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Animal Biology

What is cell memrane made of?

-Mostly made up of phospholipids (preventg water passing through)
-Some protein have cabohydartes attached (glycoprotien)

-lipids with carbohydrates attached (glycolipids)

-cholesterol

Why do cells need a cell membrane?

-Controls enetery and exit of substances
-control the cell contents + organelles

-communication with external environments

-site of chemical reactions

-transport and packaging within a cell

-allows cell to change shape

The fluid mosaic model

-The phospholipid bilayer is not a fixed structure
-Although the bilayer will always remain arranged in this configuration the individual phosolipids are able to move

Phospholipid structure

-composed of a glyceral backbone, two fatty acid chains and a phosphate group
-The fatty acid chains are non-polar

-The phosphate group is polar meaning it can mix with water so it is known as hydrophilic or 'water-loving'

-The fatty acid taqil has no charge so cannot mix with water so it is hydrophobic or 'water-hating

Proteins in the membrane

-some protiens are transmembrane (they span the width of the phosophlipid bilayer)
-Others are fixed into the bilayer on one side only theses are peripheral protiens

-The proteins have several different functions

Transmembrane protiens

-Water soultuble subsatnces pass through protien channels in the bilayer
-Some channels use energy to transport substances across e.g the soduim-pottasium pump

Peripheral protiens

-Glycoproteins allow cells to communicate with one another
-Individual groups of cells have their own glycoprotiens, recognisable by the immune system

-Proteins of the cells surface also act as recivers for incoming messages

Eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells

-

Eukaryotic cells

-Has a membrane bound nucleus oand cell organelles
-Has DNA arranged in chromosomes

-E.G- plant, animal and fungi

Prokaryotic cells

-A single-celled organiam thet has no membrane bound nucleus or other organelles
-Has 2 main groups - Bacteria and archaea

-Smaller then eukaryotic cells

-can be pathogenic

Eukaryotic cell oraganelles

-

Nucleus

-Contains chromosomes (codes/controls the cell)
- enclosed by the nucleur eveolope - made up of the phospholipid bilayer which joins to endoplasmic reculum

-contains nucleur pores (act as gates)

Nucleolus

-centre of nucleus
-Transcribes RNA to send messages/ make molecules

Mitochondria

-Double membrane-bound
-Cell power plant - generates most of the energy in the form adenosine triphosphate (ATP)

-Inner folded membrane increases surface area to produce a large amount of energy

Ribosomes

-located on the rough endoplasmic reticulm and can be free floating
-made up of 2 parts (sub-units)- 1 bigger then the other

-25-30 nanometres in size

-primary sites of protein synthesis (translation)

-links amino acids together in a sequence as instructed by messenger RNA

Vacuole

-enclosed compartment filled with water and enzymes
-formed in fusion of multiple smaller vesicles

-no single-shaped varies depending on function

-isoletes harmful material

-contains waste products

-maintain a stable acidic PH

-maintains hydrostatic pressure and cell torgidity

Chloroplast

-contains chlorophhyll (makes it green)
- It contains lots of folded membranes (thylakoids)

-works with energy from the sun to produce glycose

-only fully works in daylight

smooth endoplasmic reticulm (SER)

-contains enzymes which help to synthesize lipids, oils and phospholipids
-helps produce hormones

-aids the breakdown of glycogen to glycose in the liver

-helps remove alcohol and drugs from the liver

rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER)

- contain ribosomes which give it the rough look
-helps transport proteins to the golgi body where it gets secreted

Golgi body

-modifies, sorts and packages proteins made by the ribosomes and modified by the RER
-packages protein into vesicles that can then transport the protein to where they are needed either in or out the cell

Lysomes

-contains digestive enzymes
-breaks down excess or worm out cells organelles

-viral and bacterial cells that have been engulfed and food particles

-the membrane surronding the vesicle prevents the enzymes from causing admage to the cell

Centrioles (animal only)

-cells contain two centrioles made up of microtubles
-only visible during mitosis when cell is dividing

