Transcript
Gene Pool- A collection of all the genes in the population
Genetic Drift- describes random fluctuations in the numbers of gene variants in a population
-occurs more frequently in small populations
-often a trait is completely lost
Bottleneck Effect- A drastic reduction in the population size and the change in allele frequency
Founder Effect: occurs when a few individuals become isolated from a larger population
-New species
Barriers to Reproduction:
Prezygotic- Impede mating
-Habitat isolation
-temporal isolation
-Behavioral isolation
-Mechanical isolation
-Gametic isolation
Postzygotic- Prevent hybrid zygote from developing into viable adult
-Reduced hybrid viability
-Reduced hybrid fertility
-Hybrid breakdown
Allopatric- Different environments
Sympatric- Genetic recombination in sexually reproducing organisms can result in variation
-Horizontal Gene Transfer
Great American Interchange
Many new species arise from a common ancestor
Occurs when a few organisms make way to new, distant areas
Environmental change to extinctions to new niches for survivors
Adaptive Radiation: evolution of a group of diversely adapted species upon introduction to a new environment
Hawaiian plants descended from ancestral tarweed from North American 5 million years ago
Sexual selection:
Form of natural selection- certain individuals more likely to obtain mates
Sexual dimorphism- differences between 2 sexes
Intrasexual- selection within same sex
Intersexual- mate choice
Miller and Urey- Tested Oparin- Haldane hypothesis
Simulated early earth conditions
Produced amino acids
NH4, CO2, CH4, H2O
Endosymbiotic Theory- Lynn Margulis
Mitochondria and plastids formed from small prokaryotes living in larger cells
Evidence:
Replication, circular DNA (No histones)
Ribosomes to make proteins
Enzymes similar to living prokaryotes
Two membranes
Tempo of evolution
Gradualism
Common ancestor
Slow constant change
Preserving Genetic Variation
Diploidy: hide recessive alleles that are less favorable
Heterozygote advantage: Greater fitness than homozygotes
SS= Sickle cell
AS= Heterozygous
AA= Homozygotes
Where is sickle cell disease most prevalent? Why?
People of African descent because people in Africa are more prone to malaria so the sickle cells are a lot harder to infect with malaria.
What do the alleles stand for?
Is it rare? No
Archaea, Eubacteria, Fish, Amphibians, Reptiles, Mammals, Aves
Systematics: Classifying organisms and determining their evolutionary relationships
- Taxonomy- classification
- Phylogenetics- evolutionary history
Fossils
Morphology
Molecular evidence
Clade- Group of species that includes an ancestral species
3 domains:
Bacteria:+/-, good or bad, peptidoglycan
Archaea: Cannot make us sick, extremophiles,
Eukaryotic: Nucleus, multi celled
Archaea differ from eubacteria many key structural, biochemical, and physiological characteristics
Peptidoglycan in cell wall
Prokaryotes thrive in habitats that are too cold, too hot, too salty, too acidic, to alkaline for any Eukaryotes
Halophiles- salt
Thermophiles- Hot/sun
Barophile- High pressure
Acidophiles- Acid
Polyextremophile- Deinococcus radiodurans- Can survive many harsh environment, DNA repairing mechanism
Origin of life- 3.5-4 BYA- Cyanobacteria
Origin of life of Photosynthesis- 3 BYA
Origin of Eukaryotes- 2 BYA
Multicellular life- 1 BYA
Origin of animals- 600 MYA
Heterotroph hypothesis-
Chapter 4- Cell structure
Scopes
Light:
-Visible light passes through specimen
-Refracts light so specimen is magnified
-Magnify up to 1000x
-specimen can be alive
-color
Electron:
-Focuses a beam of electrons
-Magnify up to a milli times
-nonliving
-Black and white
Cell fractionation- take apart cells, separate major organelles
Prokaryotic- No nucleus
No organelles other than ribosomes
Small size
Eukaryotic- Membranes, nucleus
Cells must be small to maintain a large surface
Large S.A. allows rates of chemical exchange between cell and environment
Surface area- Small Intestine
Villi
Ribosomes
Composed of rNA & protein
Large subunit+small subunit
Free ribosomes: float in cytosol, produce proteins used within cell
Bound ribosomes: attached to ER make proteins for export from cell
Endoplasmic Reticulum is like the liver
Golgi Apparatus
:synthesis and packaging of material for transport
Cis = receives
Trans = ships vesicles
Lysosomes
Intracellular digestion; recycles cell’s materials
Contains hydrolytic
Vacuoles
Storage of materials
Mitochondria- Site of cellular respiration
C
1=E
2=A
3=E
4=E
5=B
6=C
Chloroplasts
-Site of photosynthesis
- Thylakoid disks in stout hacks
Peroxisomes
Breaks down fatty acids
Involves production of hydrogen peroxide
Cytoskeleton
Network of protein fibers
Support, motility, regulate biochemical activities
Microtubules
Protein=tubulin
Largest fibers
Tracts for organelle movement
Forms spindle for mitosis
Component of cilia
Microfilaments
Protein=actin
Smallest fibers
Cell movement
Intermediate Filament
Actin and Tubulin
Fix position of organelles.
