-
Prophase
- • Centrosomes
- move to the poles
- • Chromosome
- condensation – chromatids become evident (remember that each chromatid is
- actually a chromosome even though we refer to the pair of chromatids as a
- "mitotic chromosome")
-
Prometaphase
- • Nuclear
- envelope breakdown
- • Polar
- microtubules and kinetochore microtubules form
- • Chromosomes
- arrive on metaphase plate
-
Metaphase
- • Chromosomes
- are lined up on the metaphase plate
- • Sister
- chromatids bound to kinetochore microtubule on opposite spindles
-
Anaphase
- • Kinetochore
- microtubules shorten
-
-
G2
- • replication
- of the centrosome (and centrioles in some cases).
-
Ingredient for metaphase mitiotic spindles
- 1) Keep the chromatids paired until it is time to segregate.
- 2) Have unstable kinetochore microtubules that can sample the cytoplasm and only stabilize upon being captured by a kinetochore.
- 3) Give each chromatid a kinetochore with a geometry such that two kinetochore microtubules from the same spindle can't capture both chromatids of a chromosome.
- 4) Have a checkpoint at metaphase that senses when all the chromatids have been captured and only then allow the chromatids to separate.
-
How does cytokinesis happen in animals
actin and myosin, and it constricts and divides the cell
-
How does cytokenesis happen in plants
In plants – vesicles fuse to make cell membrane and cell plate, which eventually becomes the new cell wall.
-
Prophase I
- • DNA begins to compact
- • Synapsis: pairing of homologous chromosomes
- • Chiasmata form, crossing over.
-
Prometaphase I
- • Nuclear envelope breakdown
- • Spindle fiber forms
-
Metaphase I
- • Microtubules attach to kinetochores (one per homolog not per chromatid)
- • Chromosomes line up at metaphase plate held together by chiasmata.
-
Anaphase I
• Separation of homologous chromosomes into separate cells.Note: each cell now has two copies (two chromatids) of each homologous chromosome - these chromatids are not identical because of crossing over.
-
Is telphase optional in meiosis?
yes
-
Meiosis II
Basically just like mitosis except that you have half the number of homologs.
-
non-disjunction event
When the pairs of chromsome dont seperate properly and you end up with less or more
-
Down syndrom
When an egg with the extra chromosome joins with a normal sperm to make an embryo, the embryo will have three copies of chromosome 21.
-
What matters, the number or chromosomes or the ration?
Its the ratio of chromosomes that matter
-
cis/trans(Gene Linkage)
- If genes are linked; Dominant alleles are cis (alleles on same homologous chromosome)
- trans (alleles on different homologous chromosomes)
-
Types of alleles
wild type: the predominant allele (>99% in a population)
Mutant allele: a change from the wild type of allele, typically the result of a recent mutation. Also can refer to alleles that cause disease.
Polymorphic: present >1% of population
-
Epistasis
- *complex gene interactions
- - interation between albino (Aa) locus and (Bb) locus
- -1st locus determines something
- - 2nd locus determines something else
- *often results from genes involved in different steps of the same process/pathway
-
Genetic
- Gene: unit of heredity
- Allele: Different gene flavour
- Homozygous: Having two of the same allele
- Hemizygous: gene missing from 1 chromosome
- Heterozygous: Having two diferent alleles
- Genotype: the set of alleles an organism
- phenotype: the set of traits organism display
-
Recombination
Linkage of alleles with crossing over
-
How is a gene defined?
By its location on the chromosomes
-
Rate:
- Measure of distance
- -occurs at random parts of the chromosome
- -depends on how far apart genes are on the chromosome
- -measured of physical distance along the chromosome (Thomas Hunt Morgan)
- * The more recombination the farther apart the genes are
-
Linkage groups
Are genes on the same chromosome
-
Polygenetic or multigetic traits
- Multiple genes contribute to a trait
- ex: heart attack risk
- -6 genes affect
- -If each gene has a semidominatn alleles, 12 genetic risk level
-
Enviromental contributions to phenotype
Penetrance: % of individuals of a given genotype that show the phenotype at all
Expressitivity: The degree to which a phenotype is expressed (ex. shades at pink in a flower)
-
Fermentation
- -Absence of O2
- -
Generates NAD+ glycolysis going - -lactic acid by product (or alcohol)
- -never occurs in brain cells
- Note: Gluconeogenesis: process by which intermediates of glycolysis/ citnic acid cylce ae used to form glucose.
