Increases activity until exceed
optimum temperature, then enzyme
is denatured and activity stops.
pH
Increase activity until exceed
optimum pH, then enzyme
activity starts to drop off. Bell
curve.
Solvents
Surface Area
Concentration of enzyme and substrate
Increase activity. If too high concentration enzyme,
then no enzyme activity as substrate used up. If too
high concentration substrate, the rate of reaction
plateaus as enzymes are saturated.
Salts
Coenzymes and Cofactors
Coenzymes go in active site and
help substrate fit in better.
Cofactors help enzyme function
correctly
Poisons
They alter enzyme shape,
denaturing it so it can react
with substrate, or they'll
block active sites
What are they?
Globular Proteins. Functional Proteins. Made up of amino acids. Natural catalysts. Can
be catabolic (break molecules) or anabolic (build molecules). Lower activation energy for reaction.
Two models: Lock and Key model and Induced Fit model
Enzymes are specific to a certain substrate. If enzyme
shape changed, it will be useless as substrate won't
fit. It becomes denatured.
Cell Structure
Animal Cell
Mitochondria
Aerobic Respiration. Creates ATP needed for muscles, protein, and active transport. Powerhouse of Cell. Has own DNA
Aerobic Respiration
Glucose + Oxygen —> ATP + CO₂ + H₂O
C₆H₁₂O₆ + O₂ —> 6H₂O + 6CO₂ + 38ATP
Controlled by enzymes
Steps:
Glycolysis
In Cytoplasm
No Oxygen
Breaks down 6 Carbons in Glucose into Pyruvic acid (3 Carbons x2)
2 ATP made
Kreb Cycle
Pyruvic acid goes into liquid matrix
Oxygen unused by needed to proceed
Pyruvic acid broken down for H⁺ ions
CO₂ produced
Electron Transport Chain
On cristae of Mitochondria
Oxygen used
Lots of ATP produced
H⁺ ions combine with electrons and Oxygen to form Water
Drives electron pumps across cristae membrane to produce ATP from ADP, by adding an extra phosphate
Difference between anaerobic and aerobic
Anaerobic: 1 glucose -> 2 ATP in glycolysis. Creates Lactic acid. Only goes through Glycolysis
Aerobic: Same as anaerobic but also 32 ATP made in Electron Transport Chain
Oval/rod shaped
Cristae increase surface area with folds, so rate of reaction increases
Cells that need lots of energy have lots of mitochondria
Cytoplasm
Fluid in cell, organelles float freely. Medium of transport.
Ribosomes
Creates proteins from RNA. Free floating or connected to Endoplasmic Reticulum.
Nucleus
Holds DNA. Regulate Cell Activity
DNA
Structure
Bases: Cytosine, Guanine, Adenine, Thymine
The hydrogen bonds that these bases have ensure that only
Adenine can pair with Thymine and Cytosine can only pair with
Guanine. Base Pairing Rule
Direction of strand can be distinguished as if top
phosphate is attached to the 5th side of sugar and
the other is attached to 3rd side of sugar, direction
is 5' to 3'.
Replication
Helicase unzips DNA and DNA polymerase adds new
nucleotides to each half strand according to base
pairing rule to create two daughter strands
Semi-conservative as new strands are made up of half of the old strand
Endoplasmic Reticulum
Network of plumbing. Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum (with ribosomes)
Plasma Membrane
Separates cell innards from outside. Regulates what goes in and out
Plasma Membrane Structure
Fluid Mosaic Model : Components can move and are randomly scattered.
Cholesterol keeps things moving easily and maintains fluidity of membrane (think grease).
Selectively Permeable
Lipids, soluble solutes and small molecules can pass through with ease
Phospholipids made up of a nonpolar, hydrophobic tail and a polar, hydrophillic head.
Intrinsic proteins span length of membrane. Extrinsic don't.
Allows movement in and out of cell
Protection to organelles as it's a boundary
Maintain shape of cell
Allows cell recognition with carbohydrates
Vacuole
Holds stuff.
Lysosome
Digest old organelles and old parts of organelles with enzymes.
Nucleolus
Transcribe DNA to RNA and assembles it. Ribosomes also made.
