Search for notes by fellow students, in your own course and all over the country.

Browse our notes for titles which look like what you need, you can preview any of the notes via a sample of the contents. After you're happy these are the notes you're after simply pop them into your shopping cart.

My Basket

You have nothing in your shopping cart yet.

Title: Lipids, Membranes, & the first Cells
Description: These notes are meant for a 1st year biology level student who is further along in most books. They will touch upon the different types of lipids, along with their structure and function throughout the body. They will then lead into how membranes work, their makeup, and how lipids are involved. It ends with the first types of cells discovered.

Document Preview

Extracts from the notes are below, to see the PDF you'll receive please use the links above


Bio 3: ch
...

 A major hydrocarbon component called a fatty acid
 A hydrocarbon chain bonded to a carboxyl functional group
 Isoprene: large fatty acid hydrocarbon chain
 Cis- double bonds that cause kinks in hydrocarbon chains
 Causes trans fats
 Saturated and Unsaturated Fart Acids:
o Saturated lipids-stays solid in room temperature (butter)
o Saturated lipids with hydrocarbon tails- a lipid that is very long hydrophobic saturated
hydrocarbon tails wax (bees wax)
o Unsaturated fats- stays liquid at room temperature due to the kinks in the chain (cis
unsaturated fats) (oils)
 3 types of lipids found in cells
o Lipid structure is characterized by physical properties
 Their insolubility in water
 instead of a shared chemical structure
o Insolubility is based on:
 The high proportion of nonpolar C-C and C-H bonds
 Relative to polar functional groups
o 3 most important types of lipids:
 Fats (triacylglycerols, triglycerides)
 Steroids
 Phospholipids
 Structure of fats:
o Composed of three fatty acids linked to glycerol
 Also called triaclyglycerols and triglycerides
o When fatty acids are polyunsaturated
 Form liquid triacylglycerols called oils
 The primary role of fats is energy storage
o Fats form when:













A dehydration reaction occurs between a hydroxyl group of glycerol & the carboxyl
group of a fatty acid
 The glycerol and fatty acid molecules become joined by an ester linkage
Structure of Steroids:
o A family of lipids
o Distinguished by a bulky, four ring structure
o Differ from one another by The functional groups or side groups attached to different carbons in those
hydrophobic rings
o Cholesterol- a hydrophilic hydroxyl group attached to the top ring and an isoprenoid "tail"
attached at the bottom
 It is an important component of plasma membranes in many organisms
Structure of Membrane Lipids:
o Membrane forming lipids contain A polar hydrophilic region
 And a nonpolar hydrophobic region
o Phospholipids are amphipathic
 The head region contains highly polar covalent bonds
 Has a glycerol, a phosphate, and a charged group
 The tail region is comprised of two nonpolar fatty acid or isoprene chains
o When placed in a solution these lipids form membranes
 The phospholipid heads interact with th water
 The tails do not
Phospholipids in Water:
o Do not dissolve in water
 Water cannot form the hydrogen bonds it needs
o Water molecules interact
 With the hydrophilic heads
 Not the hydrophobic tails
 This drives the hydrophobic tails together
o Upon contact with water phospholipids form either:
 Micelles- heads face water and tails face each other
 Phospholipid bilayers
 Form when:
 Two sheets of phospholipid molecules align
 Hydrophilic heads align
 The hydrophobic tails face each other
 Forms spontaneously
 No input of energy is needed
Artificial Membranes as an Experimental System:
o Hydrophilic heads on both sides of bilayers
 Remain in contact with aqueous solution
 Water is present both inside and outside
o Artificial Membrane bound vesicles like these are called liposomes
o Planer bilayers Lipid bilayers constructed along holes to see what will be allowed through them
Selective Permeability of Lipid Bilayers:
o Permeability of a structure is its tendency to allow a given substance inside

o
o

Highly selective
Phospholipid bilayers have selective permeability
 Small or nonpolar molecules move across quickly
 Charged or large polar substances cross slowly if at all
 Many factors affect Membrane permeability
o The number of double bonds between carbons in the hydrophilic tail
o Length of the tail
o Number of cholesterol molecules in membrane
o temperature
 Bond Saturation and Permeability
o Double bonds in chain cause a kink
 Prevents the close packing of hydrocarbon tails
 Reduces hydrophobic interactions
o Unsaturated hydrocarbon chains
 Have at least one double bond
 Membranes are much more permeable
 Other factors affecting permeability
o Hydrophobic interactions become stronger
 Tails increase in length
 Longer tails reduce permeability
o Decreasing temp
 Molecules move more slowly
 Decreases fluidity equals decreased permeability
Chapter 7 Cell Structure
 All cells have:
o Nucleic acids- store and transmit info
o Proteins- perform cells functions
o Carbohydrates- chemical energy, carbon, support, identity
o Plasma membrane- selectively permeable membrane
 According to morphology: two broad groups
o Prokaryotes- lack membrane bound organelles
o Eukaryotes- have a nucleus
 3 Domains according to phylogeny
o Bacteria- pro
o Archaea- pro
o Eukarya
 Prokaryotes:
o Lack nucleus
o Recently revealed more complex than originally thought
o Archaea structure is still poorly understood
o Bacteria cells greatly vary in size
o Most bacteria contain several structural similarities
 Plasma membrane
 Single chromosome
 Ribosomes that synthesize proteins
 Stiff cell wall
 Cytoplasm
o Most have one supercoiled chromosome