Cilia and Flagella
Flagella: Long and few, propel through the water
Extracellular Matrix
Outside plasma membrane
Composed of glycoproteins
Strengthens tissues and transmits external signals to cell> stem cells
Tight Junction
When two cell membranes are virtually impermeable to fluid
Helps stabilize cell structure
Prevents molecules from moving into cells
Highest % in the bladder, liver
Gap Junction
A specialized intercellular connection between a multitude of animal cells
Directly connects the cytoplasm of two cells which allows various molecules and Ions to pass freely between cells
Involved in cell to cell communication
Desmosome
A cell structure specialized for cell to cell adhesion
Very random
Allows water and ions to pass
Found a lot in skin and intestines
Most abundant in the muscle cells
The Cell membrane
Phospholipids
Hydrophilic
Fatty acids tails
Hydrocarbons
Arranged as a bilayer
Polar=unevenly charged
Non Polar=evenly charged
Water
Glucose
Ions
Urea
Non Polar
CO2
O2
Polar hydrophilic heads
Within membrane
Non polar amino acid
outside=polar amino acids
Peripheral proteinLoosely bound to surface of membrane
ATP-
Adenosine
Ribose
Phosphate
Organisms are endergonic
Energy coupling
Use exergonic reactions to power endergonic
Adenosine TriPhosphate
When the bonds break- Spring loaded, releases a lot of energy
ATP- ADP
-Phosphorylation
Enzyme that phosphorylates= Kinase
Building Polymers from Monomers- connecting amino acids
Cell to cell signaling- turns on and off certain enzyme activities and transcription of proteins
Oxidative Phosphorylation- Changing ADP to ATP
NADH!!!!!
ATP Synthase
Glycolysis- Step one of cell respiration
Glycolysis is in cytosol
Link reaction is in cytosol
The Krebs cycle is in matrix
Electron transport chain is in intermembrane
10 reactions convert glucose (6c) to 2 pyruvate
Produces 4 atp and 2 NADH
Consumes 2 ATP
Yields 2 ATP and 2 NADH
Phosphorylate glucose
Phosphate came from pep
Lactic acid Fermentation
DNP
Oxidation of pyruvate- Link reaction or transition step
Releases 2 co2
Reduces 2 AND-2 NADH
Produces 2 acetyl CoA
Acetyl CoA enters Krebs cycle
2x (yield=2C sugar+NADH+Co2)
AKa citric acid cycle
In Mitochondrial matrix
8 step pathway
Each catalyzed by specific enzyme
Step wise catabolism of 6C Citrate molecule
Evolved later than glycolysis
Bacteria 3.5 billion years ago
Free O2 2.4 billion years ago
Eukaryotes 1.5 billion years ago
Aerobic respiration
Oxaloacetate forms citrate
How much per turn. 2 turns per molecule of acetyl CoA
2 CO2
3 NADH
1 ATP
1 FADH2
ENDED UP WITH 4 ATP after Krebs cycle
End result of Krebs cycle is to hold onto electron carriers, NADH and FADH2
Electron transport chain
Series of proteins built into inner mitochondrial membrane
Along cristae
Transport proteins and enzymes
Transport of electrons down ETC linked to pumping of H+ to create H+ gradient
Yields about 36 ATP from
Electrons stripped from H atoms to H+
Electrons passed from one electron carrier to next in mitochondrial membrane
Transport proteins in a membrane pump H+ across inner membrane to intermembrane space
What is the final electron acceptor? Oxygen
Che Osmosis
The diffusion of ions across a membrane
Chemiosmosis uses CO, Sulfur, Oxygen
Peter Mitchell
Proposed chemiosmotic hypothesis
What happens if O2 is unavailable
ETC backs up
Cells run out of energy and you like die
Ribozymes
Plants need O2 to respire
Heterotroph- eat other stuff
Autotroph- photosynthesis
Heterotroph- Oxidation= exergonic
Autotrophs- reduction= endergonic
CO2+H2O=H2CO3
What is a plant?
Need to get building block atoms from the environment
C,H,O,N,P,K,S,Mg
1st Photosynthetic Bacteria
Cyanobacteria- Chloroplasts
Red and Brown Algae
Land plants
COOKSONIA
Sunlight- leaves
CO2- Stomatal= gas exchange
H20- Uptake from roots
Nutrients- N,P,K,S,Mg,Fe…
Uptake from roots
Light dependent-
Photolysis (light photons split water in granum)
Light independent- Calvin cycle- in the stroma
Makes glucose
Chlorophylls and other pigments
Embedded in thylakoid membrane
Photosystem- collection of chlorophyll
Photosynthesis gets energy by absorbing wavelengths of light
-Chlorophyll a
- absorbs best in red and blue wavelengths and least in green.