Golgi Body
Modifies proteins made in Endoplasmic Reticulum and packages them for transport out of cell
Vesicle
Transport for molecules out of cell
Plant Cell
Chloroplast
Absorb light (photosynthesis). Flat for lots of surface area to get more sun.
Photosynthesis
6CO₂ + 6H₂O with light —> C₆H₁₂O₆ + 6O₂
Carbon Dioxide + Water + Light —> Glucose + Oxygen
Light Dependant Stage
In Grana
Requires Light
H₂O split into O₂ and H⁺ ions. ATP synthesised
Light Independant Stage (Calvin Cycle)
In Stroma of Chloroplast
CO₂ bonds with H⁺ ions (carbon fixation)
ATP used
Glucose produced
Depends on enzymes so if enzyme activity inhibited, so will photosynthesis.
Thylakoids
Chlorophyll and Lumen
Stroma is liquid in chloroplast. Some reactions happen here.
Cell Wall
Cell shape. Made of cellulose
Palisade Cells
Hold Chloroplasts. Near top of the cell for maximum exposure to sunlight
Transport
Active
Up concentration gradient from low concentration to high. Need ATP.
Uses some types carrier proteins to pump substances across membrane
Phosphate from ATP attaches to protein = change protein shape to pump molecule/ion into cell
Examples: Uptake glucose + amino acids in
small intestines. Absorption of mineral ions
by plant roots. Excrete H⁺ and urea from
kidney. Exchange sodium and potassium ions
in neurons and muscles.
Cells that do this have lots of Mitochondria
Cytosis (Bulk transport)
Endocytosis
Molecules into cell
Phagocytosis
Taking in lots of solid materials e.g. white blood cells with viruses
Pinocytosis
Takes in liquid into cell
Receptor-mediated endocytosis
Molecules bind to receptors on cell membrane. When molecules on receptors, membrane folds inward to form protein coated pit.
Exocytosis
Molecules out of cell
Excrete waste and other substances
Vesicles formed in Golgi fuse with cell membrane and release contents out of cell
Involve changes to membrane shape
Passive
Facilitated Transport
Channel Proteins allow
big molecules/ions
through membrane.
Some cells need more
water and so have
specialised water
channels called
Aquaporins
No energy
Down concentration gradient from high to low concentration
Diffusion
Particles dissipate over area until equilibrium/same concentration of particles
Osmosis
Diffusion but only with water
Exclusively with semi-permeable membranes
Tonicity
Hypertonic
A solution is hypertonic if it has more solutes or less water than other side of membrane
Plant cell is considered plasmolysed and animal cell is crenated if solution outside cell is in this state
Water will rush out of cell and into hypertonic solution
Isotonic
A solution is isotonic if it has the same concentration of solutes and water as other side of membrane
Hypotonic
A solution is hypotonic if it has less solutes or more water than the other side of membrane
Plant cell is considered turgid and animal cell has lysed (bursted), if solution outside cell is in this state
Water will rush into cell and out of hypotonic solution
Cell division
Mitosis
PMAT: Prophase, Metaphase, Anaphase and Telophase
Prophase: DNA condenses into chromosomes
Metaphase: Chromosomes align to equator.
Anaphase: Chromosomes torn in half by spindle network to poles of cell.
Cytokinesis: Cytoplasm divided between two daughter cells.
Telophase: Nuclear envelope redevelops and chromosomes unwind.
Interphase: Cell is carrying out normal functions. Cells usually in this stage.
G1: Protein synthesis and respiration
S: DNA replication
G2: Cell gets bigger, gathers resources, repairs
any damage to DNA
Nuclear division, one strand of each chromosome into
each daughter nucleus. Each identical to parent.
For growth, repair, and to replace cells
Meiosis
Meiosis similar to Mitosis, but make 4 daughter cells with half the number of chromosomes.
DNA wound into chromosomes in Interphase
Chromosomes replicate in S phase.
Homologous Chromosomes line up at equator randomly (Independant Assortment).
Crossing over between homologous chromosomes (exchanging of alleles) occurs in Prophase.
The chromosomes with two chromatids are separated into two daughter cell (Cytokinesis).
Then the chromosomes line up at equator again and are pulled apart
4 daughter cells are created with half of the starting number of chromosomes.