Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Diffusion is too slow to move substances round the larger bodies of multicellular organisms.
They have a circulatory system: substances are carried in blood pumped by a heart.
In a closed circulatory system (eg in vertebrates) blood is enclosed in narrow blood vessels.
This increases efficiency: blood travels faster as a higher pressure is generated.
Fish have a single circulation: heart pumps blood to gills for gas exchange, then to tissues and
back to the heart.
Birds and mammals have a double circulation: right ventricle pumps blood to lungs. Blood
returns to the left atrium and then the left ventricle pumps it to the rest of the body. Blood
travels round the body faster, delivering nutrients faster, so the animals have a higher metabolic
rate.
1.1.2
Arteries and veins contain collagen: a tough, fibrous protein to make them tough and durable.
The artery wall stretches as blood is pumped in and then recoils as the heart relaxes.
Blood flow is continual and there is a pulse.
Contracting muscles and low pressure in the chest when breathing in assist blood flow in
veins. Valves prevent backflow. There is no pulse and pressure is low.
1
Arteries Veins
1.1.3
Figure 1.9 on page 8 of the textbook: make sure you know the structure of the heart.
The chambers of the heart (atria and ventricles) fill with blood when they relax (diastole) and
pump blood out when they contract (systole).
The cardiac muscle making up the atria and ventricles is supplied with blood by the coronary
arteries.
Atrial systole Pressure in the atria increases as they fill with blood returning from
the veins.
Ventricular systole Ventricles contract from the base up, increasing the pressure and
closing the atrioventricular valves.
The semilunar valves open and blood is forced into the arteries.
In the atria blood is drawn into the heart from the veins.
2
1.1.4
Atherosclerosis: a disease process where fatty deposits block an artery or increase its chances
of being blocked by a blood clot (thrombosis)
Blood pressure increases in narrowed Calcium salts and fibrous tissue build up
artery. Positive feedback causes more in the atheroma, now called a plaque.
damage to endothelial cells. Artery is less elastic – it has ‘hardened’.
In the arteries supplying the heart, this causes a heart attack (myocardial infarction).
1.1.5
Blood clots when it flows very slowly, or when blood vessel walls are damaged.
When platelets come into contact with the vessel wall, they become ‘spiky’ – they stick to each
other and the collagen in the wall: a platelet plug is formed.
See Figure 1.14 on page 13 and make sure you understand the roles of thromboplastin,
prothrombin, thrombin, fibrinogen and fibrin in the blood clotting process.
1.1.6
3
Symptoms of cardiovascular disease:
Heart attack crushing pain in chest which may spread around the body eg
into arms or back
indigestion-type pain with dizziness
no detectable symptoms
Stroke
4
The following factors increase a person’s risk of developing cardiovascular disease:
GENETIC
This is not straightforward, but risk is increased if your parents have CVD.
DIET
some vitamins act as antioxidants, reducing the damaging effects of free radicals
high salt levels cause the kidneys to retain water, increasing blood pressure
AGE
More likely as you get older.
GENDER
Incidence is much higher for men than women.
SMOKING
carbon monoxide prevents haemoglobin from carrying sufficient O2 – heart rate increases
nicotine stimulates adrenaline release, increasing heart rate and blood pressure
chemicals damage endothelium triggering atherosclerosis
decreased levels of HDLs
INACTIVITY
most common risk factor
exercise can halve the risk of developing CHD
reduces blood pressure
STRESS
Leads to increased blood pressure, poor diet and increased alcohol consumption.
ALCOHOL
Heavy drinkers have an increased risk of CHD as alcohol raises blood pressure, contributes to
obesity and causes irregular heartbeat. It also increases levels of LDLs.
Moderate amounts of alcohol may increase HDL levels.
5
1.1.7
Blood pressure is a measure of the hydrostatic force of the blood on the walls of a blood
vessel.
Systolic blood pressure is highest and occurs when the ventricles contract.
Pressure is at its lowest in the arteries when the ventricles relax: diastolic blood pressure.