2 photosystems in thylakoid membrane
Act as light gathering molecules
Photosystem 2
Chlorophyll a
Photosystem 1
Chlorophyll b
Electron transport chain of photosynthesis
4 proteins
-Etc uses light energy
ATP and NADPH
PS 2 absorbs light
Enzyme extracts electrons from H2O and supplies them to chlorophyll
Splits H2O
O combines with another O to form O2
Where did the O2 come from?
Radioactive tracer= O18
6CO2 +6H2O + light energy - C6H12O6 + 6O2
O2 from water goes to oxygen
O2 goes from CO2 goes to glucose
Noncyclic Photophosphorylation Noncyclic is better than Cyclic
(Bacteria are Cyclic, can’t make NADPH, not as efficient)
Light reactions elevate electrons in 2 steps PS2 PS1
PS2 generates energy as ATP
PS1 generates reducing power as NADPH
From light reactions to Calvin Cycle
Calvin cycle occurs in Chloroplast Stroma (Light independent)
G3P=pyruvate
Calvin cycle
Carbon fixation (important!!!) Turns Co2 into solid releases O2
Most important enzyme Rubisco (RuBp)
Reduction- Building Pyruvate by Rubisco + CO2
Regeneration of Ribulose- Need more Rubiscot, uses ATP
3 Molecule of CO2 makes one molecule of G3P
How many CO2 molecules are needed to make glucose? 6
Glyceraldehyde-3-P
End product of Calvin cycle
Energy rich 3 carbon sugar
C3 Photosynthesis makes pyruvate
G3P can become anything the plant needs
Calvin Cycle
1- carbon fixation
2- reduction
3- regeneration of rubisco
Accounting
3 turns of calvin cycle= 1 G3P
3 CO2- 1 G3P
6 Turns of Calvin cycle = 1 C6H12O6
6 CO2
Light reactions
Produce ATP
Produce NADPH
Consumed H2O
Produced O2 as byproduct
Calvin Cycle
Consumed CO2
Produced G3P
Regen ADP
Regen NADP
Light Reaction 1=H2O+Light energy- ATP + NADPH +O2
Produces ATP
Produces NADPH
Calvin Cycle= CO2 + ATP + NADPH- C6H12O6 + ADP + NADP
Builds sugar
CO2 + H2O + light= C6H12O6 + O2
258 Billion tons captured
C4 and CAM Plants
Tonoplast, Stomata (Time), Spines---- Desert plant adaptations
Closed Stomata leads to
-O2 build up
-Co2 is depleted is calvin cycle
Inefficiency of RuBisco
-Carbon fixing enzyme
- CO2 is the optimal substrate
- Reduction of RuBP
-Building sugar
When O2 concentration is high- Photorespiration
NH3 is a toxin in plants and NH3 is made during Photorespiration
Loss of Carbons to CO2
Can lose 50% of carbon fixed by Calvin Cycle
C4 plants
Physically separate carbon fixation from Calvin cycle
Different cells to fix carbon vs where Calvin cycle occurs
Store carbon in 4C
Different enzyme to capture Co2
PEP
Different leaf structure
CAM Plants
Separate carbon fixation from calvin cycle by time of day
C4 and CAM plants make more food and clean the air
PEP Carboxylase
Store as 4C Compound (Malate)
Vascular Bundle is the Xylem and Phloem
CAM (Crassulacean Acid Metabolism)
BIG IDEA 3
Mitosis and Meiosis: Basic Cell Division:
Mitosis
Produce cells with same info
Exact copies
Same amount of DNA/number or chromosomes
Same genetic info
Repair
Growth
Regeneration
Reproduction
Asexual reproduction
Single celled eukaryotes
Yeast
protists
Number 23 is a sex chromosome and doesn't do much other than gender
1-22 are autosomes
Homologous chromosomes
Both chromosomes of a pair carry matching genes
Miosis
Special cell division for sexual reproduction
Makes sex cells
Prophase 1
Crossing over
Chiasmata is where crossing over occurs
Crossing over
Cross over- Endonuclease
Breaking of DNA- Polymerase
Refusing of DNA- Ligase
Extra credit!!!!!! Telomerase
Meiosis-fertilization-mitosis+development
Oogenesis
Eggs in ovaries halted before Anaphase 1
Meiosis 1 completed during maturation
1 egg and 3 polar bodies
3 polar bodies goes into apoptosis
DNA=Deoxyribonucleic Acid
Phosphate PO4-
Ribose
Base (A,T,C,G)
Nucleotide codes for protein
Codon: a 3 digit letter sequence that codes for amino acid
Beneficial or deleterious
mRNA codon chart
Wobble effect- third letter is changed or mutated can be a new amino acid or not work
AUG- start
Errors in Mitosis lead to disease(cancer)
Errors in Meiosis lead to pre-congenital disease
Nondisjunction
Anuy
Klinefelter's- genetics at least one extra X chromosomes to a standard human karyotype
Turners syndrome: Females born with only 45 chromosomes; missing one x chromosomes
Cystic Fibrosis: A mutation in the CFTR gene
