BY 123 Exam 1 (Ch 1-7)
Carbon's most frequent bonding partners (major organic components)
H, O, N
centrosomes
"microtubule organizing center" with a pair of centrioles and 9 triplets of microtubules for each centriole microtubules grow out of this near the nucleus
methyl group
(-CH3), methylated compound -affects gene expression and sex hormone shape
carboxyl group
(-COOH), carboxlyic acid or organic acids -acts as an acid
amino group
(-NH2), amine -acts as a base
hydroxyl group
(-OH), alcohols -polar due to O, forms H bonds with water
phosphate group
(-OPO3(-2)), organic phosphate -contributes negative energy from electrons, which gives it reactivity with water -ATP
sulfhydryl group
(-SH), thiol -two properties, SH groups can react and create a "cross-link" that stabilizes structure
carbonyl group
(C--O), ketone or aldehyde -sugars with ketone are ketoses, sugars with aldehydes are aldoses
How do carbon atoms form diverse molecules by bonding to four other atoms?
-4 valence electrons allows 4 covalent bonds to form, which allows for large structural diversity -variation in carbon structure (including isomers)
cortex and how they relate to microfilaments
the outer cytoplasmic layer of a cell -the network of microfilaments that gives the cell shape support create a semisolid gel consistency here
Evolution
the process of change that is the key to biodiversity
What happens after the rough ER synthesizes a secretory protein?
the protein is kept separate from the free proteins and are packaged into region called the "transport ER", which then transports into transport vesicles that go to the Golgi
heat
thermal energy in transfer from one body of matter to another
What are the pores in the nuclear envelope's biggest function?
transport of proteins and RNA and the large complexes of macromolecules
What does the combination of a glycerol and 3 fatty acids bring?
triglycerides bound together by ester linkages
Stanley Miller's experiment
O2 was not in the atmosphere, meaning that anaerobic metabolism was formed by bacteria as a result of a lack of oxygen
Are trans fats saturated or unsaturated?
They can be both; found in hydrogenated oils, they lead to a rapid build-up of plaque and atherosclerosis
Pyrimidines
Thymine, Cytosine, Uracil -one six member ring of carbon
nucleolus
a nonmembranous region (dark spots in the nucleus) that synthesizes rRNA to make ribosomes and RNA
feedback regulation
a process is regulated by its input or output
fat
a type of lipid made up of glycerol and fatty acids whose main purpose is energy storage from converted polysaccharides
Which action would produce a carbonyl group? a) the replacement of the -OH of a carboxyl group with hydrogen b) the addition of a thiol to a hydroxyl c) the addition of a hydroxyl group to a phosphate d) the replacement of the nitrogen of an amine with oxygen
a; carbonyl group is (C--O)
specific heat and how it relates to water
amount of heat that must be absorbed or lost for 1 g of the substance to change its temperature by 1 degree water has a high specific heat, making it a good thermal stabilizer b/c of its resistance to change temperature (oceans)
matter
anything that has mass and takes up space
Organic chemistry is defined as a) the study of compounds made only by living cells b) the study of carbon compounds c) the study of natural (as opposed to synthetic) compounds d) the study of hydrocarbons
b
endosymbiont theory
b/c mitochondria and chloroplasts exhibit features similar to bacteria: 1) bound by 2 membranes unlike the single membrane organelles 2) contain ribosomes and circule DNA 3) autonomous within the cell, reproducing on its own
Which chemical group is most likely to be responsible for an organic molecule behaving as a base? a) hydroxyl b) carbonyl c) amino d) phosphate
b; amino NOT hydroxyl
microtubules
biggest component of cytoskeleton; hollow tubes maintenance of cell shape (compression-resisting) cell motility chromosome movements in cell division organelle movements
Quaternary structure of a protein
bonding of multiple polypeptide subunits
What's the difference between bound and free ribosomes?
bound ribosomes are found in the ER or nuclear envelope (usually make proteins made to be packaged, shipped for membrane integration, or secreted) while the free ribosomes are in the cytosol (typically makes proteins found in the cytosol) -they are, however, structurally identical and can alternate between the two roles
monomer
building blocks of macromolecules (form polymers)
Which of the following hydrocarbons has a double bond in its carbon skeleton? a) C3H8 b) C2H6 c) C2H4 d) C2H2
c; carbon-carbon double bond, two more valence electrons per each carbon
macromolecules
carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids
phagocytosis
carried out by lysosomes where they fuse with food vacuoles and engulf the nutrient products within for food autophagy is also a thing where damaged cells are engulfed
plasmodesmata
cell junction in plant cells that connect plant cells and allowing cytosol to pass in between this makes plant cell connections continuous water and small solutes and maybe some proteins and RNA molecules can pass through
extracellular components
cell wall, extracellular matrix
What is an example of a structural polysaccharide?
