Edexcel Biology Unit 1 Notes
Edexcel Biology Unit 1 Notes
Edexcel Biology Unit 1 Notes
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1.1 Molecules
M M M M M M The structure and properties of some important biological molecules Water Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids
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1.1 Molecules
Content The structure and properties of some important biological molecules Water
M M M Its dipolar nature and formation of hydrogen bonds The importance of water as a solvent Other roles of water related to its high latent heat of vaporisation, specific heat capacity, density and surface tension.
Carbohydrates
M M M M M Hexoses and pentoses are monosaccharides and their role as monomers The structure and roles of the monosaccharides alpha and beta glucose, ribose and deoxyribose The roles of fructose and galactose Disaccharides and polysaccharides composed of monomers joined by glycosidic bonds Condensation and hydrolysis reactions involved in the synthesis and degradation of disaccharides and polysaccharides The structure and roles of the disaccharides sucrose, maltose and lactose The structure and roles of the polysaccharides starch (amylose and amylopectin), cellulose and glycogen
M M
Lipids
M M M M M The general nature of lipids as fats, oils and waxes The general structure of a triglyceride synthesised from glycerol and fatty acids, the formation of ester bonds The nature of saturated and unsaturated fatty acids The roles of lipids as energy stores, and in protection, waterproofing, insulation and buoyancy The structure and properties of phospholipids and their role in the structure and properties of cell membranes
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Proteins
M M M M The nature of amino acids as monomers in the formation of polypeptides and proteins The general formula and general structure of amino acids The formation of a peptide bond The meaning of the terms primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure and their importance in the structure of enzymes Condensation and hydrolysis reactions in the synthesis and degradation of polypeptides and proteins The role of ionic, hydrogen and disulphide bonds in the structure of proteins as illustrated by insulin and collagen The nature and roles of fibrous and globular proteins as illustrated by collagen and insulin
M M M
Nucleic acids
M M M M M M M M Ribonucleic acid (RNA) and deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) as polynucleotides composed of mononucleotides The basic structure of a mononucleotide Thymine, uracil and cytosine as pyrimidines; adenine and guanine as purines Condensation reactions in the formation of mononucleotides and polynucleotides (DNA and RNA) The structure and roles of messenger and transfer RNA The structure of DNA, base pairing; the double helix The mechanism of replication of DNA (semi-conservative) The nature of the genetic code, the gene as a sequence of bases on the DNA molecule which codes for a sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain The processes of transcription and translation in the synthesis of proteins; amino acid sequences are specified by DNA The function of the ribosomes Codons and anticodons in relation to messenger and transfer RNA The Human Genome Project (Practical work to include qualitative and quantitative biochemical tests for starch, reducing and non-reducing sugars and proteins using iodine solution, Benedicts reagent and biuret reagent, as appropriate)
M M M M M
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Introduction
It may surprise you to know that the bodies of living organisms are made up of fewer than 20 different chemical elements and just six of these bioelements make up 99% of the total body mass (oxygen 65%, carbon 18%, hydrogen 10%, nitrogen 3%, calcium 2%, phosphorus 1%). Most of the important biological molecules (apart from the most important of all - water) are organic, which means that they are made up from carbon compounds (note that most but not all compounds containing carbon are organic. Exceptions include carbon dioxide and carbonates).Organic biomolecules include carbohydrates, proteins, lipids and nucleic acids, all of which exist as individual sub-units (monomers) or repeating chains of sub-units (polymers). Polymers are very large molecules, built up by reactions called condensation reactions in which a molecule of water is lost as each sub-unit joins the next. They may be broken down by the reverse process, hydrolysis, which involves the addition of a molecule of water for each bond broken. The following account describes the structure of carbohydrates, proteins and lipids and the relationship of molecular structure to their function in living organisms.
WATER
Almost everyone knows the chemical formula for water - H2O. It is a molecule made up of two hydrogen atoms combined with a single oxygen atom. As molecules go H2O appears rather simple, yet its molecular structure results in many unique properties upon which life depends. Each hydrogen atom combines with the oxygen atom by means of a pair of shared electrons (covalent bond). The nucleus of the oxygen atom has a strong positive charge which tends to pull the negatively charged electrons away from the smaller hydrogen atoms. As a result, a negative charge develops near the oxygen atom and positive charges occur near the hydrogen atoms. Molecules which have charged regions are called polar molecules. Water has both positive and negative charges and is therefore described as dipolar.
Bond angle104.5
E le ct ro n d is t r i b u t i o n w i t h i n t h e w a t e r m o l e c u l e causes the oxygen end of the molecule to have a par tial negative charge and the hydrogen sites to h ave a p a r t ia l p o s i t i ve ch a r g e
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EDEXCEL
Molecular model of water solubility
Na
Cl
Na
Na
Cl
Na
Cl
Na
Cl
Na
Na
Cl
Na
Cl
Cl
H
H
O H
H O
+ H
+
O H
2
axis o f t h e O H b o n d with i n w a t e r m o l e cu le
Cl
+ +
H
H
s t ro n g hy d ro g e n bond when aligned on OH axis
O H
2
+
H H O
we a k hyd ro g e n bon d w h e n n o t pro p e r ly a li g n e d o n O H a x is
Na
H O H O H
+
H
+
O
+
+
H O H +
H O H
+
H O H
Na
+
H O H +
+
Water molecules also attract other polar molecules. When mixed with salt (NaCl), for example, electrostatic links are made between the positive and negative charges of the salt and the water. Water is an excellent solvent allowing many molecules and charged ions to be held in cells and transported around the body. Any molecule with a polar region will dissolve, including sugars and alcohol, and water molecules gather around large protein molecules to form a special kind of solution called a colloid, as found in the cytoplasm of cells.
2
H
2
O H H H O H
H O H
+ +
H O
H
Cl
H O H
H O
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Property State
Example of biological importance Solid (ice) at 0oC and vapour above 100oC (at sea level), providing a wide range of temperature at which it exists as a liquid. Universal solvent in which many substances dissolve. Water supports aquatic organisms. Ice is less dense than water, therefore ice floats and organisms can survive beneath it. Allows free flow for transport of materials inside and outside of organisms. Water has a strong surface film allowing small organisms to be supported on top or underneath it Water rises in small bore tubes against the pull of gravity because the polar water molecules are attracted to themselves and to a number of surfaces. Capillarity is important in water transport in plants. Water provides a hydrostatic skeleton. When enclosed in any structure with a strong surrounding wall, water provides much support and protection to structures within it - e.g. earthworm body cavity, human abdominal cavity As water molecules evaporate they absorb heat energy from the surface from which they are evaporating, cooling them down in the process, e.g. sweating. Water has a high specific heat. This means that it gains and loses heat slowly which is important in the temperature control of aquatic environments and internal fluids. Allows the transmission of light e.g. for photosynthesis in aquatic organisms. N CHECKPOINT SUMMARY N Water molecules are dipolar with an electronegative pole and an electropositive pole N The dipolar nature of water causes molecules to be attracted to each other by hydrogen bonds resulting in most of the key properties of water in relation to living organisms N Liquid at normal temperature and pressures, solid (ice) at 0oC, boiling point 100oC, providing a wide range as a liquid N It has high cohesion resulting in a strong surface film allowing small organisms to be supported on top or underneath it, and the ability for the water column N Universal solvent in which many substances dissolve N Water supports aquatic organisms, ice is less dense than water, therefore ice floats and organisms can survive beneath it N Low viscosity allows free flow for transport of materials inside and outside of organisms N Water rises in small bore tubes by capillarity e.g. important in water transport in plants N Being incompressible water provides a hydrostatic skeleton, e.g. earthworm body cavity, human abdominal cavity N Latent heat of evaporation results in a cooling process e.g. sweating N Water has a high specific heat which is important in temperature control of aquatic environments and internal fluids N Transparency allows the transmission of light e.g. for photosynthesis N Inorganic ions dissolve freely in water and have a wide and varied role in living organisms.