An autosomal recessive genetic disorder
Affects mostly the lungs but also the pancreas, liver, and intestine
TH Morgan- discovered chromosomes- grandson of francis scott key
Frederick Griffith
Deadly bacteria =S
Harmless=R
DNA is Universal
Horizontal gene transfer
Avery, McCarty and MacLeod
First experimental evidence that DNA was the first genetic material
Inject protein into bacteria
Injected DNA into bacteria
Hershey and Chase
Bacteriophage
Chargaff
DNA comp
c=g
a=t
Structure of DNA- Watson and Crick
Developed the double helix
Replication of DNA
Base pairing suggests that it will allow each side to serve as a template for a new strand
Dispersive
Conservative
Semi conservative
Meselson and Stahl
Label parent nucleotides in DNA strands with Heavy Nitrogen
Label new nucleotides with lighter isotope\
The central Dogma
DNA continued from gene to protein
Lack of an enzyme
Tay Sachs
PKU
Albinism
Beadle and Tatum
One gene: one enzyme hypothesis
RNA- Single stranded
Transcription-
Making mRNA
Transcribed DNA strand= template strand
Untranscribed DNA strand = coding strand
RNA polymerases
RNA polymerase 2
Transcribes genes into mRNA
Okazaki fragments
Splicing results in bio variability/ mutations
Error results in non functional protein results in diseases
Immune system is where splicing takes place
(MHC) lets white blood cells make any protein
Translation from nucleic acids to amino acids
Nirenberg and Khorana - but together letters/codon chart
Start- Aug
Stop- UGA, UAA, UAG
TRNA- 31 kinds
-TRNA clover leaf shape
-anticodon on bottom
Aminoacyl TRNA synthetase- Bonds amino acid to tRNA
Ribosomes-
Facilitate coupling of tRNA anticodon to mRNA or enzyme
Ribosomal RNA and proteins make it up
A site- holds tRNA carrying next amino acid to be added to the chain
P site- holds tRNA carrying growing polypeptide chain
E site (exit site)- empty tRNA leaves ribosomes from exit
A- initiation
P- elongation
Operons- Prokaryotic gene expressions
Prokaryotes have no nucleus
Transcription and translation happen at the same time
Transient- the bacteria needs to act quickly to adapt to new food sources
Gene regulation in Bacteria
Cells vary amount of enzymes by regulating gene transcription , turn genes on or off
Jacob and Monod: Lac operon
First to describe operon system
Operon
Genes grouped together with related functions
Promoter
RNA polymerase binding site
Operator
DNA binding site of repressor protein
Repressor protein
Binds to DNA at operator site
Blocking RNA polymerase
Blocks transcription
Inducible breaks stuff down catabolism
Repressible makes stuff
Repressible operon: tryptophan
Anabolism- makes stuff
Repressible operon- stops making stuff - enzyme on repressible turns off
Anabolic is making stuff
Inducible operon catabolic -enzyme on inducible turns on
Makes stuff to break stuff down
Eukaryotic Gene expression: Control Points
Gene regulation
Turn genes on and off quickly
Adjustable levels of enzymes for synthesis and digestion
Regulate body as a whole
Growth and development
Specialization
Most coordinate the body as a whole rather than serve the needs of individual cells
H.G.H and Insulin- negative feedback
Labor- positive feedback
The control of gene expression can occur at any step in the pathway from gene to functional protein
Packing and unpacking DNA- Packed too tight, can’t express gene. Packed loosely, can express
DNA coiling and folding
Double helix
Nucleosomes
Chromatin fiber
Looped domains
Nucleosomes- 1st level of DNA packing
Histone proteins
8 protein
Positively charged amino acid
Bind tightly to negatively charged DNA- PO4-
Transcription
mRNA processing- Splicing
mRNA transport- Where the mRNA goes
Translation- Can stop making protein
Protein processing- Designating where protein goes and what it does
Protein degradation-
Chromatin
Heterochromatin- darker DNA= tightly packed
Euchromatin- Lighter DNA= loosely packed
Methylation of DNA- Blocks transcription factors
No transcription
Genes turned off
Permanently inactivated genes
Acetylation of histones unwinds DNA
Loosely wrapped around histones
Genes turned on
Transcription initiation
Promoter
Binding of RNA polymerase and transcription factors
Enhancer
Distant control sequences of DNA
Bonding of activator proteins
