1 / 63

BIOLOGY

BIOLOGY. PSSA REVIEW. Structure and Function of organisms. PSSA Eligible Content S11.B.1.1 ( 1-3). Levels of Organization. Cells to Organism. Levels of organization. Organization - cells. Cells are the basic unit of life. All organisms (living things) are made of cells. Unicellular

elon
Download Presentation

BIOLOGY

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BIOLOGY PSSA REVIEW

  2. Structure and Functionof organisms PSSA Eligible Content S11.B.1.1 ( 1-3)

  3. Levels of Organization Cells to Organism

  4. Levels of organization

  5. Organization - cells • Cells are the basic unit of life. • All organisms (living things) are made of cells. • Unicellular • Made of one cell • Ex: bacteria, protists, fungi (yeast) • Multicellular • Made of many cells • Ex: animals, plants, fungi

  6. Cell types and organelles: animal cell

  7. Cell types and organelles:Plant cell

  8. Summary of organelles CILIA / FLAGELLA: responsible for cell movement

  9. Key cell compounds

  10. Transport across the cell membrane • Passive Transport • Includes diffusion • Does not require energy • Substances move from high to low concentration • With concentration gradient • Osmosis is diffusion of WATER across membrane

  11. Transport across the cell membrane • Active transport • Requires energy (ATP) • Substances move from LOW to high concentration • Against concentration gradient

  12. homeostasis • Maintenance of stable internal conditions required for cells to survive • CELL MEMBRANE plays key role • Selective permeability

  13. Classification of Organisms DOMAIN • Taxonomy defined • Science of grouping organisms • BINOMIAL NOMENCLATURE: • Genus/species • Ex: Homo sapiens

  14. Domains • EUBACTERIA • ARCHAEA • Prokaryotic cells • Do not contain membrane bound organelles • NO NUCLEUS • YES DNA • EUKARYA • Includes Kingdoms Protista, Plantae, Animalia, Fungi • YES NUCLEUS • YES membrane bound organelles

  15. kingdoms

  16. Phylogeny: used to classify • Evolutionary history of organism • Used to classify • Shows ancestral relationships

  17. Dna SEQUENCING: used to classify Which organisms are the most closely related? The ones with the least amount of differences!

  18. Photosynthesis • 6CO2 + 6H2O + 6O2 + C6H12O6 • Carbon dioxide + water = oxygen + glucose • Changes radiant energy from sun into chemical energy in glucose • Occurs in chloroplast & uses chlorophyll • Occurs in 2 steps: • Light dependent reaction • Energizes electrons in chlorophyll; makes ATP • Splits water and releases oxygen • Light independent (dark) reaction • Also called Calvin cycle • ATP used to form glucose

  19. ENERGY TRANSFERS • PHOTOSYNTHESIS

  20. Cellular Respiration (AEROBIC) 6O2 + C6H12O6 6H2O + 6CO2 + energy (ATP) • Energy in glucose is changed to ATP • Occurs in 3 steps when oxygen is present: • GLYCOLYSIS • Produces 2 ATP (makes 4 and uses 2) • Splits glucose into 2 molecules of pyruvate • KREBS CYCLE • Also called citric acid cycle • Transfers energy from pyruvate into energy holders called FAD and NAD which become FADH2 & NADH • ELECTRON TRANSPORT • Transfers energy from FADH2 and NADH into ATP

  21. RESPIRATION

  22. RESPIRATION (ANAEROBIC) • Oxygen is NOT present • Glycolysis occurs (glucose is split) • Following glycolysis- 2 choices • Alcoholic Fermentation • yeast • Lactic Acid Fermentation • Muscles in humans

  23. Continuity of life S11.B.2. 1 (1-4) & 2 (1 -3 )

  24. Evolution • Who developed the theory? • Charles Darwin during the 1800s • What is EVOLUTION? • Organisms change over time • Why do organisms change? • Natural selection: • All organisms have slightly different characteristics. If these characteristics/adaptations help them survive in a particular environment, they will pass the traits on to their offspring- thus changing the characteristics of the population over time

  25. EVOLUTION • EVIDENCE? • Fossils • Similar body forms • Similar embryos • Similar DNA & amino acid sequences in proteins

