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General Biology: Foundations, Chemistry of Life, and Cell Structure

Study Guide - Smart Notes

Tailored notes based on your materials, expanded with key definitions, examples, and context.

Ch1: Introduction to Biology

Major Themes in Biology

  • Purpose of living things: All living things reproduce, responding to environmental stimuli.

  • Natural selection: The environment selects for traits that enhance survival and reproduction, leading to adaptation and evolution. Traits are passed on through offspring.

  • Interdependence of organisms and the sun: Photosynthetic organisms (like plants) depend on the sun for energy, while animals depend on plants and other animals for food.

  • Organization of life: Life is organized hierarchically: organisms form populations, populations form communities, communities form ecosystems, and ecosystems make up the biosphere.

  • Levels of biological organization: Organ systems → organs → tissues → cells → organelles → molecules → atoms.

  • Domains of life: Three domains: Archaea, Bacteria, and Eukarya.

  • Scientific method: Steps used to investigate natural phenomena.

Ch2: Chemistry of Life

Elements and Atomic Structure

  • Elements: Pure substances consisting of one type of atom, represented by unique chemical symbols.

  • Atomic structure:

    • Protons (positive charge) and neutrons (neutral) in the nucleus; electrons (negative charge) orbit the nucleus.

    • Atomic number = number of protons.

    • Atomic mass = protons + neutrons.

    • Isotopes: Atoms of the same element with different numbers of neutrons.

Types of Chemical Bonds

  • Ionic bonds: Formed when electrons are transferred from one atom to another, creating charged ions (cations and anions) that attract each other.

  • Covalent bonds: Strongest type; formed when atoms share electron pairs.

  • Hydrogen bonds: Weak attractions between a hydrogen atom in one molecule and an electronegative atom (like oxygen or nitrogen) in another.

  • Polar vs. nonpolar molecules: Polar molecules have unequal sharing of electrons, leading to partial charges; nonpolar molecules share electrons equally.

How Electrons Affect Chemical Properties

  • The arrangement of electrons, especially in the outermost shell (valence electrons), determines how atoms interact and bond with each other.

Ch3: Properties of Water

Unique Properties of Water

  • Cohesion: Water molecules stick to each other via hydrogen bonds, leading to surface tension.

  • Adhesion: Water molecules stick to other polar or charged surfaces.

  • Solvent properties: Water dissolves many ionic and polar compounds, making it the "universal solvent."

  • High specific heat: Water absorbs and retains heat, moderating temperature changes.

  • Density: Ice is less dense than liquid water, so it floats.

  • pH and buffers: Water can dissociate into H+ and OH-; buffers help maintain stable pH in biological systems.

Acids and Bases

  • Acids: Proton donors; increase H+ concentration.

  • Bases: Proton acceptors; decrease H+ concentration.

  • pH scale: Ranges from 0 (acidic) to 14 (basic), with 7 as neutral. Each step is a tenfold change in H+ concentration.

Ch4-5: Organic Molecules and Macromolecules

Major Biological Molecules

  • All organic compounds contain carbon, usually hydrogen, oxygen, and sometimes nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur.

  • Dehydration synthesis: Builds polymers by removing water to form bonds.

  • Hydrolysis: Breaks down polymers by adding water to break bonds.

Classes of Biological Macromolecules

  • Proteins: Polymers of amino acids; perform structural, enzymatic, and regulatory functions.

  • Carbohydrates: Polymers of monosaccharides; provide energy and structural support.

  • Lipids: Hydrophobic molecules including fats, oils, and phospholipids; important for energy storage and membrane structure.

  • Nucleic acids: DNA and RNA; store and transmit genetic information.

Protein Structure

  • Primary structure: Sequence of amino acids.

  • Secondary structure: Local folding (alpha helices, beta sheets) due to hydrogen bonding.

  • Tertiary structure: Overall 3D shape from interactions among side chains.

  • Quaternary structure: Multiple polypeptide chains forming a functional protein.

  • Denaturation: Loss of protein shape (and function) due to heat, pH, or chemicals.

Ch6: Cell Structure and Function

Prokaryotic vs. Eukaryotic Cells

  • Prokaryotic cells: Small, lack membrane-bound organelles, DNA in nucleoid region, have cell wall and ribosomes.

  • Eukaryotic cells: Larger, have membrane-bound organelles (nucleus, mitochondria, etc.), DNA in nucleus.

Functions of Cell Organelles

  • Nucleus: Stores DNA, controls cell activities.

  • Rough ER: Synthesizes proteins (has ribosomes attached).

  • Smooth ER: Synthesizes lipids, detoxifies chemicals.

  • Golgi apparatus: Modifies, sorts, and packages proteins and lipids.

  • Mitochondria: Site of cellular respiration, produces ATP.

  • Chloroplasts: Site of photosynthesis in plant cells.

  • Cell wall: Provides structure and protection (plants, fungi, bacteria).

  • Ribosomes: Synthesize proteins.

Animal vs. Plant Cells

  • Animal cells: Lack cell wall and chloroplasts, have small vacuoles.

  • Plant cells: Have cell wall, chloroplasts, and large central vacuole.

Ch7: Cell Membranes and Transport

Structure and Properties of Cell Membranes

  • Phospholipid bilayer: Hydrophilic heads face outward, hydrophobic tails face inward.

  • Proteins: Serve as channels, receptors, enzymes, and structural components.

  • Fluid mosaic model: Membrane is flexible, with proteins and lipids moving laterally.

Transport Across Membranes

  • Diffusion: Movement of molecules from high to low concentration; passive process.

  • Osmosis: Diffusion of water across a selectively permeable membrane.

  • Facilitated diffusion: Passive transport aided by membrane proteins.

  • Active transport: Movement of substances against concentration gradient; requires energy (ATP).

  • Endocytosis: Cell engulfs material by forming a vesicle.

  • Exocytosis: Vesicle fuses with membrane to release contents outside the cell.

Osmotic Conditions

  • Isotonic: Equal solute concentration inside and outside the cell.

  • Hypertonic: Higher solute concentration outside; cell loses water.

  • Hypotonic: Lower solute concentration outside; cell gains water.

Functions of Membrane Proteins

  • Attachment points for cytoskeleton and extracellular matrix.

  • Cell identity markers.

  • Receptors for signaling molecules.

  • Transporters for moving substances across the membrane.

Table: Comparison of Prokaryotic and Eukaryotic Cells

Feature

Prokaryotic Cells

Eukaryotic Cells

Size

Small (1-10 μm)

Larger (10-100 μm)

Nucleus

No true nucleus (nucleoid region)

True nucleus with nuclear envelope

Organelles

Absent

Present (mitochondria, ER, etc.)

Cell wall

Present (peptidoglycan in bacteria)

Present in plants/fungi (cellulose/chitin), absent in animals

Ribosomes

Smaller (70S)

Larger (80S)

Key Equations

  • pH calculation:

  • Surface Area to Volume Ratio (SA/V):

Additional info:

  • Some details (such as the full list of organelles or the exact steps of the scientific method) were inferred based on standard biology curricula.

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