Enhanced rate of transcription
Operator= bacteria
Enhancer= Eukaryotes
Post-transcriptional control
Alternative RNA splicing
Introns get spliced so exons can be expressed
Regulation of mRNA degradation
Add poly(a) tail to 3’ add cap to 5’
RNA interference
Small interfering RNA
Bind to mRNA
Binds to a promoter to turn it off
Opposite of enhancer
Control of translation
Blocks translation of mRNA to protein
Protein processing
Targeting for transport
Protein degradation
Ubiquitin tagging- death tag
Proteasome degradation
Mendel- Law of dominance
Segregation
indep assortment
3 to 1
Phenotype- Description of an organism's physical trait
Genotype- description of makeup
Law of segregation
Alleles segregate
Metaphase 1
Each gene has 2 alleles, 1 of which is dominant to the other
Incomplete dominance
Heterozygote shows an intermediate
Blended phenotype
Codominance
2 alleles affect the phenotypes equally and separately
Pleiotropy
Most genes are pleiotropic
One gene affects more than one phenotypic character
Acromegaly
Achondroplasia 0`
Gel Electrophoresis- A method by which DNA,RNA, or proteins are separated in a gel
Small- The fastest
Biotechnology
Bacterial genome
Haploid
Naked DNA
No histone proteins
4 million base pairs
Transformation
Bacteria are opportunists
Pick up naked foreign DNA
Import bits of chromosomes from other bacteria
Plasmids
Small supplemental circles of DNA
Self replicating
Carry extra genes
Can be exchanged between bacteria
Vector is a plasmid
Restriction enzyme
Evolved in bacteria to cut up foreign DNA
Restriction enzymes cut at restriction sites
Electrophoresis
Identify traits
Diagnostic
Forensics
Evolution
Non coding dna- Introns
Restriction Fragment Length polymorphism
Dna that is unique to you
1987
P.C.R
Polymerase chain reaction- Amplify DNA
Template strand
DNA Polymerase
Nucleotides- ATP, GTP, CTP, TTP
Primer
Plasmids
-building custom plasmids
DNA Hybridization
Finding short sequences of DNA using a labeled Probe
Complementary to part of gene of interest
Labeled radioactive P32
DNA libraries
Cut up all of nuclear DNA from many cells of an organism
Clone all fragments into many plasmids at same time
Reverse transcriptase
Hiv
DNA Library- Genome in a plasmid
Reverse Transcriptase
RNA- DNA
Mating with yeast-
Identify their mates by chemical signaling
A signal transduction pathway is a series of steps by which a signal on a cell's surface is converted into a specific cellular response
Quorum sensing- cells of many bacteria species secrete small molecules that can be detected by other bacterial cells and influence gene expression- Paracrine- nearby
Morphogen gradient
Autocrine signaling- Cancer cells, apoptosis
Juxtacrine- Plasmodesmata and gap junction, quorum sensing
Long-Distance signaling
Nervous system in Animals
Electrical signals through neurons
Endocrine system in Animals
Uses hormones to transmit messages over long distance
Plants also use hormones
Some transported through vascular system
Others are released into the air
Epinephrine released from adrenal glands
Cell receptor receives message
Glycogen turns into glucose
G- protein- 7 domains
Involved in transmitting a signal to the nucleus of a cell through its cell membrane
Binding of GTP activates it… binding of GDP deactivates it
Involved in everything
Receptor tyrosine kinases
2 receptors are involved to form a dimer
Can actually 10 or more proteins
Most involved in growth or metabolism
Ion channel reception
- very important in the nervous system
- Signal triggers the opening of an ion channel
- depolarization (action potential)
- triggered by neurotransmitter
Acetylcholine- Ca
dopamine/serotonin
cAMP- Cyclic
IP3- Soluble
NO
CA+- Involved in muscle contraction
Pathogenesis - Komodo Dragon starfish
DAP
Response- Many outcomes
Blotting takes 30 min
Scaffolding proteins
Can increase the signal transduction efficiency
Long distance signaling
Intracellular signaling includes hormones that are hydrophobic and can cross the cell membrane
Reuptake inhibitor- depression
ADG VS Cortisol negative feedback
Apoptosis
Cell is dismantled and digested
Caspase- breaks down cells
Why? We don't need this anymore
Osteoblast- makes bones
Osteoclast- destroys
G- proteins are diseases!!!