  26. Genetic information • DNA • Nucleic acid made of phosphate, sugar (deoxyribose), and nitrogen bases (adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine) • Base pairing: A = T C = G • Basic building block: nucleotide • Stores the genetic code • GENE • Section of DNA which has a code for one trait • CHROMOSOME • One molecule of DNA • Humans have 46

  27. Can you….. • Complete the other half of the DNA molecule below? • A - T - C - G - G - C - A - T • T - A - G - C - C - G - T - A

  28. Genetic information • REPLICATION • Occurs before a cell divides in 2 • Process in which DNA makes a copy of itself

  29. RNA and DNA 3 TYPES OF RNA messenger (mRNA) nucleus to cytoplasm (ribosome) transfer (tRNA) cytoplasm to ribosome ribosomal (rRNA) makes up ribosomes/in nucleolus too

  30. Genetic information • PROTEIN SYNTHESIS • Occurs in 2 steps • TRANSCRIPTION & TRANSLATION

  31. Genetic information • TRANSCRIPTION • Copying of DNA’s code in nucleus of cell by messenger RNA

  32. Genetic information • TRANSLATION • Reading of mRNA into a protein • Every 3 bases on mRNA (CODON) – 1 amino acid • tRNA (transfer RNA) retrieves amino acid from cell • Carries to ribosome to be put into protein

  33. Genetic code What amino acid is represented by the codon: UUU? phenylalanine (Phe) What amino acid is represented by the codon: AUG? methionine (Met)

  34. CELL CYCLE Or MEIOSIS Division of cytoplasm CHROMATIDS

  35. mitosis

  36. MEIOSIS Meiosis I Meiosis II

  37. Genetic information

  38. Patterns of inheritance • DOMINANT & RECESSIVE GENES • Genes occur in pairs • The dominant gene is seen in the organism • Recessive gene is masked • EXAMPLE: • R = gene for right handedness • r = gene for left handedness • In general: • if you have a gene for both right handedness and left handedness, you will be RIGHT HANDED

  39. genetics • Punnett Squares: • Used to predict probability of offspring having certain characteristics/traits • Rr X Rr

  40. Patterns of inheritance • MULTIPLE DOMINANCE • Certain traits have more than 2 different forms • Blood types occur from 3 different gene forms (alleles) A B O AB are dominant together = type AB blood A and B are dominant over O AA, AO = type A BB, BO = type B OO = type O Type O blood is the UNIVERSAL DONOR

  41. Patterns of inheritance

  42. Patterns of inheritance • SEX INFLUENCED TRAITS • Trait expressed differently in males and females • MALE PATTERN BALDNESS • SEX LINKED TRAITS • Are carried on X chromosome • Sex chromosomes = X or Y • Females = XX Males = XY • COLOR BLINDNESS, • HEMOPHILIA (blood clotting)

  43. Ecological Behavior and Systems PSSA Eligible Content S11.B.3.1( 1 – 5), 2 (1-3), 3 (1-3)

  44. biotic and abiotic components of ecosystem • Biotic factors: all the living things in an environment (i.e. bacteria, plants, insects, birds, and other animals). • Abiotic: all the non-living things in an environment (i.e. wind, precipitation, temperature, current in a stream, soil, caves).

  45. Energy transfers in ecosystem • SUN is ultimate energy source on planet! • Food chains show the movement of energy through an ecosystem. Sun grassgrasshoppermousesnakehawk Grass = producer (autotroph) Grasshopper = primary consumer (herbivore) Mouse = secondary consumer (carnivore) Snake/hawk = tertiary consumers

  46. Food web – shows overlapping food chains Organisms are INTERDEPENDENT

  47. BIOMES • large, distinctive complexes of plant communities distinguished by climate. • There are 7 major land biomes, 1 major aquatic biome and numerous minor biomes • Tundra • Taiga • Temperate Deciduous Forest • Grasslands • Desert • Temperate Rainforest • Tropical Rainforest • Coral Reef

  48. biomes Tundra Desert • Extremely cold • Covered by a permanently frozen layer of ground called permafrost • Little vegetation (sphagnum moss, fast growing annuals) • Very few large predators (caribou, migrating birds, polar bears, arctic foxes) • Extremely hot • Rainfall: <10” annually, may be zero • Little vegetation, cacti, fast growing annuals • Very few large predators (snakes, lizards, birds, coyotes) • Usually nocturnal

  49. Tundra & desert

More Related