-help move the chromosomes toward the poles of the cell

cytoskeleton

-made up of mocrotubules and microfilagments
-series of filaments and rods which help the cell keep its shape

passive transport

-requires no energy
-simple diffusion

-facilitated diffusion

-osmosis

active transport

-requires energy in form ATP
-sodium-potassiom pump

-co-transport

-exocytosis

-endocytosis (phagocytosis + pinocytosis)

simple diffusion

-movement is small, lipid soluble molecules down the concentration gradient (high to low)

facilated diffusion

-movement of ions and polar molecules across a cell membrane
-uses channel proteins

definitions

ATP- adensine triphosphate
ADP- adenosine diphosphate

Pi- phosphate ion

osmosis

-movement of water molecules from high to low
-has water surronding the cell (hypotonic)

-fluid contains less water (hypertonic)

-if the water concentration is the same it is isotonic

Active transport

-requires breakdown of atp into adp+pi to release energy
-movement of substrate against their concentration gradient (low to high)

co-transport

-some molecules join others to enter the cell (sodium + glycose)
-sodium gets actively transported into the cell

-amino acids + glycose enter alongside sodium ions

endocytosis

movement of larger molecules into a cell
phagoclytosis- cell surronds larger molecules often a cell such as bacterium

pinocytosis- cell membrane surronds droplets of fluid usally water

exocytosis

-removal of substances from a cell
-a vesicle (from golgi body) surronds the substance

-fuses with the cell membrane and the contents of the vesicle are expelled

compound microscope

-most common
-usally looks at specimens from slides

-uses light to penetratre and visualise tissue and cells


positive- easy to prepare and see what it is

negative- not much detail and limited magnification

Dissection compound

-for larger specimens
-light bounces off outer surface


positive-easy to set up and easy to use

negative- not in much detail and low resolution

scanning electron microscope (SEM)

-specimen placed in chamber
-electron beams bounce offto create 3D image


positive- very clear and has a high resolution

negative- only veiw dead specimen and its expensive

Transmission electron microscope (TEM)

-specimens thinly sliced
-High powered magnification

-electron beams pass through a specimen


positive- very clear and has a high resolution

negative- expensive and hard to prepare

calculations

microscope magnification
eye peice x objective= total magnification


image magnification

actual size= image size/magnification

Domain

-organisms are grouped based on physical characteristics
-The first rank of the system is called Domain

-There are 3 types of domain -Bacteria, archaea and Eukarya

Kingdoms

- The next rank in the system is kingdom
-There are 5 types of kingdom

-animal (all multicelluar animals)

-plant (all green plants)

-fungi (mould, mushroom and yeast)

-protist (amoeba and paramecium)

-prokaryotic (blue-green algi)

Ranks

There are several ranks
-kingdom

-phylum

-class

-order

-family

-genus

-species


-every animal is given a two part name the genus and the species

Why is latin used?

-It was the universal language
-helps identify species that look similar

-essensial for international research

-was a language used by acedemics

Natural selection

-process over time
-selects for organisms with traits best suited to environment

-individuals with adaptive traits= more likely to survive and reproduce

-adaptive traits passed to offspring

-shapes population

Evalution

-There are 2 forms of evalution
-Divergent evolution

-Convergent evolution

Phylogenetic tree

- A branchy diagram that shows how closely related all life on earth is
-Based on physical and genetically similar they are

-shows common ancestors on main branch

-the closer the branches are together the more closely related the animals are

DNA structure

-type of nucleic acid
-stores genetic material (instruction grow from fertalised egg)

-contained in nucleus

-pacaged in chromosome

-small sections of DNA have different protiens (genome)


Diploid- full

Haploid- 1/2 egg and sperm

DNA made of

-chromosome-long strand of DNA molecule
-polymer- lots of individual nucleotides joined together

-each nucleotide- phosphate group, deotyribase suger and base

four bases

-nucleotides are building blocks for DNA
-come in 4 types which are identical parts to base

-a base is known as the sub unit of DNA and MRNA

-purines- double ringed structure

-pyrimidines- single ringed structure


A-T Adeline-Thymine

C-G Cytosine-Guanine

Genetic coding

-sections of DNA codes the production of protiens
-sequence of bases within these genes is important

-every 3 bases codes for a specific amino acid (triplet code)

-amiono acid join together from peptides or polypetides (protiens)

-There are 20 different amino acids

DNA

-DNA is always double strainded
-DNA has deobi

RNA

-RNA is a single stand
-RNA has ribsome and uracil (instead of tymine)

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