Any factor which causes arteries or arterioles to constrict will lead to high blood pressure or
hypertension.
These include:
Tissue fluid
At the arterial end of a capillary, the blood pressure forces tissue fluid (water + small
molecules dissolved in it) out through the capillary wall.
At the venous end, blood pressure is lower and fluid is no longer forced out.
As the blood is more concentrated here (because of water loss and the presence of plasma
proteins) fluid moves back in by osmosis.
20% of the tissue fluid returns to the circulation via the lymph system.
Hypertension causes more fluid to be forced out. The fluid accumulates in the tissues causing
oedema.
6
See Figure 1.30 on page 28 for an explanation of how tissue fluid is formed.
1.1.8
The electrical charge in the heart muscle cells changes – depolarisation. This spreads from cell
to cell (like a wave) causing them to contract.
Depolarisation starts in the sinoatrial node or SAN (pacemaker) in the right atrium and
spreads across the left and right atria causing them to contract.
The atria are electrically insulated from the ventricles so the wave of depolarisation converges
on the atrioventricular node (AVN).
It then travels down the Bundle of His in the septum and into the Purkyne fibres which then
make the ventricles contract from the bottom upwards pushing blood into the aorta and
pulmonary artery.
When the cells are depolarised, there is a small electrical current detectable on the skin.
PR interval time taken for impulses to travel from SAN, through AVN to ventricles.
1.1.9
7
Risk factors increase the chance of the harmful outcome.
heredity
physical environment
social environment
lifestyle and behaviour choices
A positive correlation does not necessarily mean that the two are causally linked!
1.1.10
They overestimate the risk of something happening if the risk is not under their control,
unnatural, unfamiliar, dreaded, unfair or very small.
There is a tendency to underestimate the risk if it has an effect in the long-term future eg health
risks associated with smoking.
1.1.11
Carbohydrates, proteins, lipids and alcohol all contain energy: used to be measured in calories;
the SI unit is the Joule. Average person requires 8000-10000 kiloJoules per day.
The Department of Health issues Dietary Reference Values to encourage balanced & healthy
diets and to indicate the amount of energy which should be derived from different foods.
The basal metabolic rate is the energy required to maintain life processes and varies between
individuals.
BMR is higher in males and people who are younger, heavier or more active.
8
Eating fewer kilojoules than you use results in weight loss.
Eating more kilojoules than you use results in a gain in weight.
1.1.12
Carbohydrates are a large family of compounds with the general formula Cx(H20)n
1.1.13
Glycosidic bonds are broken in hydrolysis. Water is required for the reaction to take place.
1.1.14
Lipids contain the elements carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. They are insoluble in water.
They provide twice as much energy as carbohydrates and supply the body with essential fatty
acids. Vitamins are often found dissolved in lipids.
The most common type are triglycerides: made up of 3 fatty acids joined to 1 glycerol:
G
When the molecules join together, L fatty acid
a condensation reaction takes place. Y
C
E fatty acid
R
Ester bonds are formed.
O fatty acid
L
Saturated fatty acids contain the maximum number of hydrogen atoms and no carbon-carbon
double bonds. Found in animal fats and dairy products.
Polyunsaturated fats contain a larger number of double bonds eg vegetable and fish oils.
If one of the fatty acids in a triglyceride is replaced with a phosphate group, a phospholipid is
formed. These molecules make up part of the cell membrane.
10
Cholesterol is a short lipid molecule with a structure very different to a triglyceride. Important
for cell membranes, sex hormones and bile salts. Found in food, associated with saturated fats.
1.1.15
Body mass index (BMI) is a method of classifying body weight relative to height.
body mass / kg
BMI =
height2 / m2
Normal range is around 20. Less than this is underweight and over 30, obese.
20% of the population are obese – excess dietary fat and inactivity are the likely causes.
1.1.16
It is estimated that around 46% of deaths from coronary heart disease in the UK are due to
blood cholesterol levels of more than 5.2 mmol per litre.
