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Title: IB Standard Level Biology, Chapter Two, molecular Biology
Description: Incredible notes summarising Chapter Two, "molecular biology", including all points of the IB Standard Level biology syllabus. PLUS amazing diagrams! (13 pages) (International Baccalaureate)
Description: Incredible notes summarising Chapter Two, "molecular biology", including all points of the IB Standard Level biology syllabus. PLUS amazing diagrams! (13 pages) (International Baccalaureate)
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IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
Chapter 2
...
Majority of molecules in all living organisms can be categorized into four biochemical groups
Molecules
Subcomponents (building blocks) Example molecules
Carbohydrates
Mono/di/poly/saccharide’s
Glucose, ribose, lactose, starch
Lipids
Glycerol, fatty acids, phosphate
groups
Fat stored in adipose cells, some
hormones
Proteins
Amino acids
Enzymes, antibodies, peptide hormones
Nucleic acids
Nucleotides
DNA, RNA, ATP
Carbohydrates
•
Contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
•
Organic compounds consisting of one or more simple sugars
Monosaccharide
Disaccharide
Polysaccharide
Subunits
One
Two
Three
Main function
Energy source
Transport form
Storage form
Examples
Glucose
Galactose
Fructose
Lactose
Sucrose
Maltose
Cellulose
Glycogen
Starch
Mnemonic
Gives Good Flavour
Length Support Movement
Can Get Stored
Metabolism
IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
Alpha and Beta glucose are optical isomers
because they are compounds with the same
chemical formula but have different
arrangements if atoms (different
properties)
Lipids
•
Carbon compounds made by living organisms that are mostly or entirely hydrophobic
•
Insoluble in water
•
Non polar (will absorb in non-‐polar solvent)
•
Molecules can be identified as lipids if they have two or three hydrocarbon chains or the
quadruple ring structure of steroids
Triglycerides:
^Largest type of lipid
3 fatty acids linked to glycerol (join by condensation reaction so they have 3 hydrocarbon tails)
E
...
Fats and oils
Phospholipids:
Two fatty acids linked to glycerol with a phosphate group instead of the third fatty acid
Steroids:
Four fused rings in their molecule
E
...
cholesterol, progesterone, estrogen, testosterone
Proteins
• Amino acids form proteins
• All proteins contain nitrogen
• Composed of one or more chains (polypeptide chains) of amino acids
• There are 20 unknown amino acids
Nucleic Acids
• Nucleotides form bonds between the pentose sugar and phosphate group to form long
polynucleotides chain
IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
Chapter 2
...
80% of a human cell consists of water
• Polar covalent bond
• Water molecule joined by hydrogen bonds (weak bonds)
• Polymerisation
• Oxygen atom is slightly negative/hydrogen atoms are slightly positive
• Difference between solvent & solute (solute are substances that were dissolved in the solvent)
• Hydrophilic: substances that are chemically attracted to water (blood is 95% water-‐
glucose/amino acids can dissolve in it)
• Hydrophobic: substances that are insoluble in water (oxygen in the blood won't dissolve
because they are carried by haemoglobin)
Properties of water
• Thermal-‐ high heat capacity (breaking of bonds)
• Adhesion-‐ water molecules bonding to another substance
• Cohesion-‐ sticking to one another (water molecules sticking to another water molecule)
• Coolant-‐ a lot od energy required to change from solid to gas
...
g
...
3
Carboxyl
group
Saturated
Connected by a single covalent bond (max amount of
carbons + hydrogen)
Unsaturated
Contain one more double bonds
Monounsaturated
Only one double bond
Polyunsaturated
Two or more double bond
Cis unsaturated
Same side of a double bond
Trans unsaturated Opposite side of a double bond
IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
Cis-‐isomers
Trans-‐isomers
Very common in nature
Rare in nature – usually artificially produced to
produce solid fats, e
...
margarine from vegetable
oils
...