Solvent Density
Incompressibility
Transparent
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CARBOHYDRATES Monosaccharides
Carbohydrates are a family of molecules made up, as the name suggests, from carbon and the components of water (hydrogen and oxygen). Carbohydrates are manufactured by plants and are passed on to other organisms via food chains. You should already be familiar with the name and chemical formula of one of the simpler carbohydrate molecules, glucose, which is made from CO2 and H2O in the process of photosynthesis. 6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 glucose Glucose has six carbon atoms in the form of a framework to which the oxygen and hydrogen atoms are attached. In dry glucose powder the carbon atoms are arranged in a straight chain, but if it is dissolved in water, the chains form themselves into ring structures. Two different ring forms exist called alpha () glucose and beta () glucose. The carbon atoms are numbered 1 to 6 starting in a clockwise direction from the position of the oxygen atom. As discussed later, the different structures of alpha and beta glucose result in the formation of polysaccharides with different properties. Alpha and beta glucose are isomers; they have the same chemical formula but a slightly different arrangement of atoms in the molecule. Fructose and galactose are also isomers of glucose. You will notice that fructose has the same number of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms as glucose but it has a keto group (C=O) instead of the aldehyde group (CHO). This gives fructose slightly different chemical properties, for example it is sweeter than glucose.
CH2OH C H H C OH
O H C OH C H Fructose CH2OH
- glucose
C H 2O H C H C OH OH C H H C OH H O H C OH
- glucose
C H 2O H C H H OH C H O
OH above
OH C
Reversible reaction
H H
Reversible reaction
C OH H C OH
OH below
C H 2O H
OH
HO -glucose
OH
HO -glucose
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EDEXCEL
CH2OH C H
CH2OH C H H C OH
O OH C H C H H
Deoxyribose
- glucose
- glucose
Hydrolysis
CH2OH C H C OH OH C H H C OH H O H C O H C
C H OH C H
O H C H C OH OH + H 20
1- 4 glycosidic link
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EDEXCEL
CH2OH C H C OH OH C H
glucose Sucrose CH2OH H C OH OH C H glucose Lactose CH2OH OH C OH H C H galactose H C OH C H C H O O H C H C OH C H O H C O
CH2OH O H C H C OH O H C OH C H
glucose
C H
O H C H C OH OH
CH2OH C H C OH
O H C OH C H CH2OH
fructose
CH2OH C O OH C OH C H glucose H C OH H
Structure and roles of the polysaccharides: starch (amylose and amylopectin), glycogen and cellulose
Glucose is the universal fuel for respiration, but it cannot be stored in cells because a high glucose concentration would result in the entry of large amounts of water by osmosis which could cause cells unprotected by a cell wall or surrounding cells, to swell up and burst. For this reason, glucose in excess of energy requirements is converted for storage to the relatively insoluble polysaccharides starch in plant cells and glycogen in animal cells. These substances are similar in chemical structure, both being formed from chains of alpha glucose molecules.
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EDEXCEL
Continued
CH2OH C H C O OH C H H C OH H O H C O H C OH C H H C OH CH2OH C H O H C O H C OH C H H C OH CH2OH C H O H C O H C OH C H CH2OH C H
Continued
O H C H C OH O
H C H O
C H H O H O H C H H H C O H C O H O H C O O H C H
C O H
CH
Hydrogen bonds between CH2OH groups which are all on one side pull and twist the chain to form a helix
CH
2
CH
H C H
C H H O H O H C H H H C O O H C H C O H C O O H C H
C O H
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EDEXCEL
Continued
Notice how the CH2OH groups alternate from side to side of the chain (the bonds indicated by a thick line are nearer)
Continued
H C H CH
2
H C OH H C OH C O CH
2
H C O
OH
H C H
OH
C H C H C H OH 2 CH C H C H OH C O H O H C H C OH C O H OH C CH OH 2 O OH H C H C O H OH C H
C OH
Arrangement of molecules in microfibril Chains of 1-4 linked glucose units lie parallel forming a microfibril
Continued
Continued
Hydrogen bonds form between alternating CH2OH units bind molecules together side by side into microfibrils.
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LIPIDS
Lipids are a family of molecules which include fats, oils, waxes, phospholipids and steroids. Although they vary in chemical structure they share two important characteristics: they are energy rich substances, and they are insoluble in water.
CH 2 OH H C OH
CH2 CH2
CH2 CH
CH
CH 2 OH HOOC CH2
3
Ester bond
CH2 H C OOC CH2 CH2 CH2 CH CH
3 3 3
OOC
CH2 CH2
CH2
CH2
CH
H2O
Water
Model of a triglyceride
Glycerol
3 fatty acids
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EDEXCEL
OOC CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2
OOC CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2 CH 2
CH 2 H C C H CH 2 C CH 2 C CH 2 C H
H 2C
Stearate
Oleate M on o - u n s a t u r a t e d
Linolenate Po ly - u n s a t u r a t e d
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EDEXCEL
Phosphate group
Model of a triglyceride
Phosphate group bonds with glycerol displacing one fatty acid chain
Model of a phospholipid
Glycerol
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EDEXCEL
water hydrophilic heads point outwards hydrophobic tails point inwards (mutual attraction - water excluded)
water N CHECKPOINT SUMMARY N Lipids include fats, oils, waxes, phospholipids and steroids. Cholesterol is another important lipid component of cell membranes although it is very different in chemical structure to the lipids so far described. It has a ring structure and belongs to a group called steroids which include the sex hormones testosterone and oestrogen. Cholesterol molecules are strongly hydrophobic and they take refuge between the tails of phospholipids in membranes. Their presence in the bilayer has two effects. It slows down the lateral movement of individual phospholipid molecules, making the bilayer more stable, and it prevents the movement of certain substances through the bilayer, ensuring that membrane transport occurs through the correct (protein) channels. N Triglycerides are composed of three (tri) fatty acids combined by condensation reactions to form ester bonds with glycerol. N Fatty acids have long hydrocarbon chains and a carboxyl group (COOH). N Saturated fatty acids (and hence saturated fats) have no double bonds in the hydrocarbon chain which is saturated with hydrogen. N Unsaturated fatty acids have one double bond. N Polyunsaturated fatty acids have two or more double bonds. N Fats (triglycerides) are energy rich storage products in plants and animals. N Lipids provide waterproofing in plant cuticles and animals e.g. insect cuticles. provide mechanical protection and insulation as subcutaneous fat in mammals, and bouyancy in aquatic mammals. N Phospholipids are formed from triglycerides by the replacement of one fatty acid by a phosphate group. N Phospholipids form the structural basis of biological membranes by forming a bilayer. N The bilayer is formed with their hydrophobic poles adjacent and their hydrophilic poles in contact with the aqueous phase.