Saturated fats also reduce the activity of LDL membrane receptors and therefore increase blood
cholesterol levels.
11
Eating both monounsaturated and polyunsaturated fats reduces the level of LDLs in the blood.
1.1.17
1.1.18
DIET
should be energy balanced
reduced cholesterol, saturated fats and salt
more polyunsaturated fats, including omega-3 fatty acids found in oily fish
more fruit and vegetables containing soluble fibre and antioxidants
include food with added sterols and stanols (plant compounds which reduce cholesterol)
EXERCISE
A person who is physically active is much more likely to survive a heart attack or stroke.
STOP SMOKING
After stopping, the risk of CHD is almost halved after one year.
12
1.2.1
In larger organisms, there is a reduced surface area to volume ratio, which presents a problem
for the exchange of substances between the organism and its environment.
The respiratory system provides a large surface area to volume ratio to ensure efficient gas
exchange.
circulation of blood through numerous capillaries and efficient ventilation of the lungs
maintains an effective concentration gradient
flattened epithelial cells making up the walls of the alveoli and capillaries (which are very
close together) reduce the distance gases travel between air and blood
Look at Figure 2.2A on page 52 to revise the structure of the respiratory system.
1.2.2.
13
In the cell membrane, the hydrophobic tails face inwards
to avoid water, while the hydrophilic heads point outwards.
proteins: some are fixed, while others move around. May be enzymes, carriers or
channels.
cholesterol: reduces the fluidity of membrane by preventing movement of
phospholipids.
glycoproteins: (polysaccharide + protein) cell recognition and receptors
glycolipids: (polysaccharide + lipid) cell recognition and receptors
1.2.3
Practical on the effect of temperature on membrane structure.
1.2.4
Osmosis is the movement of water molecules from an area where they are in high
concentration to an area of lower concentration through a partially permeable membrane.
Water molecules form hydrogen bonds with solutes, reducing the movement of the water
molecules.
1.2.5
Diffusion is the movement of molecules or ions from an area of their high concentration to an
area of their low concentration.
It will continue until the substance is evenly distributed throughout the whole volume.
Small uncharged molecules eg oxygen and carbon dioxide can diffuse across the cell
membrane.
Hydrophilic molecules and ions cannot penetrate the hydrophobic phospholipid tails.
channel proteins span the membrane and have a specific shape to transport specific
particles. Some are gated – they can be open or closed.
14
carrier proteins bind with the molecule or ion, change shape and transport the particle
across the membrane. Movement can occur in either direction, depending on the
concentration gradient.
Diffusion, facilitated diffusion and osmosis are passive – they do not require energy.
In active transport, ATP supplies energy to change the shape of a carrier protein molecule
when substances are moved against the concentration gradient ie from low to high
concentration.
Exocytosis involves the bulk transport of substances out of the cell eg insulin into the blood.
Vesicles (little membrane sacs) fuse with the cell surface membrane and the contents are
released.
Endocytosis is the reverse: substances are taken into a cell by the creation of a vesicle.
1.2.6
-a 5 carbon sugar
-a phosphate group
-an organic base
Nucleotides link together by condensation reactions between the sugar of one and the
phosphate group of the other.
Each nucleotide in DNA has 1 of 4 different bases: Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine or Thymine.
Two long polynucleotide strands, running in opposite directions, are held together by hydrogen
bonds between the bases.
This ladder-like structure, with alternating sugar and phosphate molecules forming the
uprights and pairs of bases forming the rungs, is then twisted in a helix.
15
The bases pair in a particular way, based on their shape and chemical structure:
A & T pair forming 2 hydrogen bonds C & G pair forming 3 hydrogen bonds
RNA (ribonucleic acid) is made up a single strand of nucleotides. In these the sugar is called
ribose and the bases are adenine, guanine, cytosine and uracil (not thymine).
1.2.7
The sequence of bases in the DNA of the chromosomes acts as a coded recipe for making
proteins.