cellulose; the most abundant compound on Earth!!!!; differs from starch based on its glycosidic linkage chitin in arthropods and fungi; exoskeleton (beta ring like cellulose except with a nitrogen)
vacuoles and plants
central vacuole: in mature plant cells, sap solution with inorganic ions are held here and hold a large role in plant growth certain vacuoles carry out enzymatic hydrolysis pigments organic compound storage
functional groups
chemical groups directly responsible for reactions -differing in shape and size
The protein and DNA complexes making up a chromosome is known as
chromatin
plastids
closely related plant organelles (chloroplasts, amyloplasts, chromoplast)
cholesterol
common steroid component of animal cell membranes
ribosomes
complexes made of rRNA and proteins that combine to make proteins from RNA -cells with high rates of protein synthesis will have more ribosomes (pancreas creating enzymes)
element
components of matter that can't be reduced by other substances
centrioles
composed of 9 sets of triplet microtubules
nucleus
contain the genes of a eukaryotic (nuclear envelope
hormonal proteins
coordination of organism's activities -i.e. insulin
glycosidic linkage
covalent bond between two monosaccharides formed by dehydration synthesis
dehydration synthesis
covalent bond forms through the loss of a water molecule -one group provides a hydroxyl group -the other group provides a H+
hydrolysis
covalent bond is broken through the addition of water -hydrogen attaches to one group -hydroxyl group attaches to other group
gap junctions
create cytoplasmic channels between cells allowing ions, sugars, amino acids, and small molecules to pass (similar to the plasmodesmata)
peptide bond
dehydration synthesis reactions between the amine group of one amino acid (N-terminus) and the carboxyl group of another (C-terminus)
DNA v. RNA
deoxyribose in DNA, ribose in RNA DNA directs RNA, which directs protein synth (known as gene expression)
cis-trans isomers
differ in atoms' arrangements AROUND a double bond due to the inflexibility of double bonds -cis: X element on the same side -trans: X element on opposite sides
Structural isomers
differ in the arrangement of covalent atoms (branched differently)
gene
discrete component of inheritance composed of nucleic acids
chromosomes
discrete units of DNA in genes
Shape of covalently (single) bonded carbons
double (or more) tetrahedron
nuclear envelope
double membrane encases the nucleus and separates in from the cytoplasm -its pores line the entire envelope consisting of lamina
trace elements
elements required for life only in small quantities
life requires the transfer and transformation of ___ and ___
energy and matter
kinetic energy
energy of motion
denaturation
environmental effect leads to the protein losing its shape and thus its functionality -most commonly happens when transferred from an aqueous solution to a nonpolar solvent, changing the orientation of the hydrophobic and hydrophillic regions
systems biology
exploration of a biological system by analyzing the interactions between the parts
pseudopodia
extensions of microfilaments to move a cell forward
Shape of covalently (double) bonded carbons
flat plane
membranes are not rigidly in place and are ___
fluid; the interactions between the amphipathic regions leads the membrane to constantly move (sometimes flip completely)
scanning electron microscope
focus a beam of electrons onto the surface of a specimen (3D appearance)
transmission electron microscopes
focus a beam of electrons through a specimen
form fits what
form fits function!!!!!!!!!
basal body
forms the base of a cilia or flagellum, very similar to centriole with 9 triplet microtubules
other functions of a protein
gene regulation and sensory input
What proteins are spherical and what proteins are long fibers?
globular and fibrous; form fits function and can be replicated if similar enough
fibronectin
glycoprotein in the ECM that binds to an integrin protein in the plasma membrane
Extracellular matrix (ECM)
glycoproteins (like collagen) and carbon-including molecules exist outside the cell membrane
surface tension
happens as a result of the cohesion between water molecules, giving the substance more structure in an ordered arrangement
surface area to volume ratio
having a high ratio allows for a greater number of specialized functions to occur (which is beneficial to the cell) -microvilli do this without increasing the volume -this is why there are many small cells instead of several large ones
cohesion
hydrogen bonds linking water molecules to one another
adhesion
hydrogen bonds linking water molecules to other substances
lipids
hydrophobic chains made of mostly hydrocarbons -fats, phospholipids, steroids
What bond is weaker, hydrophobic or covalent bonds?