Ion channels- movement
Scaffolding protein
Viagra
Inhibits hydrolysis of c
BIG IDEA 4
Anatomy- Structure
Physiology- How we use it
Animal form and function are correlated at all levels of organization
Cells of growing embryo differentiate into 3 tissue levels
Endoderm, mesoderm, ectoderm
Hierarchical Organization of body of body plans
Organelles-cells-tissues-organs-organ systems
Four main types of tissues-
Epithelial
Covers the outside of the body and lines the organs and cavities within the body
Connective
Binds and supports other tissues
Cartilage, tendons, ligaments, bone, blood, adipose
Muscle
Controls body movements
Skeletal, smooth, cardiac
Nervous
Senses stimuli and transmits signals throughout the animal
Neurons, glia
Cuboidal Epithelium- kidneys
Stratified squamous epithelium- mitosis, cancer
GLIA is the powerhouse of the brain
Thermoregulation
Endothermic- makes energy
Ectothermic- Gives it away
Insulation
Circulation Adaptations
Cooling by evaporative
Behavioral responses
Antifreeze
Basal Metabolic rate- Endotherm
Standard metabolic rate- Ectotherm
Tropism- How a plants responds
Auxin- The plant hormone auxin
Gibberellins- Plant hormones that regulate growth
Cytokines a class of small proteins and hormones that are involved in plant growth
Barrier
White blood cells
Immunity
Complement system
Attack bacterial and fungal cells
Form a membrane attack complex
Basal cells
interleukin -1- fever
B- cells- bring protein to surface
T cells- kill
Myeloid- Neutrophil- kill anything
Antigens can be good or bad
Lymphocytes
B cells
In bone marrow
Plasma cells
Immediate production of antibodies
Memory cells
Long term immunity
T cells
Mature in thymus
Humoral- fluid
Antibodies
proteins that bind to a specific antigen
Must be specific
T helper cells show antigens
7
Acquired immunity vs passive immunity
A.P.C cells and M.H.C
Antigen presenting cells
Full immune response takes 10 to 17 days
DNA rearrangement and somatic mutation vertebrates can produce millions of B and T cells
Vaccinations are for viruses
Immune system exposed to harmless version of pathogen
Triggers active immunity
Jonas Salk
Developed Polio that gave you 99% chance of survival
Iron Lung
Passive immunity
Obtaining antibodies from another individual
Paternal immunity
Antibodies pass from mother to baby across placenta or in mothers milk
Injection of antibodies- serum
Short term immunity
T cells
Cell mediated response
Immune response to infected cells
Defense against “non self” cells
types - Helper T Cells- alerts the immune system
Killer T cells
Thymus is used to hold T Cells
CD4 cells low count is aids
Major histocompatibility (MHC) proteins- Only reason we can make antibodies
antigens - glycoproteins
MHC proteins constantly carry bits of cellular material from the cytosol to the cell
T Cell Response-
Retroviruses and Autoimmune Disease
Adaptive immunity- getting sick and making antibodies
Vaccines
Passive- mothers milk
Key attributes of the immune system-
Specificity- antibody specificity
Diversity- MHC
Memory- B cells
Ability to distinguish self vs non self- Failure results in autoimmune disease
Lytic vs Lysogenic cycle-
Lysogenic cycle ends in cell death
Lytic cycle- making copies
M.H.C- splicing, mutating
Perforin- death tag cell
HIV and AID
HIV- virus infects helper T cells
Helper T cells don’t activate rest of immune system
CD4/CCR5- receptors for aids YOU HAVE TO T9 4 =AKE A.Z.T
KINSHASA- Bonus!!!- Town where HIV was traced back to.
Acquired ImmunoDeficiency Syndrome
Death from other infections
Delta 32- Bonus!!! The gene responsible for not having either CD4 or CCR5- Where aids attaches to. No CD4 or CCR5, to Aids
AIDs is Reverse Transcriptase
RNA- DNA then DNA-RNA
Components of a mammalian nervous? Brain, spinal cord
Who has a nervous system?
Coral to human
CNS- central nervous system
Autonomic
Parasympathetic
Resting and digestion
Sympathetic
Fight or flight response
PNS- Peripheral nervous system
Somatic
Skeletal muscles
Afferent- sensory
Efferent- motor
Why a nervous system?
-Fast
-accurate
-reset quickly
Hypothalmus
Neuron- nerve cell
Many entry points for signal
One path out
Transmits signal
Synapse- space in between neurons
Myelin sheath degradation= MS
3 kinds of neurons
Sensory (1)
Motor (3)
Interneurons (2)
Starts with sensing something, gets sent to brain, locomotion
Transmission of a signal
Start the signal
Propagate the signal
Reset the system
All or nothing response
NA+
CL-
Ions that neurons use
Anions (negative)
More concentrated in the cell
CL-, charged amino acids
Cations (+0
More concentrated in the extracellular fluid
NA+
3 NA goes in
2 CL goes out
Cells have voltage
Membrane is polarized
Resting potential of -70 mV
Has to get up to -55 mV
Nerve impulses travel in a wave
Wave moving down neuron= Action potential
Change in charge opens voltage gated channels ie ion channels
Stimulus- nerve is stimulated
Reaches threshold potential- -55mV
Charge reverses on neuron
Cell becomes depolarized
Reseting
K channels open
K channels open more slow than NA channels
K ions diffuse out of cells
Charge reverse back at that point
Negative inside, positive outside
Wave= nerve impulse, or action potential
Brain- finger tips in milliseconds
Afferent vs efferent
Afferent- sensory neurons
Efferent- Motor Neurons
Sodium potassium pump
Antiporter
Requires ATP
3 NA+ out
2 K+ in
Batrachotoxin
Arrow frog
Snakes release Nerotic Cytotoxins
Resting potential
Stimulus reaches
Depolarization
NA+ channels open
K+ channels closed
4. Na+ channels close
K+ channels open
5. Repolarization, reset
6. Undershoot
K+ channels close slowly
2 milliseconds!!