4
• Ribosomes are a form of RNA (rRNA) during transcription
• 20 amino acids: "r" group give them different properties e
...
positive/negative charge and
hydrophilic/hydrophobic
• Primary structure:
• Secondary structure:
• Tertiary structure:
• Quatemary structure:
• Difference between Fibrous protein and globular proteins
Properties Fibrous Protein
Globular Protein
Shape
Long and Narrow
Rounded/ spherical
Role
Structural (strength and support)
Functional (catalytic, transport, etc
...
More sensitive to changes in heat, pH, etc
...
Absorbs a single photon of light
• Collagen: involved in holding teeth in place, strong mesh
• Spider silk: stronger than Kevlar
• Genome: all of the genes of an organism
• Proteome: all of the proteins of an organism
IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
Chapter 2
...
6
Bases
Sugar
RNA
Adenine (A)
Guanine (G)
Uracil (U)
Cytosine (C)
DNA
Adenine (A)
Guanine (G)
Thymine (T)
Cytosine (C)
Number if strands
Single Stranded, and often, but not
always, linear in shape
Two anti-‐parallel, complementary strands
form a double helix
IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
Double helix is antiparallel
Purines
(longer) pyrimidine’s (shorter)
Chapter 2
...
coli plasmid
Outline of translation
1
...
The mRNA contains a series of codons each of which codes for an amino acid
3
...
tRNA
molecules bind to specific amino acid that corresponds to the anticodon
4
...
The ribosome moves along the mRNA and presents codons in the first two binding sites
6
...
A peptide bond is formed between the two amino acids (carried by the tRNAs)
8
...
Another tRNA carrying an amino acid binds to the first site and a second peptide bond is
formed
10
...
e
...
8
• Cellular respiration: the controlled release of energy from organic compounds in cells to
form ATP
• Order of energy sources-‐ glucose/carbohydrates -‐> lipids/ fatty acids -‐> proteins
•
ATP is used for: muscle contraction, active transport, protein synthesis, vesicle transport,
DNA/RNA replication, cell signalling
Anaerobic respiration:
• No oxygen present/ small amount of ATP produced
• Bread: oxygen in the dough is used up so yeast is forced to respire anaerobically
Bioethanol
Lactate: supply ATP very quickly in aerobic respiration because a lot of ATP is produced in
this process
Chapter 2
...
Chlorophyll absorbs red and blue light most effectively and reflects green light more than
other colours
...
Chloroplasts are the tiny organelles in plant or algae cells where photons (the fundamental particle
of light) are captured
...
★Definition
Action spectrum shows the efficiency of photosynthesis or rate of photosynthesis achieved over
the various wavelengths of light from the visible spectrum
...
IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
Photolysis of Water
Photolysis is the splitting of water by light (photo – light and lysis – splitting)
...
Photolysis generates hydrogen ions, electrons and oxygen:
2 H2O + photons → 4e-‐ + 4H+ + O2
The electrons are used to generate ATP through cyclic or non-‐cyclic photophosphorylation
...
Photosynthesis carbohydrate production:
The energy absorbed from light is used to turn carbon dioxide and water into carbohydrates and
other carbon compounds
...
Light dependent reaction: use light energy to produce ATP and to split water (photolysis)
o Light is absorbed by chlorophyll, which results in the production of ATP (chemical energy)
o Light is also absorbed by water, which is split (photolysis) to produce oxygen and hydrogen
o The hydrogen and ATP are used in the light independent reactions, the oxygen is released
from stomata as a waste product
2
...
g
...
)
o The ATP provides the required energy to power these anabolic reactions and fix the carbon
molecules together
IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
IB Standard Level Biology
Chapter 2 – Molecular Biology
Photosynthesis: Limiting factors
★Definition
A limiting factor is a factor that restricts the rate of a reaction when present in low amount
...
g
Title: IB Standard Level Biology, Chapter Two, molecular Biology
Description: Incredible notes summarising Chapter Two, "molecular biology", including all points of the IB Standard Level biology syllabus. PLUS amazing diagrams! (13 pages) (International Baccalaureate)
Description: Incredible notes summarising Chapter Two, "molecular biology", including all points of the IB Standard Level biology syllabus. PLUS amazing diagrams! (13 pages) (International Baccalaureate)