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PROTEINS
Proteins are polymers made up of amino acids, joined together in long chains, which may be folded and twisted in various ways. There are as many as 100 000 different kinds of protein molecule in human cells. This variety of structure is made possible by the fact that the twenty different types of amino acids commonly found in proteins can be arranged in any order in chains up to 2000 units long.
Amino Acid H N H R 1 C H C OH H O H
Amino Acid R 2 N C H C OH O
H N H
R C H
O C
H N
R C H C
OH
OH
H Water
H2O
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Primary structure
The amino acid sequence is the starting point or primary structure of proteins. The final shape of proteins depends upon additional bonds which form between the -NH, -C=O, and -R groups which stick out of the sides of the polypeptide chain.
Secondary structure
The secondary structure of proteins is determined by hydrogen bonds between adjacent -NH and -C=O groups. Two very different formations are possible, the alpha helix and beta sheet. Both of these secondary structures may occur in the same protein Secondary structure of proteins In an alpha helix hydrogen bonds pull molecule chain into a spiral structure
In a beta sheet hydrogen bonds hold and align molecule chains side by side. Angle of bonds in each chain are as a consequence perfectly aligned forming pleats.
Leu Glu Tyr Leu Leu 15 Gln 15 Ala Tyr Glu Leu Val Ser Leu S Cys His 10 Val 10 Ser Ser Gly Ala S Cys S Leu S Cys Gln 5 Glu Val Ile Gly His 5 Gln Asn Val Phe Cys
Tertiary structure
The tertiary (third level) structure of proteins is the complex 3D folding determined by bonds which form between R groups. There are three possible types depending upon the chemical properties of the different R groups. R groups may be acid, basic, polar or non polar.
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EDEXCEL
Quaternary structure
The quaternary (fourth level) structure of proteins arises from the combination of separate polypeptide chains to form a larger complex, e.g. haemoglobin, which is composed of four polypeptide chains with iron containing haem units. Primary structure Amino acids join to form a polypeptide chain
R R R
Tertiary structure Helix folds to form compact globular unit around Haem group haem group
side chains
R
R R R R R R
R
R
protein chain Secondary structure Polypeptide chain folds in upon itself to form a helix Quaternary structure Several polypeptide chain units come together held by disulphide bridges to form a functional protein Haemoglobin molecule has four subunits
haem group
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Globular proteins
Globular proteins have a pronounced tertiary structure with many folds and twists, making them very susceptible to temperature and pH changes. Non polar groups tend to be repelled by water (hydrophobic) and tuck inside the molecule whilst the polar groups are attracted to water (hydrophilic) and they face outwards forming hydrogen bonds with water molecules. Globular proteins therefore tend to be soluble. Globular proteins are involved in metabolic activities e.g. enzymes, hormones, antibodies, and haemoglobin. Insulin is made up of two peptide chains, one 21 amino acid units long, the other 30 units long, joined together by disulphide bridges. It is produced in the pancreas cells as a single longer chain (a precursor molecule) which is chopped into the two smaller pieces by a hydrolysing enzyme in a process called activation before being secreted into the bloodstream.
Leu Ser Cys Val Tyr Gln Leu Gln Asn Tyr Cys Asn
COOH
disulphide bond
Val Ser Ala Leu Tyr Leu Ala
Ile
Val
Glu
Gln
Cys
Cys
Phe
Val
Asn
Gin
His
Leu
Cys
Gly
Ser
His
Leu
Val
Gln
B chain of 30 amino acids Insulin is a small protein made up of 51 amino acids arranged as two polypeptide chains linked together by disulphide bonds
COOH
Fibrous proteins
In fibrous proteins the peptide chains are extended and inter-twined to form long thread like molecules. They do not dissolve in water and are relatively unaffected by changes in pH or temperature (they are not easily denatured). Fibrous proteins are mainly structural in function, giving support to tissues e.g. keratin in hair and skin, and collagen. Collagen
polypeptide chains
hydrogen bonds
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EDEXCEL
N Generally all these tests are qualitative, i.e the results show whether a substance is present or not. N They are not generally quantitative, i.e. the results do not give an accurate measure of how much of the substance is present. N The Benedicts test for reducing sugars can be semi-quantitative in so much as the colour and amount of the precipitate found in a positive test is roughly proportional to the amount of reducing sugar present. Positive results can be compared to results from solutions of known concentration of reducing sugar. N The same considerations apply to the iodine in potassium iodide test for starch. The colour for a positive test grading from blue-black to pale brown with decreasing amounts of starch present. N The test for lipids is physical rather than chemical, depending on the observation of the formation of an emulsion. N The biuret test is not a simple test for proteins but is used as such by Biologists N These tests are commonly referred to as Food tests as traditionally they are used on samples of food.
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C G
GC
T A
G C
GC
C G
C G
GC
T A
G C
GC
C G
C G
GC
P
deoxy -ribose sugar
Adenine
P
deoxy -ribose sugar
Cytosine
T
T A
G C
P
deoxy -ribose sugar
Guanine
P
deoxy -ribose sugar
Thymine
GC
C G
Continued
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EDEXCEL
Adenine
P
ribose sugar
P Guanine P
ribose sugar
P
ribose sugar
Cytosine
P
ribose sugar
URACIL
Replication of DNA
In the process of DNA replication, one double stranded DNA helix gives rise to two new DNA double stranded helices (plural of helix). To achieve this the two strands of a DNA helix unwind and separate, and each acts as a pattern (template) for the formation of another new strand. Each of the new daughter DNA molecules has one of the original strands and a new strand. For this reason, the process of replication is said to be semi-conservative, half of the original molecule is conserved in each of the two new DNA molecules. The process requires a supply of the four different types of nucleotides, energy in the form of ATP, and an enzyme called DNA polymerase. DNA polymerase is required to catalyse the condensation reactions by which free nucleotides combine to form a copy of the template strand.