hydrophobic interactions
nucleoid
in a prokaryote, the region where DNA is concentrated
intermediate filaments
in between microtubule and microfilament sizes; only found in some animal cells maintenance of cell shape (tension bearing) anchorage of nucleus and certain other organelles formation of nuclear lamina tend to be more stationary than microtubules or microfilaments
cytoplasm
in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes -euk: space between the nucleus and plasma membrane
chloroplasts
in plant cells, photosynthetic components derive energy from the sun; are mobile and their shape is changeable
cell wall
in plants, exist outside of the plasma membrane in order to provide structural integrity, prevent excessive water uptake,
Endomembrane system
includes the nuclear envelope, ER, Golgi, lysosomes, vesicles/vacuoles, plasma membrane
desmosomes
intermediate filaments form a solid bond between the cells in strong sheets, with keratin proteins anchoring the desmosomes in the cytoplasm
vacuoles
large vesicles of the ER or Golgi -food vacuoles -contractile vacuoles in freshwater eukaryotes -several functions in plants that lead to a smaller cytosol
primary structure of a protein
linear chain of amino acids it dictates the secondary and tertiary bc of the backbone and side chains
Only macromolecule to not be a polymer?
lipid boys
steroids
lipid characterized by 4 carbon ring structure
reductionism
looking at biology by studying individual parts
enzymes
lower activation energy, thus speeding up reactions (hydrolytic or synthetic) acting as catalysts
Proteins
macromolecules consisting of amino acids bound together by peptide bounds in order to form polypeptides -unique 3D shape -many functions
polymer
made of many covalently bonded monomers
plasma membrane
made of phospholipids; selectively permeable membrane that allows oxygen, nutrients and wastes to enter/leave
temperature
measure of energy that represents the average kinetic energy
fluid mosaic model
membrane is a mosaic of fluid bilayer in phospholipids
endoplasmic reticulum
membrane network in the cytoplasm made of cisternae and an internal compartment of the ER lumen that is separate from the cytosol Active role in synthesis of membranes, metabolism and synthetic activities
lysosomes
membranous sacs of hydrolytic enzymes that digest macromolecules -typically works better in a low pH (does nothing to the neutral cytosol until too many lysosomes break) -digests proteins, fats, polysaccharides, and nucleic acids
microvilli are a common type of
microfilament
cilia
microtubule controlled signal receiving (nonmotile) can either be motile or nonmotile based on function
Enantiomers
mirror images of one another -ibuprofen and albuterol
amphipathic
molecule has both a hydrophilic and hydrophobic region phospholipids have the hydrophilic phosphate head and hydrophobic nonpolar fatty acid tails
amino acid
monomers of proteins
flagella
motility structure in some animals extending from the plasma membrane
dyneins
motor proteins that use ATP to "walk" up a microtubule
contractile and motor proteins
movement -i.e. cilia and flagella
cytoskeleton
network of fibers extending throughout the cytoplasm, organizing its structure and anchoring many of the organelles main roles involve support and structure, but through the use of motor proteins, also motility and manipulation of the plasma membrane consists of microfilaments, intermediate filaments and microtubules
peroxisomes
removes H+ from the environment and transfers them to O2 to make hydrogen peroxide that is converted to water
receptor proteins
response of cell to chemical stimuli -i.e. receptors built into nerve cells
rough er
ribosomes on outer surface; continuous with the nuclear envelope synthesis of proteins like glycoproteins; polypeptide chain pumped into the ER lumen through a pore complex where it folds into its functional shape also makes phospholipids makes membranes by combining phospholipids and membrane proteins
Difference between saturated and unsaturated fats
saturated fats have SINGLE bonds between the carbons, so the hydrogens can saturate the fatty acids easily; the unsaturated have DOUBLE bonds, so there's less hydrogen to saturate
Most animal fats are
saturated, which is why they can pack more closely together without the double bond kink
biology
scientific study of life
glycoproteins
secretory proteins with carbohydrates covalently bonded; typically seen in the plasma membrane
enzymatic proteins
selective acceleration of chemical reactions -i.e. digestive enzymes used to catalyze hydrolysis reactions
plasma membranes are ___ permeable
selectively
cytosol
semifluid, jelly-like substance which subcellular components are suspended from
mitochondria
site of cellular respiration to synthesize ATP from energy
microfilament
smallest cytoskeleton component; thin, solid rods made from the globular protein actin maintenance of cell shape (tension) changes in cell shape muscle contraction cytoplasmic streaming cell motility cell division (cleavage furrow formation)
atom
smallest unit of matter that retains the property of an element
Does starch or cellulose have the alpha ring structure? What does this structure affect?