TRANSCRIPTION
DNA helix unwinds, hydrogen bonds break and RNA nucleotides pair with the exposed
bases on the template strand of the DNA
3 bases on the DNA (triplet) are transcribed into 3 bases on the RNA (codon)
the messenger RNA (mRNA) molecule formed enters the cytoplasm through a nuclear
pore
TRANSLATION
the beginning of the sequence is always marked with the start codon AUG which codes
for the amino acid methionine
a transfer RNA molecule (tRNA) with 3 bases exposed (an anticodon) pairs with a
specific codon on the mRNA
16
attached to the tRNA molecule is a specific amino acid
the amino acids, arranged in the order dictated by the mRNA codons, are joined with
peptide bonds to form a polypeptide
a stop codon signals the last amino acid in the polypeptide chain
1.2.8
The genetic code in the DNA making up the chromosomes acts as a code for protein synthesis.
It dictates the amino acids required to make the protein and the order in which they should be
bonded together.
3 bases code for 1 amino acid and these base triplets are non-overlapping.
The code is degenerate: there is more than 1 triplet for each amino acid.
A gene is a sequence of bases on a DNA molecule (ie a short section of a chromosome) coding
for a sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain.
1.2.9
residual or
R group – different in each
amino acid
17
R
H O carboxylic acid
amine group N C C group
H OH
H
20 different amino acids are found commonly in the proteins of living organisms.
The amino acid monomers join together in a condensation reaction to form peptide bonds.
The polymer formed is called a polypeptide.
Secondary structure the shape the molecule folds into as a result of hydrogen bonding
between the C=O of one amino acid and the N-H of the amine
group of another – an α helix or a β pleated sheet
Tertiary structure the final 3D shape of the molecule, held together by ionic bonds,
interactions between hydrophilic R groups and strong disulphide
bridges between R groups containing sulphur
Quaternary structure if the protein contains more than one polypeptide chain
Fibrous proteins remain as long chains, often with several polypeptides cross-linked for extra
strength.
They are insoluble and are important structural molecules eg keratin, collagen.
They are soluble and are important metabolic molecules eg enzymes, antibodies and some
hormones.
1.2.10
Enzymes are globular proteins which act as catalysts. They speed up chemical reactions by
lowering the activation energy, and remain unchanged at the end of the reaction.
18
Part of the molecule is a specifically shaped active site, into which a substrate fits to form an
enzyme-substrate complex.
The lock and key hypothesis suggested an exact match between the shapes of the substrate
and active site.
The induced fit hypothesis describes the active site moulding around the substrate once it is in
place.
1.2.11
An increase in temperature (and therefore an increase in the kinetic energy of the molecules)
increases the likelihood of a collision between enzyme and substrate molecules.
Beyond the optimum temperature, the increased vibration of the atoms in the protein
molecule break the bonds maintaining the tertiary structure.
pH changes around the enzymes optimum pH, alter the charge distribution in the active site,
reducing the compatibility of enzyme and substrate.
Tertiary structure bonds are again affected and extreme changes will denature the enzyme.
An increase in either substrate or enzyme concentration will increase the rate of reaction until
the other acts as a limiting factor.
1.2.12
DNA copying or replication must occur before a cell divides to ensure that daughter cells
receive a copy of the genetic code.
1.2.13
19
Sometimes, the DNA replication does not work perfectly – an incorrect base may slip into
place.This is called a gene mutation.
If this occurs in a sperm or ovum which ultimately forms a zygote, every cell in the new
organism will carry the mutation.
In a gene, it will cause an error in the mRNA and an incorrect amino acid may be included in the
polypeptide chain causing a genetic disorder eg sickle cell anaemia.
A number of different mutations can affect the gene coding for the cystic fibrosis
transmembrane regulatory (CFTR) protein channels, which allow chloride ions to pass
through the membrane.
The most common mutation is a deletion of 3 nucleotides resulting in the loss of the 508th
amino acid in the protein.
The altered protein may not open, or may reduce the flow of chloride ions through the channel.
