Image of monomer
phosphate head, ribose/deoxyribose sugar, nitrogen base
tRNA vs DNA
tRNA - Uracil, ribose, more 02
DNA - thymine, deoxyribose, less 02
Why template strand copied
Has promoter region
Respiration
Glucose + oxygen –> carbon dioxide water
Glycolysis (cytosol)
Input = Glucose, NAD+, ADP + Pi
Output = Pyruvate, NADH, ATP
2 ATP
Crebs (Matrix of mitochondria)
Input = 2 acetyl CoA VIA 2 Pyruvate, NAD+, FAD, ADP + Pi
output = Co2, NADH, FADH, ATP
2 ATP
ETC (Cristae)
Input = O2, NADH, FADH2, ADP + Pi
Output = H2O, NAD+, FAD, ATP
32-34 ATP
Photosynthesis
Carbon dioxide + water –> glucose + oxygen + water
Light dependent (grana in the thylakoid membranes)
Input = NADP+, ADP + Pi, H2O
Output = NADPH, ATP, O2
Light independent (stroma)
Input = NADPH, ATP, CO2
Output = NADP+, ADP + Pi, Glucose
Antibiotic resistance
Bacteria species use a plasmid that has the antibiotic resistant gene and this will confirm if the vector cell has the recombinant plasmid (if survive the bacteria)
Out of Africa
Positive control
Basis of comparison but have a known predicted change
Negative control
Blank setup, nothing should happen, acts as point of comparison
Vector
Way of delivering gene of interest into bacteria cell
Older dating use vs younger dating
Potassium to argon (older)
Carbon 14 to nitrogen (young)
PAM
A specific sequences of nucleotides that binds to the gene of interest guides Cas9 to identify the gene location
Cas9
cleaves DNA at specific base sequences.
gRNA
RNA sequence complementary to gene of interest that provides the platform for the Cas9 protein to bind to synthesis DNA
CRISPR natures way
CRISPR application
Homologous structures
Structures that have been derived from a common ancestor and thus show similarities in structure, but have different functions.
Example: The bones of a bat’s wing are homologous to those of a whale’s flipper, even though one structure is specialised for flying and the other for swimming.
Vestigial structures
Structures that are non-functional remnants of structures that were functional in ancestral species.
Example: Whales are mammals evolved from a terrestrial mammalian ancestor, but are now specialised for life in the seas. Their skeletons show the presence of a reduced pelvis and, in some cases, vestiges of the bones of the hind limbs.
Analogous structure
a feature found in two unrelated species, having evolved independently in each due to similar selection pressures
Secondary protein structures
Alpha helix: single twisted strand. Help increase SA:V, can stretch / relax and contract - muscle fibres.
Beta-pleated sheets: staggered fold. Can stretch, give flexibility to the protein, maintains a structure / appearance surrounding
Random coiling: often the active site of an enzyme allowing a substrate to successfully bind
C3, C4, CAM
C3 - Cool temp, moist conditions, Rubisco, Location of LID in, mesophyll cells, Open stomata, Carbon fixation during day
C4 - Hot arid environment, exposed to drought, PEP carboxylase (Rubisco starts LID), Location of LID in bundle sheath cells
don’t open stomata, Carbon fixation during day
CAM - warm temp, tropic regions, PEP carboxylase (Rubisco starts LID), Location of LID in mesophyll cell, open stomata at night only, Carbon fixation at night
Sympatric speciation
mutations in chromosome
Deletions - When a chromosome breaks in two places, losing the middle section, and the remaining sections rejoin.
Inversion - When a chromosome breaks in two places, and middle piece turns around and joins up again - normal
Translocation - When a piece of a chromosome breaks off and joins up with another chromosome
Duplication - When a section of chromosome replicates (set of genes repeated, can be thousands repeats)
Phospholipid bilayer
Hydrophobic
Head - hydrophilic
Tail - hydrophobic