starch 3D shape (starch is helical while cellulose tends to be straight); cellulose is never branched
storage proteins
storage of amino acids -i.e. casein in milk, ovalbumin in egg whites
Isomers
structural variation in compounds with the same chemical formula, thus leading to various properties
genomics
study of a whole set of genes of a species
proteomics and a proteome
study of sets of proteins and their properties; the entire set of proteins in a cell
compound
substance that has 2 or more elements combined in a fixed ratio
sickle cell disease
substitution of valine instead of glutamic acid (primary structure) that leads to to "collapsed" secondary and tertiary structures, which affects quaternary structure of the polypeptide subunits and preventing oxygen to be effectively carried in hemoglobin
carbohydrates
sugars and starches -simplest being monosaccharides, then disaccharides, and then polysaccharides -made of carbonyl (C--O) and multiple hydroxyl (-OH) groups that are either aldoses or ketoses based on the location of the the carbonyl group -form rings in aqueous solutions
structural proteins
support -i.e. keratin
cell fractionation
takes cells apart and separates the organelles and subcellular structures from one another (centrifuge)
Shape of covalently bonded carbon to other molecules
tetrahedron
secondary structure of a protein
the alpha helices (fibrous proteins usually) and beta pleated sheets (globular proteins usually)
What separates a functional protein and a polypeptide?
the alternative structures (twisting and folding)
Refraction
the bending of light to magnify an image
What's the reason that humans can't ingest cellulose?
the beta structure of cellulose can't be hydrolyzed by the enzymes in the animal digestive tract this is why it's so important for bacteria to exist b/c they can hydrolyze it
What is the cis face of the Golgi and how is it different from the trans face?
the cis face receives ER products and the trans face ships the transport vesicles. products of the ER are typically editing between the cis and trans faces
nuclear matrix
the fibrous structures consisting of the inside of the nucleus
thermal energy
the measure of kinetic energy within the movement of atoms; in part relating to volume
resolution
the measure of the clarity of the image
diseases associated with misfolded proteins
Alzheimer's, Parkinson's, mad cow
atomic nucleus
protons and neutrons at the center
3 subatomic particles
protons, neutrons, electrons
transport proteins
provides transport for substances -i.e. hemoglobin and oxygen
Purines
Adenine and Guanine -a six member ring of carbon bound to a 5 member ring
magnification
ratio of an object's image size to its real size
What factors affect protein structure?
-interactions between the amino acids, folding, the interactions btw those the different foldings, and the subunits (structures) -environmental factors (pH, salt concentration, temperature, etc.) that affect bonding
characteristics of a prokaryote
-no nucleus -DNA in nucleoid (no histone proteins) -no membrane-bound organelles -cytoplasm bound by plasma membrane
What are the structural components of a amino acid?
1) amino group 2) carboxyl group 3) R (functional) group 4) alpha carbon in the middle
Biological organization
1) biosphere 2) ecosystems 3) communities 4) populations 5) organisms 6) organs and organ systems 7) tissues 8) cells 9) organelles 10) molecules
structure of mitochondria
1) first double membrane 2) intermembrane space 3) cisternae of the inner membrane (increases surface area) 4) second (inner) membrane 5) mitochondrial matrix (enzymes, mitochondrial DNA, ribosomes)
properties of life
1) order 2) evolutionary adaptation 3) regulation 4) energy processing 5) growth and development 6) response to the environment 7) reproduction
Components of DNA
1) phosphate group (one or more) 2) 5 carbon sugar 3) nitrogenous base (tend to take up H+ in solution)
structure of a phospholipid
1) phosphate group (phillic) 2) glycerol (phillic) 3) fatty acid tail with the unsaturated hydrocarbon chain (phobic)
Describe the reinforcement process of a cell wall in plant cells
1) primary cell wall is formed in young plant cells 2) sticky w/ pectin, middle lamella layer is placed in between primary walls 3) Secondary cell wall can form btw plasma membrane and primary wall, or a hardening agent is incorporated
4 emergent properties of water
1) solvent of life 2) cohesion of water molecules 3) temperature control 4) floating of ice on water
structures of chloroplasts
1) thylakoids, granum, stroma 2) intermembrane space 3) thylakoid space
Glucose monomers in starch are joined by what linkages? What about amylose and complex starches?
1-4 (number 1 carbon to number 4); no branching; 1-6
4 ways carbon skeletons can vary
1. length 2. branching 3. position of double bond 4. presence of rings
essential elements make up ___%; 96% of those elements being __________
20-25%; C, H, O, N
What direction is DNA read on a complimentary strand?
3' to 5' carbon on the sugar; aka running ANTIPARALLEL
How many monomers contribute to the diversity of life
40-50; arranged in various ways leads to infinite possibilities in monomers that form polymers of macromolecules
What percent of dry mass do proteins have?