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Experimental evidence
for the semi-conservative mechanism of DNA replication includes experiments in which the mass of the DNA content of Escherichia coli (a bacterium), grown on different nutrient media was determined and compared. One batch of microorganisms was cultured on a medium containing a heavy isotope of nitrogen (15N), the DNA was extracted and compared with that of organisms cultured on a medium containing normal light nitrogen (14N). The E.coli cells grown on heavy nitrogen were then transferred to a new medium containing only light nitrogen and allowed to divide once to produce a new generation. The DNA of these daughter cells was found to be halfway between the heavy and light values, indicating that half the DNA was old and half was new (semi-conservative replication).
GC
GC T A
T A
A T
G C
A
G C AT GC C G T
AT
GC C G T A
G C AT GC C G A A
G
G C
AT
GC
C G
A T
A
G
T
C
T
G C
nucleotides
C
A
G
T
C
C
T C
A G
C G
AT
GC T A T A
G C AT GC C G
C G
AT
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N CHECKPOINT SUMMARY N DNA and RNA are long chain polynucleotide molecules with repeating sub-units of mononucleotides combined as a result of condensation reactions. N Mononucleotides consist of a 5 carbon sugar, a phosphate, and an organic base. N In DNA the sugar is deoxyribose and the organic base can be one of adenine, thymine, cytosine and guanine. N In RNA the sugar is ribose and the organic base can be one of adenine, uracil, cytosine and guanine. N RNA is a single stranded helix with base pairs of adenine-uracil and cytosine-guanine. N There are three types of RNA - messenger, transfer and ribosomal. N The DNA molecule is a double stranded helix with the two strands held together by hydrogen bonds between complementary base pairs adenine-thymine and cytosineguanine. N DNA carries out semi-conservative replication in which each strand of the original molecule acts as a template for the construction of a new one, so that each new double stranded molecule of DNA consists of one original strand and a new complementary strand. N The synthesis of new strands of DNA is catalysed by enzymes, including DNA polymerase. N A gene is a length of DNA which carries the genetic information for the synthesis of a single polypeptide chain. The gene determines the primary structure of the polypeptide, that is the sequence of amino acids.
Protein Synthesis
Protein synthesis involves all three of the RNA types described above working in combination, and is achieved in two stages. As the DNA cannot leave the nucleus, the code has to be read and copied (transcribed) into mRNA, in a process called transcription. The mRNA moves out of the nucleus and associates with the ribosomes, where the code (now embedded in the mRNA) is used in the synthesis of a polypeptide in the process of translation. Transcription begins as an enzyme, RNA polymerase, attaches to the Start codon of a gene. The DNA base sequence of this Start codon is always TAC. As RNA polymerase attaches to the DNA, the hydrogen bonds binding the two strands of the DNA double helix break apart to expose the sequence of triplet base codons on both strands. The enzyme then travels rapidly down the length of the gene like a zip fastener unzipping the DNA. As it does so, a molecule of mRNA is formed as a copy of one of the DNA strands. Only one of the two DNA strands is copied into mRNA, called the template strand. The mRNA is therefore an exact replica (save that U is substituted for T) of the other strand, consequently referred to as the copy strand. When the enzyme reaches the Stop codon of the gene, transcription ends, the enzyme is free to start the process again, and mRNA is released out through a pore in the nuclear membrane to the ribosomes where translation occurs. A complicating feature of the process of transcription in eukaryotic cells (cells with a nucleus) is that the length of DNA (the gene) to be copied into mRNA, has sections of junk code which do not code for any of the required amino acids in a polypeptide chain. The junk sequences are called introns and the parts to be transcribed and translated are called exons. The whole length is transcribed into mRNA, but before it is released from the nucleus, the introns are cut out with the assistance of enzymes, leaving a single, unpolluted, strand.
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GC T A
GC T A
GC T A
GC T A
G C
G C
template strand
G
G C
G C
GC C G
copy strand
C
G C
G
GC C G
GC C G
C C
C G
C G
C G
C
GC T A
G C
GC
G
GC T A
T T
G
A U UA
G C
T A
U
G
U
G
G C
G C
G C
GC C G
G C
G C
C
G
GC C G
C G
C C
C
C
C G
C G
GC T A
C
T
G
GC T A
G C
DNA uncoils to allow RNA polymerase move down template strand of double helix
C G
C
G C
GC
G
T T
G
A U UA
G C
T A
G C
G C
G
GC C G
G
GC C G
G C
GC C G
C G
C G
C G
U
G
C G
C G
G
GC T A
GC T A
GC T A
GC T A
C C
A
G
G C
G C
G C
G C
GC C G
GC C G
GC C G
GC C G
Translation occurs at ribosomes which are made up of two subunits, one larger than the other, which come together only for the purpose of translating a length of mRNA. The mRNA binds to the small sub-unit at its Start codon (AUG). It is then joined by the large sub-unit along with a molecule of tRNA which has the anti-codon UAC and which carries the amino acid methionine. As the three different RNA types come together, the interface between the small and large sub-unit of the ribosome forms two binding sites allowing two triplet codons be lined up side by side. The process of translation can then proceed.
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EDEXCEL
Amino acids in cytoplasm tRNA collecting specific amino acid polypeptide chain forming (amino acids linked by peptide bonds)
IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII
Strand of messenger RNA with sequence of triplet codons ribosome sub units Direction of ribosome movement
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EDEXCEL
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1.2 Enzymes
Content
M M M M M M M The structure of enzymes as globular proteins, and the concept of the active site and specificity Enzymes as catalysts which reduce activation energy The effects of temperature, pH, substrate and enzyme concentrations on enzyme activity Active site-directed and non-active site-directed inhibition of enzyme action The commercial uses of enzymes as illustrated by pectinases in food modification and proteases in biological detergents The advantages of the immobilisation of commercial enzymes, as illustrated by lactase (Practical work to include experiments to investigate the effects of temperature, pH and enzyme concentration on enzyme activity using suitable enzymes, illustrations of enzyme immobilisation using lactase, the use of pectinase in the production of fruit juice)
Introduction
Most students of science can name an enzyme. Usually it is a digestive enzyme like amylase or pepsin, but enzymes are not just concerned with breakdown reactions like digestion, they can also help build things up. In fact, every chemical reaction in every living cell is made possible by an enzyme. Several thousand enzymes have been isolated and studied. Enzymes are protein molecules. Compared to many other molecules they are relatively large (macromolecules) of the globular type with a complex tertiary structure. What gives each enzyme its particular qualities and mode of action is the way in which its peptide chains are folded and twisted into specific shapes. As you will see in the following account, enzyme action depends upon shape recognition between enzymes and other reacting molecules called substrates.
substrate molecule
enzyme-substrate complex
product molecules
active site
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Enzymes as catalysts
Enzymes are biological catalysts. A catalyst is a substance which speeds up a reaction without being changed itself in the process. As they are not used up or changed, enzymes can be used repeatedly; therefore they are effective in relatively small amounts. Usually enzyme molecules are much larger than the reacting molecules (substrates). In an enzyme-catalysed reaction, the substrate(s) become attached to a particular region on the enzyme called the active site which has a specific shape and structure matching that of the substrate(s), forming the enzyme - substrate complex. This association is temporary and lasts only long enough to allow the substrate molecules to interact to form the products. Once the products are formed, they are released from the active site and the enzyme is free to repeat the process. The formation of the enzyme-substrate complex lowers the activation energy which is the energy needed to start a reaction. In the laboratory, it is common for reacting substances (substrates) to be heated in order to make the reaction occur more quickly. The heat energy causes the molecules to move about more rapidly (i.e. it gives them more kinetic energy) so that they collide more frequently, forming the product. In other words heat is used to overcome the activation energy. Living cells operate at a constant, relatively low temperature so therefore they rely on enzyme catalysts to overcome the activation energy.