1.2.14
Different forms of the same gene are called alleles. If a cell contains two copies of an allele,
their genotype is described as homozygous. Different alleles at a locus result in a
heterozygous condition.
A recessive allele (represented by a small case letter eg f) is only expressed in the homozygous
condition.
A dominant allele (represented by the same letter in the upper case eg F) will be expressed in
the phenotype in either the homozygous or heterozygous condition.
In the 19th century, Gregor Mendel initiated the study of genetics using the garden pea. He
established patterns of inheritance of a number of phenotypes including height and the
morphology of seeds.
20
In humans, recessive mutations of single genes result in:
1.2.15
In the respiratory system, the amount of water in the mucus produced must be regulated:
too runny and it floods the airway
too viscous (sticky) and it can’t be cleared by the cilia
This is controlled by the transport of sodium and chloride ions across the epithelial cells.
Water follows the ions because of osmosis.
See Figure 2.19 on page 67 for a full explanation of why in cystic fibrosis, the mucus is too
viscous.
Summary:
the CFTR channel is non-functional, so chloride ions cannot pass out of the cell towards
the lumen
the sodium ion channels are open and sodium ions are continually absorbed from the
mucus
water is drawn out of the mucus by osmosis and it becomes much too viscous
The cilia cannot move the viscous mucus – it builds up in the airway and becomes infected.
White blood cells invade the mucus, then die and release DNA making it even more viscous.
Mucus blocks the bronchioles, reducing the number of ventilated alveoli. This reduces the
efficiency of gas exchange.
In the digestive system, the viscous mucus blocks the pancreatic duct.
21
Enzymes are not released into the small intestine and food is therefore not digested effectively.
Undigested food cannot be absorbed and energy is lost in the faeces (malabsorption
syndrome).
1.2.16
Gene therapy attempts to alter the genotype and phenotype of target cells:
normal alleles inserted into target cell using viruses or liposomes (see below)
normal form of gene transcribed and translated
functioning protein produced by target cell
Using viruses: Viral DNA for replication is deleted and replaced with normal allele.
A gene promoter is required to initiate transcription and translation.
Produces side effects eg headache, fever, increased heart rate.
Using liposomes: Normal allele inserted into a plasmid, which is then combined with the
liposome (a spherical phospholipid bilayer).
Patient breathes in aerosol containing the liposomes and the DNA is carried into the
target cells.
In CF trials, chloride transport in respiratory epithelial cells has been restored to 25% of
normal. Treatment is temporary as epithelial cells are constantly lost.
Altering specific somatic cells (body cells) like this is permitted in the UK.
Altering germ cells (sperm and eggs) is known as germ line therapy and is not legal.
1.2.17
22
Electrophoresis is a technique which can separate DNA fragments of different lengths:
restriction endonucleases cut the DNA into fragments at specific base sequences
fragments placed on a gel connected to electrodes
fragments separate according to their size and charge
fragments are transferred to a nylon filter (Southern blotting)
strands of the DNA helix are separated by an alkaline buffer
the desired sequence is identified using a gene probe
image obtained by placing the radioactive probe next to X-ray film
A gene probe is a short, radioactive base sequence, complementary to the base sequence of the
gene.
There is a large number of mutations responsible for the abnormal CFTR protein in cystic
fibrosis. A gene probe identifies one specific base sequence. While a positive result will
confirm a diagnosis, a negative result must be treated with caution!
1.2.19
embryo testing: a sample of cells from a developing fetus can be analysed. The sample
is obtained either by amniocentesis (withdrawing amniotic fluid around
15-17 weeks of pregnancy) or by chorionic villus sampling (cells removed from the
placenta at 8-12 weeks).
23
1.2.20
Genetic screening has obvious advantages, but is a contentious business! You need to consider
the social, ethical, moral and cultural issues related to the process.
2.3.1
24
centrioles one pair found in animal cells
made of protein microtubules
involved in spindle formation and cellular transport
2.3.2
Proteins synthesised on the ribosomes of the RER are moved to other parts of the cell through
the cavities of the endoplasmic reticulum.