- -Intermediates can also--> COH fatty acids
- ---> amino acids/ purines- pyrimidines
-
Electron Transport Chain
- 1.NADH oxidized e-given to NADH-Q reductase - proton pumped
- 2.FADH oxided e- given to succinate dydrogenase - proton not pumped
- 3. e- go to ubiquinone--> cytochrome C reductase
- 4. e- go to cytochrome C---> cytochrome C oxidase - proton pumped -O2 e- acceptor- H2o +2H+
- Purpose: set up "electochemical gradient"
- *oxidation of enzymes--> conformation change-->trans H+
-
Pigments
- *Chlorophyll a- action center
- *Chlorophyll b (max absorption blue 420nm/red 680nm
- *ring attached to tail (inside thylakoid membrane)
- Absorption spectrum- where pigment absorbs most light
- Action spectrum- corresponds roughly to combined spectra of chlorophyll/ cartenoid
-
Pyruvate oxidation
- 1. Pyruvate oxidized to a 2C acetyl group and CO2 released
- 2. Reduction of NAD+---> NADH+H+
- 3. CoA is attached
- look at diagram
-
Glycolysis
- In cytoplasm**
- 1. ATP invested, phosphate added
- 2. isomerization, ATP invested, phosphaleadded
- 3. Symmetry- split into 2 C3 atoms (63p)
- 4. 2x-63P oxidized 2 molecules NADH+H+ formed
- 5. P group transferred to ADP--> ATP (2x)
- 6. Isomenzation, loss of H2O (2x)
- 7. Transfer other phosphate to ADP--> ATP (2x) **substrate level phosphorylation
- 2ATP invested---4ATP made 2Pi invested
- 2(NADH+H+) 2(H2O) evolved * last step has LARGE delta G
- FINAL---PYRUVATE
-
Redox Reaction
- Reduction: gain of electron
- Oxidation: loss of electron
- Oxidation of organic molecules decreased the number of C-H bonds
- Tendency to gai/lose electrons is called redox potential
ex. NAD+ 2H--- +H+ (2H+ +2e-)
-
Calvin Cycle
- 1. 6O2 combines with acceptor RUBp forming 6(3PG) (rubisco)
- 2. 6(36P) is reduced to 63P is 2 step rxn requiring 12ATP and 12 NADDH+12+
- 3. About 1/6 63P (2) used to make sugars- output
- 4. Remaining 63P (1) precessed to make RUMP
- 5. RUMP--RuBp with the use of ATP
3Stages: carbon fixation (1). Reduction and sugar production (2)(3)Regenration RuBp (4)(5)
*photorespiration: O2 instead od CO2--releases CO2 reduces net c fixed
-
Regulation
- -Glycolosis
- Kinase: inhibits by high ATP
- -Citnic Acid Ccle: 1st dehydrogenase: high NAD+ activates high NADH+H+ inhibits
- ETC:
- -regulated by H+ gradient
-
Citric Acid Cycle
- *In Mitochondria*
- 1. 2C acetlyl and 4C oxaloacetate combine-- 6C
- 2. Iso citrate oxidized, CO2 released NAD+ reduced
- 3. alpha-ketoglurate oxidized, NAD+ reduced, CO2 released
- 5. Succinul-CoA--succinate GTP-GDP, ATP--ADP
- 6. Reduction of FAD---FADH2--fumarate
- water added--malate
- 7.Malate--oxaloacetate, NADH+H+ formed
- 2[3NADH+H+FADH2+ATP]
- **Fermentation oxidized NADH+H+---NAD+
-
Light Cycle
- Noncyclic: (H2O replenisheds e-)
- 1. Photon strikes PSII (680)e captured by primary acceptor--plastoquinone (pumps H+ in)--cytochrome complex--plastocyanin
- 2. Photon strikes PSI and re-energizes e- (700) raptured by Ferredoxin---NADP reductase (NADP+ +2H+---NADPH+H+)
- Cyclic:
- 1.Photosystem I energyzed--Fd--ETC--Photosystem I (pumps H+ in therefroe ATP synthesis)
- **Followed by Chemiosmosis
-
Chemiosmosis
- Potential energy of the H+ gradient a proton motive force
- -harnessed by ATP synthase
- *Funit Founit--rotates
- -channel allowing H+ to diffuse back to the matrix
- make ADP into ATP
- *oxidative phosphoralation
- ATP synthase can work in reverse
- -imstead of using synthase, other enzyme produces
-
Cell Theory
- All organisms consist of cells
- Cells divide to provide new cells
- Higher organisms fuse their cells(sperm and eggs, pollen and egg) to produce a new organism
- *all organism come from a single cell which cleave and multiply to give rise to multicelluar organim*
-
Cell Adhesion
basal(amina=thin mat extracellular matrix
apical faces lumen