Progress of reaction The active site matches the substrate, so different shaped substrate molecules require different shaped active sites. Most biological reactions therefore involve different specific enzymes. This is possible because proteins which make up enzymes can be made in an infinite variety of shapes as a result of the nature and sequence of the amino acids and their R groups. This model of enzyme action is referred to as the lock and key model, but it is known that the shape of the active site may change as the substrate makes contact with it, adjusting to make a close fit, rather like a soft glove around a hand, a mode of action called induced fit.
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The effects of temperature, pH, substrate and enzyme concentration on enzyme activity
pH is a measure of H+ ion concentration, which is a measure of acidity and alkalinity. A pH of 7 is neutral, less than 7 is acid, and more than 7 is alkaline. Small changes in pH can affect the association process between enzyme and substrate which happens at the active site. The attraction between substrate and enzyme is often the result of small electric charges at the active site, and these are disrupted by changes in H+ ion concentration. Extremes of pH, i.e. very acid or alkaline conditions, cause permanent denaturation. Enzymes have an optimum pH for efficient functioning. Usually this is around pH7, the normal pH of cells. Notable exceptions are the enzyme pepsin, which is found in the stomach and works best in highly acidic conditions in the range pH 1-2, and the enzyme trypsin which is found in the duodenum and has an optimum pH of 9. Temperature affects the rate of all chemical reactions. As the temperature increases, so does the kinetic energy of the reacting molecules. More enzyme/substrate complexes are formed as the reactants collide more frequently, and the reaction rate rises exponentially, doubling for every 10oC rise in temperature. However, enzymes, like all proteins, suffer irreversible alterations in molecular shape above certain temperatures as a result of the breaking of chemical bonds within the molecule, so that in enzyme-catalysed reactions, there is an optimum temperature above which the reaction rate drops sharply. For an enzyme, any change in the shape of the active site means a loss of function, the enzyme is said to be denatured. For most enzymes, the optimum temperature is around 40oC, but there are exceptions. For example, some bacteria living in hot springs have enzymes which function at temperatures above 85oC, whilst the ice fish of the Antarctic possess enzymes which operate at -2oC. Enzyme Concentration exerts a direct effect on the rate of the reaction as long as there is a plentiful supply of substrate. Any increase in the number of enzyme molecules will result in a proportional increase in the number of enzyme-substrate complexes and therefore an increase in the rate of reaction. Substrate concentration has a similar effect. At low substrate concentrations, not all the active sites of the enzyme molecules will be occupied, so the rate of the reaction depends upon the concentration of substrate alone. As the concentration of substrate increases, so all of the available active sites will become filled. The upper limit is determined by the amount of enzyme molecules available.
Acid
Neutral
Alkali pH
Substrate concentration
Temperature
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Enzyme Inhibitors
Enzyme inhibitors are substances which interfere with the active site of the enzyme. Active site-directed inhibitors block the actual active site directly. Non-active site-directed inhibitors attach a part of the enzyme away from the active site, but alter the enzymes molecular shape so that the enzyme-substrate complex cannot be formed. Competitive inhibitors are active site-directed substances which have a molecular structure resembling that of the substrate. They attach themselves to the active sites forming inhibitor/enzyme complexes and cause the reaction to slow down or stop altogether. The effect of competitive inhibitors depends upon the relative concentrations of the substrate and inhibitor, and also the relative stability of the enzyme/substrate and inhibitor/enzyme complexes. This type of inhibition is seen in the action of a group of antibiotics called sulphonamides, which compete for the active site of a key bacterial enzyme involved in synthesising an essential growth factor, not found in the cells of the host. Non-competitive inhibitors are non-active site-directed and are substances which bind onto the enzyme at a place other than the active site called an allosteric site, causing the enzyme to change shape sufficiently to stop enzyme-substrate complexes being formed. Non-competitive inhibitors are not similar to the substrate molecules and are not affected by the substrate concentration. The ions of some heavy metals such as arsenic and cyanide may bind onto allosteric sites and act as poisons, stopping important enzyme controlled reactions. (Some enzyme molecules possess an allosteric site which must be occupied by an activator substance to give the enzyme its correct working shape. Without the activator, the enzyme will not work.) Inhibitors and activators are important in regulating the activity of enzymes in the complex metabolic pathways of the body.
enzyme
inhibitor occupies the active site preventing the formation of enzyme-substrate complexes
Non-active site-directed
inhibitor-enzyme complex alters the shape of the active site preventing substrate binding inhibitor attaches to an allosteric site on the enzyme allosteric site
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Absorbtion
Encapsulation
- - + + +- ++ - - + + + + -
Entrapment
Covalent bonding
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Eukaryotic cells
M M M The organisation of eukaryotic cells as illustrated by a leaf palisade cell and a liver cell. Light and electron microscopy compared (magnification and resolution) The structure and roles of the nucleus, nucleolus, rough and smooth endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, lysosomes, chloroplasts, mitochondria, ribosomes, centrioles and microtubules, the cellulose cell wall. The structure, properties and roles of the cell surface (plasma) membrane.
M M
Aggregations of cells
M Tissues as aggregations of cells of common origin, structure and function, as illustrated by the tissues of a mesophytic leaf.
Introduction
All living organisms are composed of cells. It is calculated that an average human adult is made up of around 1014 cells, each coordinated with the others to form functional tissues, organs and systems. At the other extreme, some organisms are composed of a single cell; Amoeba, bacteria and yeast are examples of single celled organisms. Cells are grouped into two major types, prokaryotic and eukaryotic, the most important distinction between them being the presence or absence of a nucleus (karyon in Greek means nucleus, eu means true, and pro means before). Eukaryotic cells are so named because they have a true nucleus and prokaryotic cells are built on an earlier design without a true nucleus.