The Golgi apparatus is a stack of membrane-bound sacs formed from fused vesicles from the
ER.
Proteins are modified here and packaged in vesicles. Some eg enzymes and hormones are
released from the cell.
2.3.3
Organisms with eukaryotic cells are classified into 4 kingdoms: Animals, Plants, Fungi and
Protoctists.
25
have no nucleus
have circular DNA, not associated with protein
have small rings of DNA, called plasmids
always have a cell wall
To compare prokaryotic & eukaryotic cells, see Figures 3.4 and 3.8 on pages 98 & 100.
2.3.4
Mitosis is a type of cell division, which retains the full or diploid number (2n) of
chromosomes.
In humans, a cell with 46 chromosomes divides to form 2 identical daughter cells, each with 46
chromosomes.
26
mitosis (nuclear division) separation of the 2 DNA helices making up the
division chromosome
2.3.5
Mitosis, with identical daughter cells, ensures genetic stability - important for:
2.3.6
Cell division is a continuous process, but 4 stages of mitosis (nuclear division) can be
described:
27
Make sure you are familiar with the details of the core practical in which you observed
the stages of mitosis.
2.3.7
SPERM smaller than the ovum and motile (it can move)
long tail for swimming, powered by energy released by mitochondria
head contains acrosome (package of digestive enzymes) to break down the
zona pellucida
2.3.8
At fertilisation (in the oviducts) the sperm nucleus enters the ovum and fuses with its nucleus
forming a zygote.
The diploid number is restored and the cell contains genetic information from both parents.
2.3.9
Gametes are produced in the ovaries and testes of animals by meiosis which:
produces haploid cells (contain half the number of chromosomes found in a body cell:
one of each homologous pair)
creates genetic variation among offspring
As either of the pair can end up at either pole (random assortment), genetically variable
gametes are produced.
28
2.3.10
Fuelled by nutrients from the ovum, the zygote divides rapidly to form smaller cells – the
embryo remains the same size.
After 3 divisions, there are 8 totipotent stem cells – each could form a total human being.
Most lose the ability to develop into a wide range of cell types, but some don’t: they are
multipotent stem cells.
2.3.11
Stem cells, isolated from embryos could provide new cells, tissues or organs for
transplantation.
A significant number of people consider the use of an embryo for research purposes morally
and ethically unacceptable.
Bills passed in 2001 and 2002 allow ‘spare’ embryos from IVF treatment to be used as a source
of stem cells for research into serious diseases.
2.3.12
The specialised function of a cell depends upon the proteins it synthesises ie which genes are
expressed.
29
Transcription of a gene is initiated by RNA polymerase and transcription factors binding to a
promoter region (section of DNA adjacent to gene).
Others are only synthesised in certain cells at a particular stage of development, often in an
inactive form, which is later activated by signal proteins.
Signal proteins may act directly by entering the cell or indirectly through a second messenger.
The gene remains switched off until all the transcription factors, in their active form, are
present.
2.3.13
Sometimes the gene for an enzyme required for the metabolism of a particular substrate can be
expressed only when that substrate is present (induction) eg β galactosidase and lactose in
prokaryotes.
2.4.14
Some are due completely to genotype eg blood groups and show discontinuous variation:
they fall into discrete categories with no overlap.
Others are influenced by both genotype and environment and show continuous variation eg
human height, skin and hair colour, cancer.
30
See Figure 3.38 on page 127.
Human average height has increased in the past 150 years for various reasons.
height
a person may have genes for being tall, but not achieve their potential
height because of malnutrition.
Skin the pigment is called melanin and is made from tyrosine in a reaction
and catalysed by the enzyme tyrosinase.
hair
colour melanin is made by melanocytes activated by melanocyte-stimulating
hormone (MSH).
UV light increases the amount of MSH and the number of MSH receptors
on the melanocytes.
some animals have mutant alleles for tyrosinase so that the unstable
enzymes only works in cooler areas: extremities are darker.
