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BIOLOGY SOL BLAST. HOMEOSTASIS. stable internal conditions in spite of changes in the external environment. ENZYMES. help organisms maintain homeostasis; increase the speed of chemical reactions; fit with substrate like a lock and key. substrate. active site. enzyme.
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BIOLOGY SOL BLAST
HOMEOSTASIS stable internal conditions in spite of changes in the external environment
ENZYMES help organisms maintain homeostasis; increase the speed of chemical reactions; fit with substrate like a lock and key substrate active site enzyme
IN AN EXPERIMENT . . . Control group • comparison group • what the experimenter changes • the variable that is measured Independent variable Dependent variable Remember . . . Only test one variable at a time. Can you name the cells to the left?
Cell Organelles Mitochondria “mighty mitochondria” • powerhouse; produces ATP • where proteins are made • lipid bilayer; controls what enters and leaves cell • contains chlorophyll; needed for photosynthesis Ribosome Cell Membrane Chloroplast
WATER • Polar • Universal solvent • High heat of vaporization • Less dense in its solid form Water has cohesive and adhesive properties allowing for capillary action to take place in trees. cohesion Water sticks to itself adhesion Water sticks to other substances
Hyper-shrinks Hypo=expands Hypertonic Hypotonic _________ = cell shrinks __________ = cell expands Diffusion movement of substances from a high to low concentration Osmosis movement of water from a high to low concentration
CELLULAR RESPIRATION Two Types: -requires oxygen (produces 36 ATP) -does not require oxygen (produces 2 ATP) transfer of energy in organic compounds to ATP AEROBIC ANAEROBIC What is used in cellular respiration is produced in photosynthesis---what is used in photosynthesis is produced in cellular respiration.
Photosynthesis 6CO2 + 6H2O (+ light energy) C6H12O6 + 6O2 What is the main purpose of photosynthesis? Produces food (C6H12O6 - glucose) for the plant Takes in which gas? Releases which gas? Carbon Dioxide Oxygen
MITOSIS • Somatic (body cell) division • DNA must replicate before • division takes place • Results=2 diploid cells
MEIOSIS • Gamete (sex cell) division • Results = 4 haploid cells When fertilization takes place, 2 haploid cells (sperm and egg) unite to create what? 1 diploid cell
PUNNETT SQUARE diagram used to predict the probable outcome of a genetic cross B = pink b = white GENOTYPIC RATIO: PHENOTYPIC RATIO: BB = bb = Bb = 1:2:1 3:1 Homozygous dominant Homozygous recessive Heterozygous
DNA DNA is made of nucleotides which are made of: 1. 2. 3. (A-T, C-G) Sugar (deoxyribose) Phosphate Nitrogen bases
RNA A - T A- U DNA G - C G - C CTA = GAT TAC = AUG
How are proteins made? A chain of amino acids = protein Amino Acids tRNA ANTICODON mRNA CODON ribosome
If given the codon, AAC, what is the amino acid the tRNA will bring to the mRNA?
Famous names in the discovery of DNA • Double Helix Structure- • X-Ray Diffraction to determine structure- • Base-pairing rules- Watson & Crick Franklin Chargoff
VIRUS What is this? Is it living? No
Lytic Cycle Bacteriophage Host Cell Bacterial DNA Capsid Viral Nucleic Acid
KINGDOMS OF LIFE -No cell walls -Cell walls of cellulose -Cell walls of chitin
What are the two types of cells? Eukaryotic Prokaryotic What organisms are eukaryotic? What organisms are prokaryotic? animals, plants, fungi, and protists bacteria
Bacteria • Unicellular • Prokarytotic • Eubacteria / Archaebacteria • Cell Wall • Reproduce Sexually or Asexually (Binary Fission) • Remember Sexual reproduction is the best because it creates variation in the species.
Protists What do Paramecium move with? Cilia • Unicellular or Multicellular • Most diverse group • First eukaryotes • “Catch-all Group” • Plant-like, Fungus-like, Animal-like • Can be Heterotrophic and/or • Autotrophic What do Amoeba move with? Pseudopodia What do Euglena move with? Flagellum
Fungi • Unicellular or Multicellular • Eukaryotic • Heterotrophic-absorption • Cell walls made of chitin • Reproduce sexually or asexually (spores) • Visible portion is reproductive structure and body is mass of hyphae (mycelium)
Plants • Multicellular • Eukaryotic • Autotrophic • Nonmotile • Cell wall= Cellulose • Starch
Animals • Multicellular • Eukaryotic • Heterotrophic • No cell walls • 95% Invertebrates • 5% Vertebrates
Isolation • Condition in which two populations of the same species cannot breed with one another • Geographic-separated by a physical feature (i.e. canyon) • Reproductive-can no longer mate with each other (i.e. different mating times, physical differences, no longer attracted to the other)
NATURAL SELECTION Process by which populations change in response to their environment as individuals better adapted to the environment survive and reproduce and pass those favorable characteristics on Who was the scientist who developed this theory? Darwin
PRIMARY SUCCESSION What are the first organisms to colonize a new site (i.e. bare rock)? pioneer species SECONDARY SUCCESSION What is the name of a mature, stable community? climax community
1 10 100 1000
NUTRITIONAL RELATIONSHIPS Heterotroph • Organism that cannot make its own food; must consume food • Examples: animals, fungi, some bacteria and protists (decomposers, herbivore, omnivores, carnivores) • Organism that can produce its own food; usually by photosynthesis • Examples: plants, some bacteria and some protists Autotroph
Read each question carefully. • Go with your first instinct. • If you don’t understand the question, try visualizing it or sketching it. • With graphs and diagrams, most likely the answer is in the question . • Make this the last time you look at the Biology SOL!