Activation energy
Ein energy required to begin a rxn
facilitate rxns but are NOT affected by the rxn
enzymes
enzymes are
organic catalysts that are peptides/proteins
monomers of proteins & peptides
Amino Acids (covalently bonded together)
Amino Acid
Amino- Amine group Acid- Carboxyl Group R group- gives amino acid its identity
Amino Acid Subcategories
(determined by R Group) Neutral Polar Charged
Peptide bonds form through
dehydration condensation rxn between an amine & a hydroxyl (remove H2O)
Primary Protein Structure
list the amino acids from amine group to carboxyl group
Secondary Protein Structure
Any bending or folding due to hydrogen bonding
Tertiary Protein Structure
Any bending or folding due to something OTHER THEN hydrogen bonding
Quaternary Protein Structure
multiple subunits of peptides combined into a larger molecules
enzymes end in suffix
-ase
Ligand
temporarily bond to substrate so that an enzyme can interact with that molecule
Epitope
specific region where enzyme binds to substrate
Changing the shape of a protein affects
function
disrupt hydrogen bonds
change temp, pH, add ions/salts
How do substrates and enzymes find each other
brownian motion
Left Shift on product formation diagram
add more enzymes rxn rate increased
right shift product formation diagram
less enzymes rxn rate decreased
Plateau on %binding vs time diagram
saturation
an enzyme is said to be denatured when
the epitope is bent/changed so drastically that it will not fit with anything (irreversible)
temporarily disable enzymes
change pH or temp
saturation
enzyme molecules will continue to find epitopes until binding has reached 100%
enzyme affinity
the ability of the enzyme to grab the substrate and bind to it right shift- lower affinity left shift- higher affinity
slope
amt product or absorbance/time
thermal optimum
temp at which enzymes work best
Regulating Enzyme Activity
enzymatic cascades allosteric regulation
Enzymatic Cascades
systems of enzymes that work together: the product of one enzyme is the substrate of another
Feedback loop
product regulates enzyme in front of it
Allosteric Regulation
protein w/ Fe core carries/transports CO2 & O2 from one place to another. has 2 epitopes for O2 and 1 epitope for CO2
First O2 Epitope
Loads in cool basic (lungs) Unloads in warm acidic (metabolizing muscles)
Second O2 Epitope
Loads more easily when epitope 1 is loaded
Allosteric
the ability of an enzyme to control what happens down the line
% Binding is ____ when temp is high and pH is low
high (metabolizing tissue)
Relationship between O2 epitope and CO2 eptiope
reciprocal one loads while the other unloads
Protein Functions
Enzymatic Structural Storage Transport Hormonal Receptor Defensive Movement
Polymers of amino acids
polypeptides
Organic molecules prossessing carboxyl & amino groups
Amino Acid
What do each of the terms symbolize in Fick's Equation?
dx/dt = overall diffusion rate A = surface area d = diffusion constant m = membrane thickness xi-xo = change in concentration T = temp P = pressure

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