2.3.15
Cancer occurs when the rate of cell multiplication is faster than the rate of cell death.
This causes the growth of a tumour.
31
chemical carcinogens such as those in the tar in cigarette smoke
viruses may trigger cancer by altering the DNA
Chemicals called radicals are produced by the cell metabolism and can damage DNA.
Fresh fruit and vegetables contain antioxidants to destroy radicals.
The cause may also be genetic. About 5% of cancers are due to an inherited gene.
The progression through the cell cycle (G1, S, G2, M) is controlled by:
oncogenes which stimulate the cycle. Mutations can result in the cycle being continually
active and lead to excessive cell division and tumour formation
tumour suppressor genes which stop the cycle. Mutations mean there is no brake on
the cycle and control is lost.
If tumours are not removed, cancer cells can spread to other parts of the body through the blood
and lymphatic systems. This is called metastasis.
2.3.16
In 2001, the Human Genome Project published a working draft of the sequence of bases in
human cells. Work continues to identify specific genes and establish their function.
32
Identification of new drug targets a molecule that a drug interacts with
identification of genes allows identification of
drug targets
Preventative medicine and improved variation in base sequences may account for
drug treatment why some people experience side effects from
drug therapies
identification of mutations associated with a
particular disease allows patient to make
lifestyle changes or adopt preventative drug
therapy
Part of the budget for the HGP has been set aside to address the ethical, legal and social issues
which may arise from the project:
Water is a polar molecule: the hydrogen end is slightly positive and the oxygen end is slightly
negative. The positive end of one molecule is attracted to the negative end of another -
hydrogen bonding.
This cohesion (attraction between like molecules) is important in transporting water through
plants. It also creates surface tension – useful for supporting organisms eg pondweed, pond
skaters.
Hydrogen bonding affects the properties of water eg it explains why water is liquid at normal
biological temperatures.
It also means that the amount of energy required to raise the temperature of water is high. This
avoids large changes of temperature inside living organisms.
34
Ionic substances eg NaCl and polar molecules eg sugars dissolve in water. This is vital for
chemical reactions to occur and for the transport of substances in living organisms.
Water expands as it freezes. The density of ice is less than liquid water, so ice floats enabling
organisms to live in liquid water under ice in frozen ponds and lakes.
Plants also require inorganic ions, absorbed through the roots and transported in the xylem:
Nitrates Used by cells to manufacture amino acids/proteins, nucleic acids, ATP and
growth substances.
Calcium Important constituent of cells walls and affects the permeability of the cell
membrane.
2.4.2
See Figure 4.5 on page 148 – the ultrastructure of a generalised plant cell.
Compare this with Figure 3.8 on page 100 – the ultrastructure of a generalised animal cell.
Organelle Comments
35
Tonoplast The membrane surrounding the large, central vacuole.
Pits Points in the cell wall with only a thin layer of cellulose where
plasmodesmata are found.
Middle lamellae The region between cell walls of neighbouring cells which cements
them together. Contains pectins eg calcium and magnesium pectates.
2.4.3
See Figure 4.7 on page 149 showing the structure of α and β glucose.
Starch Cellulose
Contains 1,4 and 1,6 glycosidic bonds Contains 1,4 glycosidic bonds only ie
ie there is side-branching. no side-branching.
36
Hydrogen bonds form between the OH groups of adjacent cellulose chains. A bundle of about
70 cellulose molecules linked in this way creates a microfibril.
The microfibrils are wound around the cell at different angles and stuck together with a
polysaccharide glue made of hemicelluloses and pectins.
This composite structure makes the cell wall strong and flexible.
2.4.4
To compete effectively for light, plants must grow tall. This presents two problems:
Xylem vessels (together with phloem sieve tubes) form vascular bundles.
Look at Figure 4.13 on page 154 and know the location of the vascular bundles in the stem.
The polymer lignin gives strength to the structures and renders them waterproof.