baslateral: away from lumen
- 1.Tight Junction:
- seperates apical and basolateral membrane domains
- prevent substances from moving through the intercellular space (prevent leakage)
- 2. Adherens junction:most important/ancient
- circumferential belt close to apical basolateral boundary
- made of cadherins (stick out and bind to other cadherins on ther cells)
- then connects to actin filaments
- set up initial polarity
- lnk actin bundle in one cell to actin bundle in other
- 3.Desmosomes: provide mechanical stregth (skin);connected to intermidate filaments (in both cells)
- 4.Gap Junction- channels (connexins)
- facilitate communication between cells-(heart cells)(cat ion move)
- 5.Focal Adhesion- anchors action filaments in a cell to basal lamina
- made of transmembrane intergrins
- connect to actin filaments
-
Cytoskeleton
- Cilia-locomotony appendages of cell (made of microtubules)
- -shape/polarity
- mechanism of cell movement
- acts as tracks for motor proteins
- ACTIN FILAMENTS(+ve..........-ve)
- add structure to plasma membrane/shape cell
- with myosin:cell shape changes, cell migration and muscle contraction
- INTERMED FILAMENT:rope like assemblages in cell (multi)
- stabolize nucleus (lamins)/mechanical strength
- MICROTUBULES:hollow tubules (tubulin) cell polarity, tracks (kinesin/dyein)--extend from centriol
-
Sodium Potassium Pump in membrane transport
- 3Na+1ATP(out)
- S.C--2K +(in)
- S.C--repeat
-
Membrane transport
- 1Diffusion--Brownian movement
- rate:distance, temp, size of molecule and concentration of gradient(Gases/water can cross, large polar molecules and small ions CANNOT PASS
- 2. Facililitaed Difusion:
- Channel:opens/closes/w/ stimulus molecule
- carnier:binds transported substance carrier proteins get saturatt, channel proteins do not.
- 3.Active Transport:
- Primary:uses ATP directly-sodium Potassium Pump-to control osmolarity and generate of membrane potential NA+k+ATase-animals!
- Secondary:uses established gradient to move substances(follows primary) then use symport + antiport to move substances
- symport(2substance. 1direction)
- antiport (2substances 2 directions)
- uniport(1substance 1direction)
-
Golgy
- small membranous sacs (pancakes)
- small membrane enclosed vesicles
- receive proteins from ER and further modify add olisosacchandes to membrane lipids
- concentrate package and sort of proteins before they are sent to destinations (exocytosis and endocytosis)
- phagasocytosis (pinching of cell membrane)
- lysosomes made by golgi
- autophagy- self eating
-
Prokaryotes
- small, no nucleus, no membrane-bound organelles--bacteria
- inhibits widest range of enviromental extremes b/c great metabolic diversity
- can use light rxns, H2,S,Fe,N...etc(methane, benzene,fluorocarbons)
- ribosomes smaller
- DNA is usually single stranded circular chromosomes located in nucleoid
-
Endosymbiotic Organelles
- symbionds-organism that lives in harmony withing another organism
- Mitochondria
- outer plasma membrane, inner folded membrane (cristae)
- cellular respiration (Kreb's Cycle and ETC)
- Chloroplasts(plastid)
- photosysthesis
- outer membreane and inner membrane (thylakoids--granum, lumen, stroma)
- photosynthesis ocurs in stacks
- carbon fixation in stroma
-
Endoplasmic Reticulum
- ER-Network of interconnecting membreanes
- (lument different ion/protein comp communicates only w/ outside of cell)
- membrane can be cont. w/ outer nuclear envelope
- makes phospholipids
- insert membrane proteins
- RER-ribosiome directed after transcription of first few amino acids
- Oligosacchanides: (3-12 glucose) attached to protein
- Enzyme in ER detoxify many substances
-
Eukaryotes
- Compartmentalization!
- each organelle has its role
- Endomembran system
- -ER
- -Golgy
- -Cell membrane
- -nuclear membrane
- -vescicles
- Nucleus!