50%
Why are unsaturated fats liquid?
Cis double bonds lead to there being a kink in the hydrocarbon chain that prevents the fat molecules from packing close together
characteristics of a eukaryote
DNA in nucleus membrane-bound organelles cytoplasm in the nucleus and in between usually larger
True or false: RNA cannot exist as a single strand
F
Inductive versus deductive reasoning
Inductive: small to big (specific observations lead to a generalization) Deductive reasoning: big to small (generalizations to ideas about a specific idea used to hypothesize)
Things both prokaryotes and eukaryotes have
Plasma membrane Cytosol Chromosomes Ribosomes
Difference between estragen and testosterone
Similar carbon ring structures, only differ in the groups attached to the carbon skeleton (functional groups) -different methyl group
How do you make a 1 M solution of glucose when the atomic mass is 180 g?
Since you're finding the number of moles per 1 liter, it's just the amount of g in a mole of glucose; dissolve 180 g in 0.8 L of solution and then add enough water to fill it to the 1 L mark
smooth er
no ribosomes on outer surface synthesis of lipids (oils, steroids like sex hormones, phospholipids) detox drug and poisons by adding a hydroxyl group (barbiturates decrease the smooth ER function --> habituation) store Ca+ in the lumen
Hydrocarbons
nonpolar organic molecules with only carbon and hydrogen atoms -fat molecules
structures of a plant cell
nucleus (nuclear envelope, nucleolus, chromatin), ER (smooth and rough), mitochondria, vacuole, ribosomes, CHLOROPLASTS, Golgi, peroxisome, PLASMODESMATA, CELL WALL, cytoskeleton (microfilaments, microtubules)
structures of an animal cell
nucleus (nucleolus, nuclear envelope, chromatin), ER (smooth and rough), cytoplasm, Golgi apparatus, peroxisomes, mitochondria, plasma membrane, cytoskeleton (microfilaments, INTERMEDIATE FILAMENTS, microtubules), microvilli, FLAGELLUM, centrosome, lysosome, ribosomes
know basic science terms
ok
tertiary structure of a protein
overall shape of the polypeptide dictated by the secondary folding -held together by misleading hydrophobic interactions (caused by the interaction of nonpolar substances in the absence of water) -held loosely by London dispersion forces and the polar bonds by the side groups
glycerol
part of fat; an alcohol with 3 carbons that all form hydroxyl groups
fatty acid
part of fat; long strings of hydrocarbons featuring a functional group at the end (the acid)
What are the repeating sequences of polypeptides (excluding functional groups)? What are the the functional groups referred to?
peptide backbone; side chains
cytoplasmic streaming
plant cells: actin-myosin interactions lead to the circular flow of cytoplasm
What are storage polysaccharides used for typically?
plants in the form of starch stored in granules that are in plastids through dehydration synthesis that can be broken into glucose through hydrolysis when needed; animals in the form of glycogen stored in liver and muscle cells
tight junctions
plasma membranes of two different cells packed together very tightly and bound by specific proteins this creates an effective barrier to prevent extracellular leakage
nucleic acids
polymers of nucleotides (polynucleotides); polydiester bonds lead to helical shape
polypeptide
polymers of proteins bound together by peptide bonds
emergent properties
properties that a complex system or community has but an individual does not --> requires a specific level of organization in order to function
defensive proteins
protection against disease -i.e. antibodies
nuclear lamina
protein filaments that hold the shape of the nucleus together
myosin
protein in thicker filaments that interact with actin filaments in order to contract a muscle
chaperonins
protein molecules that help proteins fold properly
proteoglycans
protein/carb complex that form a collagen fiber network -complex bound together by noncovalent bonds
Most structurally sophisticated molecules?
proteins b/c of its unique 3D shape
integrin
proteins that span between the ECM and the cytoskeleton; they can transmit signals and integrate changes
phospholipids
type of lipid that are the major component of cell membranes -only differs from a triglyceride by having 2 fatty acids attached to the glycerol; the other hydroxyl group in the glycerol is bound by a negative phosphate group -fatty acid tails are hydrophobic while the glycerol head (with the phosphate group) is hydrophillic
calories
unit of heat
dalton (amu)
used for atoms and subatomic particles
contrast
visible differences in brightness between parts of the sample
light microscope
visible light is passed through a specimen and then through glass lenses
Golgi apparatus
warehouse of sorting, shipping, receiving, and some macromolecule manufacturing (like polysaccharides) of ER product -secretion into transport vesicles -composed of membranous sacs (cisternae)
Methods to study protein form and function
x-ray crystallography (but it's hard for them to form crystals) nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy (which doesn't require crystallization) bioinformatics