Acetylcholinesterase
Enzyme which breaks down acetylcholine neurotransmitter
Myelin sheath
Axon coated with Schwann cells
Insulates axon
Speeds signal
Saltatory conduction
330 MPH
How come cells with the same DNA differentiate into different kinds.
Regeneration
Oogenesis
Unequal meiotic divisions
1 egg
3 polar bodies
Fertilization- Fusing of egg and sperm to for a zygote in fallopian tube
Cleavage- repeated mitotic divisions of zygote
Unequal divisions establishes body plan
Morphogen creates a gradient
zygote - morula -
Gastrulation-
ectoderm
Outer body tissues
Skin nails, teeth
mesoderm
Middle tissues
Blood and lymth, bones
Inner lining
Digestive system.
Neurolation
Formation of notochord and neural tube develop into nervous system
Organogenesis- development of the organ system
-placenta forms.- Allows for exchange across membranex
Chorion- releases water when birth coming
Amnion-
Chorionic villus sampling- used to make karyotype
Oogenesis
Fertilization
Zygote
Cleavage
Gastrulation
Neurulation
Organogenesis
AP Bio Notes- Breathe By:Hanna Scali
We need a respiratory system to take in O2- for aerobic cellular respiration and to make ATP, 20%
Need CO2 out- waste production from krebs cycle, 16%
Gas exchange- O2 and CO2 exchange between environment and cells- 800 mL of water needed
Needs moist membrane and needs high surface area
Gills in a fish are actually called operculum
Water carrying gas flows in one direction and blood flows in the opposite direction
Blood should flow out of the mouth of the fish and pumped to the gills
The process that fish breathe is called the countercurrent exchange
Advantage of terrestrial life- air is much lighter than water and therefore easier to pump, O2 and CO2 can diffuse much faster
Disadvantages- keeping large respiratory surface moist causes high water loss
Tracheae- air tubes branching throughout body, gas exchange by diffusion across moist cells lining in terminal ends, not through open circulatory system
Caterpillars use spiracles(little holes in their sides) to get air in
1) pharynx 2) tracheae 3) bronchus 4) bronchiole 5) alveoli- gas exchange across thin epithelium of millions of alveoli
Negative pressure breathing- breathing due to changing pressure in lungs
Breathing in increases the pressure and breathing out decreases it and doesn’t take energy
Excretion and Water balance
Kangaroo rat- does not drink
Superworm turns into a bug
American toad- absorbs it
Two evolutionary paths
Regulate internal environment
Maintain relatively constant conditions
Conform to external environment
Allow internal conditions to fluctuate
Thermoregulation- temp control
Osmoregulation- water control
Overcoming limitations of diffusion
Evolution of exchange system for
Distributing nutrients
Removing wastes
Excretory system
Respiratory system
Integumentary system
Osmoregulation
Water balance
Hypotonic
Water flows into cells and salt cell
Saltwater
Hypertonic
Water loss from cell
Land
Dry environment
Conserve water
May also need to conserve salt
Carbs= CHO
Intracellular waste products
Lipid=CHO
Proteins= CHON N= Nitrogen
ORCA WHALE- Bonus question????