In the nucleoid region
Contains long strand of DNA
Supportive proteins
Coils very titely on itself
o Many also contain plasmids
 Small supercoiled DNA
 Help the cell to adapt
 Physically independent from the chromosome
o Other structures are contained within cytoplasm:
 Ribosomes- consist of RNA molecules and protein
 Used for protein synthesis
o Internal photosynthetic membranes
o Cytoskeleton
 Support the cell inside by a network of long, thing protein filaments
o All energetic reactions happen along a membrane in all cells
o Recently discovered that there are internal compartments within Bacteria
 Qualify as organelles " little organelles"
o Bacterial organelles perform an array of tasks
 Store calcium or key ions
 Holding crystals that act as compass
 Organized enzymes
 Sequestering enzymes
o Plasma Membrane:
 Phospholipid bilayer
o Inside membrane is all cell contents
 Collectively called cytoplasm
o Cell wall forms protective exoskeleton
 Most pro's have a cell wall
 Composed of tough fibrous layer
 Surround the plasma membrane
o Many also have another layer
 Outside cell wall called glycolipids
o Some have tail like flagella
 On cell surface
 Spin around to move the cell
o Base of this structure
 Embedded in plasma membrane
 Rotation spins along a helical filament
 Propels through water
o Fimbriae (fimbria singular) - think Velcro
 Needlelike projections
 Extend from plasma membrane
 Promote attachment to other cells
Eukaryotes: range in size from very small to very large
o Many are multicellular with a few unicellular
o Larger than prokaryotes
o Size makes it hard for molecules to diffuse across entire thing
o Solved by breaking volume into several membrane bound organelles



o

o

This offers two advantages
 Separation of incompatible chemical reactions
 Increases chemical reaction efficiency
Four key differences:
 Eukaryotic chromosomes found in nucleus
 Much larger
 Contain extensive amounts of membrane
 Diverse dynamic cytoskeleton
 Pg
...

 Pinocytosis brings fluid into the cell
 Vacuoles:








Structure- large, membrane bound structures found in plant and fungi cells
Function Some are for digestion
 Most are for storage of water and/or ions
 To help maintain its normal volume
 Inside seeds they are filled with proteins
 In flower petals or fruits they kicontain pigments
 May contain toxic compounds to keep predators away
Peroxisomes:
 Structure- globular organelles bounds by single membrane
 Originate as buds in the ER
 Function- center for oxidation reactions
 Liver cell peroxisomes contain enzymes that remove electrons from or oxidize
the ethanol in alcohol
 Specialized ones in plants called glyoxysomes
Mitochondria:
 Structure- have two membranes
 Inner one is folded sack of cristae
 Is called the mitochondrial matrix
 Have their own DNA
 Manufacture own ribosomes
 Function- ATP production is core function

Over view of cellular respiration
 All organisms use glucose to build fats, carbs, and other compounds
 Cells recover glucose by breaking down these molecules
o Glucose is used to make ATP through CR or fermentation
 CR produces ATP from a molecule with high PE-usually glucose
 4 Steps
o Chemical reactions
o Distinctive starting molecule
o Characteristics set of products
 When Glucose is Oxidized
o Carbon atoms of glucose are oxidized to form CO2
o Oxygen atoms on O2 are reduced to form water
o Glucose is oxidized through aa long series of carefully controlled redox reactions
o Result change is free energy is used to synthesize ATP, ADP, etc
 Steps of CR
o CR is any set of reactions that produces ATP in an electron transport chain
o 4 steps:
 Gylcolysis - broken down to form pyruvate
 Pyruvate processing
 Citric Acid Cycle (crebs cycle)- Acetly CoA is oxidized to CO2
 Electron tranposrt and chemiosmosis
 CR Interacts with metabolic pathways
o Energy and carbon













Two fundamental requirements
Need high energy electrons for generating chemical energy (ATP)
o Catabolic pathways- break molceules down and make ATP
o Anabolic pathways- results in synthesis of larger molecules from smaller components
For ATP productions cells
o First use carbs
o Then fats
o And finally proteins
Proteins, carbs, and fats can all furnish aubstrates for cellular respiration
Processing proteins and fats as fuel
o Enzymes remove the amino groups from proteins
 Remaining carbs are intermeidiates
 Used in glycolysis
o Enzymes break down fats
 Form glycerol
 Enters glycolytic pathways
 To form acetly CoA
 Enters citric acid cycle
Methods of producing ATP
o Subatrate level phosphoaralation
Feedback inhibition
o Occurs when an enzyme in a pathway is inhibited by an abundance of products
Pyruvate Processing
o Produced during glycolysis
o Transported from cytosol into mitochondria
o Mitochondria have both inner and outer membrane
 Criatae and matrix


Title: Lipids, Membranes, & the first Cells
Description: These notes are meant for a 1st year biology level student who is further along in most books. They will touch upon the different types of lipids, along with their structure and function throughout the body. They will then lead into how membranes work, their makeup, and how lipids are involved. It ends with the first types of cells discovered.