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PROKARYOTIC CELLS
Prokaryotes are all single celled organisms and they are classified in a separate kingdom called Kingdom Prokaryotae, and include the bacteria. Prokaryotic cells are much smaller than eukaryotic cells, ranging from 1-10 m in size (eukaryotic cells range from 10-100 m). Although bacteria are all constructed according to the same basic pattern, they are a very diverse group with individual types capable of inhabiting parts of the earth as distinct from each other as hot sulphurous springs to permafrost, some are photosynthetic, others (decomposers) live off the dead remains of other organisms, assisting in the breakdown, decay and recycling of essential nutrients. A few have gained notoriety as disease agents (pathogens) due to their parasitic life style e.g. Mycobacterium tuberculosis (TB), Salmonella enteriditis (food poisoning). Not all bacteria are able to move, but some possess flagella, capable of propelling the organism through water. The cell wall is not made of cellulose, but is formed from a mixture of polysaccharides and amino acids called murein. Many bacteria which cause disease (pathogenic bacteria) have a slime capsule as their outermost layer which helps in protection against the body defences of the infected organism. Bacteria generally divide and reproduce themselves much quicker than eukaryotes. Each bacterium divides into two (binary fission) to give two new daughter cells. Growth of bacterial populations can show a doubling every 20 minutes or so in ideal conditions.
cytoplasm
mesosomes infoldings of membrane to which enzymes attach plasmid DNA cell wall made of murein cell membrane
flagellum
Scale 1 m
Escherichia coli (E. coli) is a bacterium common in the gut of humans and other animals, it can occasionally however cause disease. E. coli has flagellae all over its surface. Like other Prokaryotic cells, it does not possess organelles (organelles are membrane bound structures found in Eukaryotic cells, e.g. nucleus, mitochondria, chloroplasts.) Its outer membrane folds inwards, however, to form special areas (mesosomes) for the attachment of enzymes. The DNA is not enclosed by a nuclear membrane but exists as a single main coil, E
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X 55000
cell wall
mesosome
with smaller loops of DNA (plasmids) containing just a few genes, scattered in the cytoplasm. Food energy reserves are stored in glycogen granules and fat droplets. Due to their small size, the detail described above can only be seen under the electron microscope. Under the typical laboratory light microscope bacteria will be seen as tiny darkly staining specks, even at the highest magnification.
N CHECKPOINT SUMMARY N Prokaryotic cells (bacteria) lack a true nucleus and membrane bound organelles N Escherichia coli (E. coli) is a bacterium found in the large intestine of animals, normally it is harmless but can cause disease under certain circumstances; new mutations can be fatal. N The DNA is located in a central strand (bacterial chromosome), and as circular plasmids in the rest of the cytoplasm
EUKARYOTIC CELLS
Eukaryotic cells (all cells other than the prokaryotic cells) do possess a membrane bound nucleus, within which is to be found DNA and histone proteins which form into chromosomes just before nuclear and cell division. Eukaryotic cells also possess membrane bound organelles; e.g. mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, lysosomes, and if photosynthetic - chloroplastids. The occurrence and distribution of these organelles depends upon the type of eukaryotic cell that is under consideration. Like prokaryotic cells they all possess ribosomes. The description of a typical eukaryotic cell is not possible, due to the wide range of structure and function. However, the two groups (plant and animal cells) can be illustrated by reference to plant leaf palisade cells and animal (mammalian) liver cells.
N The plasmids can be exchange between bacteria, a fact exploited by genetic engineering N The cell wall is not cellulose as in plant cells, but is formed from a mixture of polysaccharides and amino acids called murein N The cell surface (plasma) membrane is partially permeable and controls the transport of substances into and out of the cell N The cell wall provides protection and support, preventing bursting (lysis) of the cell in more dilute solutions N Many disease causing (pathogenic) bacteria have a slime capsule covering the cell wall which helps in protection against the body defences of the infected organism N Respiration is located in mesosomes which are infoldings of the cell surface membrane, sharing the principle of increased surface area of membranes with true mitochondria N Ribosomes are present in both prokaryotes and eukaryotes N Glycogen granules and lipid droplets act as energy stores N Flagella provide bacteria with mobility.
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epidermis
Position of sinusoid ( blood space) Cytoplasm variable (depending on the level of glycogen and other molecules present)
chloroplasts pushed against cell wall cellulose cell wall chloroplasts (surface veiw) cytoplasm nucleus
liver cells
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Resolution
Resolution or resolving power can be defined as the ability of a system (e.g. microscope, the eye) to distinguish (resolve) detail in an object. The amount of detail of a specimen that can be seen is determined by the resolving power of the microscope system being used. In the case of looking at material under the light microscope, the resolving power depends upon the light being able to distinguish this detail, which is determined by the wavelength of light. To resolve the detail, light must be reflected back from the structures. Any structures less than 0.2 micrometres (m), that is 200 nanometres (nm) in diameter cannot be distinguished by light, nor can two structures closer than 0.2m be seen as separate. (1 m = one thousandth of a millimetre, 1nm = one millionth of a millimetre)
Measurement under a light microscopeusing an eyepiece graticule and slide (stage) micrometer
9 10
Eyepiece scale as seen when held up to the light away from the microscope.
slide micrometer scale Scale in mm etched upon a microscope slide or a printed acetate sheet (slide micrometer)
Accurate measurements can be achieved using the two scales in combination through the lenses of the microscope.
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N CHECKPOINT SUMMARY N If the specimen can be observed with the naked eye without the need for magnification the calculation of the linear magnification of any drawing of it is straightforward - being the number of times any linear dimension of the drawing is greater than that of the specimen N Magnifications of images of slides of biological material are given in terms of the magnification of the microscope image, that is by multiplying the power of the two lenses.e.g. 10 x 10 = 100 N However reproductions of the image as seen down a microscope introduce another layer of magnification which is often overlooked N To calculate the linear magnification of drawings of microscope images of specimens it is necessary to know how many times the drawing is larger than the actual specimen N The actual size of the specimen is measured with an eye piece graticule and stage micrometer N Resolution is the ability to see detail N The higher the resolution the more of the detail present can be seen N Increasing magnification only reveals extra detail if the detail can be resolved N Resolving power of light microscope limited by the wavelength of light N Put simply some detail is so small that it cannot be hit by light, and therefore cannot be seen N Endless magnification of the image produced by a light microscope yields no extra information N Wavelengths of electron beams are much shorter than that of light and give the electron microscope much greater resolving power than the light microscope N Therefore extra magnification up to x250 000 yields an equivalent amount of detail.
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The principal features and organelles of a eukaryotic cell as seen by the electron microscope
The electron microscope reveals a wealth of detail of cell structure. EM part of an animal cell (liver)
mitochondria
nucleus
crista of mitochondrion
chromatin
nuclear envelope
glycogen granules
Nucleus
Even with the optical microscope, the nucleus is clearly visible, having an average diameter in animal cells (liver) of about 5 m, and in plant cells (mesophyll) of about 15 m. The nucleus stands out because of the material chromatin, a mixture of DNA and protein, which takes up the stains used in slide preparations. Chromatin is the material of which the chromosomes are made. The nucleus is surrounded by a double membrane, the nuclear envelope which
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lipid
cell membrane
has the same structure as, and is continuous with, the other membrane systems of the cell. Three or four thousand large pores (up to 100nm diameter) perforate the nuclear envelope but the passage of materials in and out is controlled by plugs of protein and RNA which appear to fill the pores. Genes in the nuclear chromosomes direct all the cells activities and determine its life span and reproductive cycle. The nucleus is rightly called the command centre, but it does not contain all of the genetic material of the cell. Mitochondria and chloroplasts also contain DNA and have genes of their own.