Ammonia= NH3
Very toxic
Very soluble
Must dilute it and get rid of it fast
Nitrogen waste
Aquatic organisms
Can afford
ammonia
Terrestrial
Need to conserve water
Urea
Terrestrial egg layers
Need to conserve water
Need to protect embryo in egg
Uric acid
Least toxic
Urea= larger molecule= less soluble= less toxic
2NH2+CO2
Kidney
Filter solutes out of blood
Reabsorbs H20
Excrete waste
Egg laying land animals
Nitrogen waste disposal
No place to get rid of waste in egg
Need even less soluble molecule
B
Cycles in Ecology
Organism
Population
Community
Ecosystem
Biosphere
Ecosystem-
All the organisms in a community plus abiotic factors
Ecosystems are transformers of energy and processors of matter
Ecosystems are self sustaining
Energy flows
Capture energy, transfer energy, cycle nutrients
N2-- NO3- NO2
Eutrophication
Deforestation breaks the water cycle
Ground water is not transpired to the atmosphere
Anoxic- lack of o2
Repairing the damage
The Greenbelt Movement
Planting trees in Kenya
Restoring a sustainable ecosystem
Population ecology
Food chain
Trophic levels
Feeding relationship
Start with energy from sun
Captured by plants
Efficient transfer of energy
Abiotic- sunlight
-precipitation
- soil
Biotic- prey
Competitors
predators
Dependent are biotic
Abiotic are independent
Intrinsic factors- Adaptations
DNA
Population
Group of individuals of same species in the same area at the same time
Population spacing
Size of population
Monoculture
At risk populations
Critically endangered species- dozens or none left
Population spacing
clumped - packs- wolves
Uniformed- territory- penguins
Random- scavengers
Population size
Birth
Death
Immigration
Emigration
Stable= B+I= D+E
Growth=(B-D) + (I+E)> 0
Declining= B+ I < D + E
Sex ratio- 1 to 1
How many females to males
Generation time
Age
Age structure
Survivorship curve and invasive species
Demography
Factors that affect growth and decline of populations
Vital stats and how they change
Belding ground squirrels
1- High death rate in post reproductive years- Humans, whales
2- Constant mortality rate throughout life span- Birds, hydra
3- Very high early mortality but the few survivors live long- oyster, sea turtles
PARENTAL INVESTMENT
K selected species
-late reproduction
- few offspring
- Invest in a lot in raising
- Coconut, primates
R selected species
Early reproduction
Many offspring
Little parental care
K=Type 1
R=type 2
Kestrel Falcons-
The cost of larger broods to both male and female parents
Large brood size is bad
Exponential growth rate
Characteristic of population without limiting factors
Introduced to a new environment or rebounding from a catastrophe
Introduced species
Non native species
Transplanted populations grow exponentially in new are
Out compete native species
Loss of natural controls
Lack of predators, parasites, competitors
Reduce diversity
Examples
Afro honey bee
Gypsy moths
zebra s
Mussel
Filter feeders
Toxins bioaccumulate to birdies and such
Invasive species and carrying capacity
Lamprey- sucky sucky
Carrying capacity-
Maximum population size that can support with no degradation of habitat
Measuring population density
Individuals in a population?
Niche
An organism’s niche is its ecological role
Competitive Exclusion
No too similar species can occupy the same niche
Resource partitioning
Interspecific relationships- symbiotic interactions
-competition(-/-), compete for limited resources
-predation/parasitism(-/+)
-mutualism(+/+), ex. lichens (algae and fungus)
-commensalism(+/0), ex. barnacles attached to whale
Mimicry
Batesian mimicry- harmless species mimics a harmful model
King snake is harmless while coral snake is
Mullerian mimicry- two or more protected species look like each other, “group mentality”, group defense, usually they are both toxic or poisonous, ex. Cuckoo bee and yellow jacket
Keystone species and ecological succession
Aposematic- warnings, species come to resemble each other
Species diversity- how many diff species
Composition- dominant species
Most biomass are chemosynthetic bacteria
But mostly producers
Keystone species
Influential ecological role
Exert important regulating effects
Keystone species increases diversity
AMERICAN BEAVER
Ecological succession is recovery
Pioneer species
Secondary succession-
Existing community cleared
KEELING CURVE- Bonus
Animal behavior- Innate vs learned Animal behavior
Fixed action patterns and imprinting
Behavior- Movement
Pheromones
Electricity
Behavior- everything an animal does and how it does it
Innate- inherited, instinctive
Automatic
No learning curve
Learned
Ability to learn is inherited, but the behavior during animals lifetime
Variable and flexible
Proximate causes
Immediate stimulus and mechanism
How and what questions
Ultimate causes
Evolutionary significance
How does behavior contribute to survival
Proximate is what
Ultimate is why
ETHOLOGY
Pioneers in the study of animal behavior
Karl von Frisch- The Waggle Dance
NIko Tinbergen
Konrad Lorenz
Fixed Action pattern (FAP)
Sequence of behavior essentially unchangeable and usually conducted to completion once started
Sign stimulus
Supernormal stimulus
Responding more to a larger sign stimulus
Some birds like fake eggs
Taxis6
Change in direction
Automatic movement towards or away from a stimulus
Phototaxis
Chemotaxis
Kinesis
Change in rate of movement in response to stimulus
Migration is complex innate behavior
Magnetite
Associative learning- learning to associate a stim with a consequence
Operant conditioning- trial and error learning
Skinner box
Habituation: loss of response to stimulus
¨cry wolf¨
Decrease in response to repeated occurrences of stimulus
Enables animals to disregard unimportant stimuli
Example: the lion and the leaves, iguana and waves, and marmot with humans
Social behaviors
Communication by song
Bird song- species identification and mating ritual
Mixed learned and innate
Insect song
Mating ritual and song
innate
2. Agonistic behaviors
Threatening and submissive ritual
HFPHJF