- -DNA replicared
- - lipid bilayer(nuclear pores)
- -transcription mRNA, rRNA
- -rRNA folds (4 rRNA +80proteins form ribosomes in nucleolus) ribosomes 2parts:activate outside
-
Energy and Rxn
- 1st law-emergy is not created nor destroyed
- 2nd law- entropy increase is favourable
- RXNs
- 1.Heat released, disorder increased:always spontaneous (exergonic)
- 2.Heat released, disorder decreases spont. at low temps
- 3.Heat used, disorder increases: spont. at high temps
- 4. Heat used, disorder decreased; never spontaneous(endergonic)
- delta G=0 at equilibrium
- a ⇔B is always reversible
-
Enzymes
- Only rxs with overall - delta G can be catalysed . delta G does not change!!
- lower Ea
- enzymes:
- orient substances
- strain inducing in substrates
- add charges to substrates
- saturate when all binding sites occupied
- cofactors-anything but amino acids
- regulation-inhibited by natural/artificial binders
-
Inhibition
- a) competative
- competes with substrate for binding site
- b) non-competitive (+ve/-ve allosteric reg)
- binds to site distinc of active site
- -ve:conformation change to stop substrate
- +ve: conformation change to allow substrate
- (c)Coorperative: two or more subunits(makes 2nd inhibitor easier to bind)
-
Cells
- small b/c require diffusion which requires "bronian motion"
- distance traveled alpha srt(time)
- size limited by high SA/volume ratio (only this allows diffusion to make place fast enough)
- -eggs can be larger b/c no diffusion takes place, simply storage containers
-
Macromolecules
- Can form polymers
- present in all organisms in smae porportion
-
Condensation
Anabolic- produces H2O
-
Hydolysis
Catabolic-requires H2O
-
Structural Isomers
chiral mirror image (occurs with a carbon attached to 4 diff functional groups)
-
Lipids (Vi+ A and D)
- Hydrophobic
- engergy storage
- cell membranes
- electrical insulation of nerves (Brain)
- water repellency (waxes/oils)
- Triglyceride(esterlinkage)(3H2O)
- unsaturated-double bonds(kinks)
- saturated-no double bonds
- phospholipids; (phophatidylcholine)
- (2fatty acids-glycerol-phosphate-choline)
-
Buffers
Make solution resistant to pH change, b/c reacts with both added bases and acids
The law of mass action: Add reactants speed reaction as well decrease product increase reaction
-
Functional Groups
- alcohol
- ketone
- carboxyic acids
- aldehydes
- amines
- thiols
- orgranic phosphates
-
Membranes
- Phospholipids bilayer:
- cholesterol-makes it rigid
- unsatureated fatty acids-fluis
- leaflet is one layer
- mvmt:lateral mvmt (diffusion),flexion, rotation, flip flop (occurs to gernerate a-symmetry)
- -ouside-sugars
- inside-charged lipids (cytosolic)
- The fluid mosaic model:mosaic of proteins in 2D fluids
-
Membrane Protein
- Transmembrane Proteins:
- hydrophobic region faces inside
- Hydrophilic: faces outside
- Peripheral membrane proteins:
- lack hydrophilic groups
- covalentrly bond to lipids or non covalently bond to transmembrane protein
- Function: signal transduction, transport of molecules energy generation, cell adhesion
-
Acid
Releases H+ ions in solution
-
Bases
accepts H+ ions in solution (releases OH-)
-
Starch
- Polysaccharide alpha (1-->4) link
- long chain is bent curve and eventually spiral
-
Examples of starch
- Amylose- Unbranched
- Amylopectin- moderately branched (plants
- )Glycogen -highly branched (animals)
-
Cellulose
- Beta (1-->4) link
- Always unbranched
- every other B glucose is flipped
- alwats linear
-
Is starch branched
- Sometimes...in Amylase its unbranched
- Amylopectin its moderately branched
- Glycogen its highly branched
-
DNA
- genes
- protein manufactur
- signalling/energy transducers
- phosphate binds to C5
- pentose sugar w/o is deoxy (DNA)
-
Purines?
- Double ring
- Adenine
- Guanine
-
Pirimidines?
- single ring
- Cytosine
- Thymine
- Uracil
-
Carbohydrates
- energy storage
- building blocks for other molecules
- structuaral compenent
- provide cell identity by embedding into cell membrane
- joined by glycosidic linkages
- Glucose:forms ring in water stable
-
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