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Nucleolus
This is an even more darkly stained region in the nucleus, which consists of a mass of RNA, used in the manufacture of ribosomes. Ribosomes are relatively small structures, about 20 nm in diameter, which occur in large numbers, often several thousand per cell either bound to internal cell membranes or free in the cytoplasm. They are built in two sections called sub-units, made of approximately equal quantities of RNA and protein. They act as the sites of assembly for new proteins, manufactured both for export and for internal use.
Golgi apparatus
This is more clearly seen in animal cells and is a region of stacked smooth ER specialised for the purpose of collecting, processing and redirecting proteins and fats made in the rough ER. Materials are transported between the ER, the Golgi apparatus, and the plasma membrane, sealed in membrane sacs called vesicles which bud off from one membrane, and then fuse with another. Substances are taken in (endocytosis) and expelled (exocytosis) by the plasma membrane in this way. For example, digestive enzymes produced by cells of the pancreas are secreted by exocytosis into the pancreatic duct.
secretory vesicles
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Lysosomes
Some of the vesicles produced by the Golgi apparatus are specialised for particular functions. Animal cells, have lysosomes which contain a cocktail of digesting enzymes. They break down and dispose of unwanted materials or damaged structures in the cell, expelling waste debris by exocytosis, and recycling reusable molecules within the cell. They also meet and fuse with vesicles carrying imported food substances, or immobilised bacteria, from the cell surface, and digest the contents. It is clear from this that the membranes surrounding lysosomes must act as impermeable barriers to the passage of these digestive enzymes. If the contents of a lysosome spilled out into the cytoplasm, for example, the digestive enzymes would digest the cell itself. This process (autodigestion) occurs after the death of a cell and plays an important part in its removal.
Chloroplast
stroma
Chloroplasts
contain the green pigment chlorophyll which absorbs light for photosynthesis. In photosynthesis light energy is used in the synthesis of organic compounds (e.g. glucose) from carbon dioxide and water. Chloroplasts, like mitochondria, have a double membrane, but there is also a third membrane system inside the chloroplast called the thylakoid membrane system. It is on this that the chlorophyll molecules and enzymes of the light dependent stages are located. The thylakoid membrane system is arranged in the form of stacked discs (grana) joined by connecting membranes (lamellae). The internal space between the membranes is filled with a fluid (stroma) containing enzymes for making organic compounds, e.g. glucose and starch.
granum
Mitochondria
Mitochondria (singular = mitochondrion) carry out aerobic respiration, which transfers energy from energy rich substances such as glucose, into the energy rich substance ATP. High energy consuming tissues like those in the muscles or brain may contain up to a thousand mitochondria in a single cell. Mitochondria are rodlike structures which can vary greatly in length and shape, but are never greater than 1m in diameter. There is an outer and an inner membrane. The area of the inner membrane is increased by infoldings of the membrane (cristae), and it is encrusted on its inner surface with spherical bodies which contain the enzymes for making ATP. The more active the cell, the more cristae and the more enzymes there are, the more the mitochondria increase in size, and increase in number by dividing (they contain their own mitochondrial DNA). The fluid matrix within the inner membrane contains the enzymes responsible for the final stages of the aerobic oxidation of glucose to carbon dioxide and water. Mitochondrion
matrix
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The structure, properties and roles of the cell surface (plasma) membrane
The plasma (cell surface) membrane controls the entry and exit of all materials into and out of all cells. The electron microscope does not reveal any details of its structure, which is modelled on evidence of biochemical investigations. It is fatty in nature and contains proteins and other substances. It is partially permeable, being more permeable to water, than to dissolved solutes which pass through at different rates depending on a complex of factors (see below). In cells which are specialised for the exchange of materials across the plasma membrane e.g. cells lining the small intestine and parts of the kidney tubules, the surface area may be dramatically increased by extensions known as microvilli. The cell surface membrane and the membranes which enclose the cell organelles and make up the extensive system of interrelated channels and vesicles within the cell share the same structure. It is a structure which is so flexible that it can break and reform easily yet it is capable of performing complex functions, acting as a barrier, container, transport regulator and as a site of recognition, distinguishing between a wide variety of substances. The fluid-mosaic model of membrane structure is based on a bilayer of phospholipid molecules, strengthened by cholesterol. Phospholipids adopt this bilayer structure automatically in fluid surroundings because the fatty acid tails of the molecules are water repelling (hydrophobic) whilst the phosphate/alcohol heads are water attracting (hydrophilic).
Fluid mosaic model of cell surface membrane Exterior branched chain of sugar molecules attached to lipid (glycolipid) extrinsic surface protein
branched chain of sugar molecules attached to protein (glycoprotein) hydrophilic phosphate heads
hydrophobic fatty acid tails transmembrane or integral membrane protein forming a hydrophilic channel or pore
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This gives a rough guide to the rate at which a substance such as oxygen, for example, diffuses from the air in an air sac (alveolus) in the lung into the blood in a lung capillary. In principle, the greater the surface area, the greater the concentration difference, and the thinner the separating layers, the greater the rate of diffusion. The most important factor affecting diffusion across cell membranes, however, is the chemical nature of the substance being transported. Diffusion across the bilayer depends principally upon the solubility of the substance in fat. The phospholipid bilayer is strongly hydrophobic. Polar (charged) molecules such as glucose, some amino acids, and inorganic ions pass through very slowly or not at all, whilst non-polar molecules such as calciferol (vitamin D) move across with ease. It is interesting to note that the first anaesthetics (chloroform and ether) were fat solvents that disrupted membrane structure and function especially in nerve cells.
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Diagram to show diffusion and facilitated diffusion Facilitated diffusion via carrier Diffusion
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Osmosis
Cell membranes are partially permeable, allowing the passage of substances at different rates. Generally cell membranes are more permeable to water than to many solutes. Water moves according to the same principles of diffusion, but it is not usual to refer to high and low concentrations of water - the term concentration being traditionally associated with any solutes dissolved in water in a solution. Therefore the preferred term is the chemical potential of water or water potential. Water always moves (diffuses) from a region of higher water potential to one of lower water potential. You could think of water potential as the tendency for water molecules to move i.e. diffuse. The higher the water potential the more easily the water molecules move, and the lower the water potential the less easily the water molecules move. At standard pressure and temperature, pure water has the highest water potential. If substances are dissolved in solution then the water potential is decreased because the solutes associate with water to a greater or lesser extent and reduce the ease with which the water molecules can move. Therefore any solution has a lower water potential than pure water, and a more concentrated solution has a lower water potential than a less concentrated solution. The water potential of a fluid can be described as the tendency of water to move into it from pure water. If the fluid is pure water, there is no movement, so the water potential of pure water is zero. The water potential of any solution is less than pure water and is therefore negative. The more negative the water potential the greater the tendency of water to move into that system. Where a solution is separated by a partially permeable membrane from pure water or a less concentrated solution, water will diffuse into the more concentrated solution until equilibrium is reached. The special case of the diffusion of water across a partially permeable membrane is known as osmosis.
