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Title: General Biology 1
Description: Gen Bio 1 Exam 1 notes/study guide. University of North Florida Dale Cassammatta
Description: Gen Bio 1 Exam 1 notes/study guide. University of North Florida Dale Cassammatta
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Gen Bio Exam 1
Evolution & Assorted Things
1
...
Predicted that cells would appear spontaneously in a nutrient broth as well as if
the broth is exposed to preexisting cells (you die in the woods, maggots cover
your body)
...
Lamarck
a
...
1st one to propose that a changing environment (not divine intervention) is
what causes an organism to alter its behavior
...
Organisms are endowed with a “vital force” which propelled them towards
perfection
...
Experimental evidence refuted his hypothesis
...
Early thinkers who influenced Darwin
a
...
Populations increase exponentially
1
...
Food supplies increase geometrically
1
...
Charles Lyell
i
...
Features developed over great lengths of time via volcanic activity,
erosion, glaciation, etc
...
The earth is very old
4
...
Air contained the vital essence for microbial life to originate
i
...
Discovered objects resembling plant spores
iii
...
Concluded it was these objects which caused the broth to turn turbid
b
...
Placed nutrient broth in flasks
ii
...
Flasks remained opened to air
iii
...
no growth observed
c
...
How did Darwin’s trip influence his formulation of the Theory of Natural Selection?
a
...
Populations of organisms could potentially far outstrip their resources
(competition)
c
...
) with a very different prehistoric
env
...
Changing environments cause populations to change (selective breeding)
e
...
Wanted to explain the variation he had seen in his journeys
ii
...
iii
...
4 tenants of natural selection
a
...
Overproduction: reproduction can cause the population to increase
geometrically (or even exponentially) over time
c
...
Tied to the notion of a carrying capacity of the env
...
Leads to increased competition
d
...
are more likely to survive and reproduce
...
Differences b/w homologous & analogous features
a
...
Analogous features:
c
...
Mammals who eat ants & termites
Biology & the study of life
1
...
living organisms are composed of cells
i
...
Biological growth: increase in the size of cells, number of cells, or both
c
...
Regulate metabolism processes
i
...
Essential to nutrition, growth and repair of cells, and conversion of
energy
iii
...
Homeostasis (internal regulation) – it would be very costly to an
organism if their biological processes were unregulated (energy
would be lost and wasted)
e
...
(respond to changes in light, temp, pressure, sound, chemicals, etc)
f
...
Reproduction: majority of life on earth employs asexual reproduction, often via
binary fission (also can use fragmentation, cloning, etc)
h
...
How are biological systems organized?
a
...
Tissues: aggregation of cells w/ a common function
c
...
Organ systems
e
...
f
...
Ecosystem: a community and the env
...
how is information transferred in an organism?
a
...
b
...
Genes specify instructions for
making every living organism
i
...
Cell-‐to-‐cell communication is a complex process called cell signaling
d
...
What is the basic unifying theory in biology?
a
...
What is the scientific method?
a
...
Experiment
c
...
e
...
What are the basic parts of an atom & what do they do?
a
...
Neutron: neutral
c
...
Nucleus: contains protons & neutrons
e
...
What is an isotope?
a
...
mass)
3
...
Determined by # of electrons
i
...
If # of electrons = # of protons then charge = 0
c
...
Etc
...
The octet rule
a
...
By sharing electrons w/ other atoms
ii
...
By gaining electrons to become a negatively-‐charged ion
5
...
Covalent: when two atoms share one or more pairs of electrons
1
...
Nonpolar covalent: equal sharing
3
...
Single bond: when one electron pair is shared
1
...
Double bond: when two electron pairs are shared
1
...
Triple bond: when three electron pairs are shared
1
...
Ionic bond: opposite charges hold together two ions, usually in a lattice
configuration
i
...
Hydrogen bond: bond that exists b/w two polar molecules
i
...
NOT a bond b/w two hydrogen atoms!
6
...
The hydrogen bond in water is to strong
7
...