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Active transport
Some transmembrane proteins act as active ion pumps, which use energy from ATP from respiration, to move ions against their concentration gradients. The ion channels can open and close like gates, and the activity of the ion pumps can be varied. In these ways, the membrane can be made selectively permeable to certain ions at certain times. As a result of the distribution of ions on either side of the membrane, transmembrane potentials are created, in which there is an overall difference in electric charge between the inside and the outside of the membrane. In normal conditions, the inside of the cell membrane is negatively charged relative to the outside, and this will assist the uptake of positively charged ions (cations) and oppose the uptake of negatively charged ions (anions). Thus the movement of ions across membranes is influenced by both electrical and chemical gradients i.e. electro-chemical gradients (these have particular importance for the function of nerve and muscle cells). Some of these transmembrane protein carriers carry two substances at once in a coupled mechanism. A common example is the sodium/potassium pump (Na+/K+ pump), in which the active pumping of sodium out of a cell is coupled with the pumping of potassium in, both against their diffusion gradients. For every two Diagram to show active transport (ion pumps) Outside the cell High glucose concentration Na+ Na+ Na+ carrier protein (coporter) Na+ Na+ Na+ Na+ Na+ Glucose enters down its diffusion gradient but at a faster rate Na+ Low glucose concentration Inside the cell Passive re-entry of Na+ associated with glucose Na+ Na+ Na+ carrier (uniporter) Na+ Low sodium ion concentration ADP + P ENERGY ATP Na+ Sodium ions actively pumped out using energy Na+ Na+
+ NaNa +
Na+ Na+
Na+
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Phagocyte moves towards bacterium bacterium phagocyte lysosome nucleus
Vacuole formed lysosomes collect around the vacuole fuse with it releasing digestive enzymes
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Aggregations of cells
The leaf palisade and liver cells illustrated at the beginning of this unit were chosen to represent typical plant and animal cell features. In life they are grouped with other similar cells performing the same functions into cell aggregations called tissues. The leaf and the liver are organs, made up of different tissues organised to carry out a particular function or related functions The leaf is an organ specialised for photosynthesis. It consists of various tissues: epidermal tissue of transparent cells with no chloroplasts which secrete a waxy layer (cuticle) and form a protective layer on the leaf surface; palisade tissue forms the photosynthetic layer; spongy mesophyll consists of large, loosely packed, thin walled cells with few chloroplasts, specialised to form a gas exchange surface; and the leaf veins are made up of vascular tissues, xylem and phloem, for the transport of water and organic solutes.
guard cell
stoma
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portal area
bile duct
The so called classic liver lobule is only seen in the pig liver, in other animals the structure of the liver is far from clear. The blood flows from the portal area, through the blood sinusoids, into the central vein. As it passes over the large surface area of the liver cells the various adjustments are made.
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Mitosis
M Mitosis: the behaviour of chromosomes during the stages of the mitotic cell cycle, the events of prophase, metaphase, anaphase and telophase The significance of mitosis in growth and replacement; the significance of daughter nuclei with chromosomes identical in number and type The nature of natural and artificial cloning in plants and animals
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Chromosomes structure
DNA is the carrier of the genetic code by which hereditary information is passed from generation to generation via the nuclei of the gametes and from cell to cell via the nuclei of the cells produced by division of the fertilized egg. In a non-dividing cell, the nucleus contains scattered chromatin material which is a mixture of DNA and an associated protein called histone. When the DNA is in this dispersed form seen in the non-dividing nucleus, it is genetically active, sending out information to the cytoplasm to control the complex of cell processes. When the cell is about to divide the chromatin concentrates or condenses into an inactive state to form the chromosomes. In this state the DNA is more resistant to damage during the processes of nuclear and cell division. Moreover, since it is in discrete bodies like the chromosomes, the division of the genetic material between the nuclei can be carefully controlled, reducing the danger of any being lost. It is only in this condensed form that chromosomes are ever visible in the cell and this only happens during cell division, so the familiar ribbon like image of a chromosome is not representative of its active state. Chromosomes consist of a centromere and two arms, the relative lengths of which depend on the position of the centromere. As a result of the replication of DNA before their appearance, chromosomes appear as double structures known as sister chromatids. A chromatid is in effect a new chromosome, but while they remain attached by a single centromere, they are referred to as sister chromatids. The nucleus of each cell of a diploid organism contains two sets of chromosomes; one maternal from the female gamete and one paternal from the male gamete. As a result, each chromosome has a partner in the other set which carries genes for the same characteristics. Two such chromosomes are said to form a homologous pair. The nucleus of the palisade cell and that of the liver cell, described in 1.3 are diploid. The cells were produced by divisions of a parent cell by the process of mitosis, described below, in which the DNA is copied exactly (replicated). DNA replication is described in Unit 1.1 and you will find it helpful, before starting this module to read through the section on DNA.
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histone proteins
Each human chromosome contains approximately 48mm of DNA and is about 6m long. A lot of organisation is required to pack the quantity of DNA into the length of chromosome.
chromatid
kinetochore microtubules
centromere
DNA double helix molecule pair of chromatids forming one chromosome 1 Homologous chromosomes pair together, prophase 1 of meiosis 2 chromatids centromere 2 3 4
When cells are first formed by the process of division they all look much alike. At a very early stage, however, they start to behave differently as different genes are switched on and off with the result that groups of cells (tissues) become specialised for a particular function. The process of cell specialisation is called differentiation. The leaf palisade cell and liver cell described above are produced by nuclear division (mitosis) and cell division followed by differentiation.
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Mitosis
Mitosis is the process by which the genetic material of a dividing cell, contained within the DNA of chromosomes, is copied into two new genetically identical daughter cells. Mitosis occurs in the cell division seen in growth, repair, the replacement of cells which have a limited life span like our red blood cells and skin cells, and in asexual reproduction in many plants and lower animals.
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1 Prophase Cell is rounded MTOCs migrate to opposite poles nuclear membrane disintegrates spindle formed by MTOCs spindle forming
2 Metaphase Chromosomes held on equator of cell under tension. MTOCs at opposite poles cell equator kinetochores attach chromosomes (chromatids) to spindle
3 Anaphase Chromatids separate and move towards opposite poles cell equator spindle microtubule
4 Telophase Chromosomes form beginnings of new nuclei at opposite poles, nuclear envelope reforms spindle microtubule
Cytokinesis in plant cells cell plate forms from coalesced vesicles containing cell wall materials new nuclear membrane chromosomes begin to unravel remains of spindle vesicles formed by Golgi apparatus (not shown)
new nuclear membrane chromosomes begin to unravel from their condensed state actin molecules contract, actin is a contractile molecule
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