The making & breaking of bonds
b
...
No change in # or identity of any atoms involved
d
...
What do we mean when we call something a nutrient?
a
...
Environmental conditions often affect type and rates of metabolism
b
...
C, O, H, N, S, P
1
...
Ca, Mg, Fe
1
...
Micronutrient (trace elements): needed in very minute amounts
i
...
Typically needed in small quantities that trace contaminants in the env
...
iii
...
Elevated levels may prove toxic/ harmful
9
...
Heterotrophs
a
...
Many microbes, plants
ii
...
Many different photosynthetic pigments (in plastids) used to capture
sunlight of various wavelengths
iv
...
Heterotrophs: use reduced, preformed organic molecules
i
...
Nutritional requirements may change based on environmental conditions
10
...
Passive diffusion: process by which molecules move from and area of high to low
concentration
i
...
Requires a large concentration gradient
1
...
Facilitated diffusion: carrier aided diffusion
i
...
Much greater rate of diffusion over strict passive diffusion
iii
...
Smaller concentration gradient is required for significant uptake of
molecules
v
...
Active transport: the use of metabolic energy to bring in molecules against a
concentration gradient
...
Energy-‐dependent process
ii
...
Concentrates molecules inside cell
iv
...
why is Carbon (C) so often employed in biological systems as the primary atom?
a
...
What types of bonds does C typically form?
a
...
Straight chains
c
...
Rings
3
...
Consist only of one carbon & hydrogen
b
...
Energetically very stable and efficient and thus quite valuable
i
...
Good way to store energy for later use
d
...
Nonpolar molecules (mostly)
f
...
(fats are partially hydrocarbons)
4
...
5
...
7
...
9
...
Structural isomers: differ in covalent arrangement of their atoms
c
...
Usually around a double bond
What do we mean when we talk about functional groups?
a
...
Provides polarity or charge
ii
...
Are transferred as a group during chemical reactions
b
...
Primary groups:
i
...
Large, covalently-‐bonded structures that cells utilize or create
b
...
Ex: proteins are macromolecules that are made of monomeric amino acids
ii
...
One molecule provides an –OH while the other provides –H
2
...
Energy is required
iii
...
Water is added across a covalent bond to generate a shortened
polymer & a monomer
2
...
Required for passage of monomers into cells
What is a lipid?
a
...
Composed of fats and oils
c
...
Energy store due to large number of bonds
e
...
Saturated v unsaturated
i
...
Tighter packing of lipid molecules
2
...
Unsaturated: possess double bonds in the tails
1
...
Plant & fish oils
iii
...
Amphipathic: hydrophilic and hydrophobic at opposite ends of structure
What is cholesterol?
a
...
Present in plasma membranes
c
...
Precursors for other steroids
Amino acids
a
...
All contain an amine group (N)
c
...
20ish amino acids
i
...
some are polar (don’t like water), some are nonpolar (like water)
f
...
how are proteins assembled?
a
...
May be extensively linked
c
...
Enzyme catalysts: fits snuggly around chemicals and stress bonds which catalyze
reactions
e
...
Transport:
g
...
Motion: muscle proteins (actin, myosin)
i
...
Storage: nutrients in seeds
k
...
Primary structure: the specific amino acids and sequence of a polypeptide
1
...
Secondary: hydrogen bonding b/w amino and carboxyl groups in a
polypeptide
1
...
B-‐pleated sheet: H-‐bonds b/w sections of the polypeptide that are
parallel
iii
...
Determined by folding nonpolar amino acids into the interior of the
protein
2
...
Amino acids that are far apart in the primary sequence may
interact
iv
...
Hydrophobic interactions
2
...
Ionic bonds
4
...
Quaternary:
1
...
Each polypeptide is called a subunit
3
Title: General Biology 1
Description: Gen Bio 1 Exam 1 notes/study guide. University of North Florida Dale Cassammatta
Description: Gen Bio 1 Exam 1 notes/study guide. University of North Florida Dale Cassammatta