Because plants fibres are long and thin, flexible and strong, they have been used by humans for
thousands of years eg for clothing, rope, floor coverings, paper.
Extracting fibres is called retting – bacteria/fungi, enzymes and in some cases caustic alkali
breaks down the polysaccharides holding the fibres together, leaving the more resistant fibres
intact.
Plant fibres are used to absorb heavy metals and oil spillages. They can be combined with
plastic to form biocomposites.
2.4.5
*tensile strength means it doesn’t break easily on stretching; compressional strength means it doesn’t buckle easily.
2.4.6
Water evaporates from the surface of the spongy mesophyll cells and diffuses down the
diffusion gradient through the stomata of the leaves. This is called transpiration.
Water in these cells is replaced from the xylem, lowering the hydrostatic pressure at the top
of the vessel. This results in water being drawn up from below: the transpiration stream.
Because of hydrogen bonding causing cohesion between water molecules, water moves up the
stem in a continuous column: the cohesion-tension theory. Thick xylem walls prevent them
from collapsing.
There is adhesion (attraction between unlike molecules) between the water and the xylem
walls. The narrow xylem vessels have a high surface area to volume ratio so that the high
adhesive forces hold the column of water within the tube.
temperature increases
windspeed increases
humidity decreases
surface area and number of stomata in leaf increases
when stomata are open ie in sunlight
2.4.7
Practical on extracting fibres from nettles and testing their strength (Activity 4.6)
2.4.8
38
Plants contain many antibacterial compounds eg allicin in garlic. Many medicines are derived
from plants eg aspirin from willow bark, morphine from poppies.
In 1775, Dr William Withering published A Treatise on the Foxglove. He bought the recipe for
a herbal cure for oedema (accumulation of fluid in the tissues) from a patient and used it on an
unpredictable ‘hit and miss’ basis as a treatment for the condition.
He began with a low dose and increased it until the patient suffered side effects. An amount
slightly less than this was considered the ideal dose.
The extract from the foxglove plant, Digitalis purpurea, is now marketed as a drug called
digitalin and is used to treat heart disease.
New drugs are now tested extensively before marketing – it can take over 10 years.
Clinical testing – I Small group of healthy volunteers assess how the body deals with the drug
Clinical testing – II Small group of volunteer patients are treated to assess effectiveness.
Clinical testing – III Large group of patients divided into two for double-blind trial ie neither
doctor nor patient knows if they’re given the drug or an inactive placebo.
2.4.9
2.4.10
A seed contains an embryonic plant with its own food supply, inside a protective coat.
When conditions are suitable (water, oxygen, warmth), they re-start growth: germination. They
absorb water through the micropyle causing the cells to expand and rupture the seed coat.
Water triggers metabolic changes: growth substances are activated and enzymes (amylase,
maltase, lipase and protease) are released to digest stored food.
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Seeds are vital to the survival of a plant as they:
protect the embryo by means of a lignified seed coat (testa)
aid dispersal to avoid competition with the parent plant
provide nutrition for the new plant
When the ovule in a flowering plant is fertilised by the nucleus in a pollen grain, it develops
into a seed. This happens inside the ovary, which develops into a fruit.
Some seeds store food in endosperm tissue rather than in the cotyledons.
Some seeds germinate as soon as conditions are suitable. Others are dormant and must be
activated by eg:
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2.4.11
Seeds (particularly of cereal crops) are useful in animal and human diets. Carbohydrate
polymers and oils also have major industrial uses.
Sustainability means we can keep using the resources in the long term without harming the
environment.
Burning plant-based fuels also produces carbon dioxide, but it was recently absorbed when the
plants grew. However, there are still problems eg:
paper bags are less strong than plastic bags and disintegrate when wet
degradation of waste requires aerobic organisms, so little happens in deep landfill sites
closer to the surface, methane (a greenhouse gas) is often produced
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2.4.12
Artificial selection involves choosing plants with advantageous features and then breeding
them eg by self-pollinating or saving seeds from one year to plant during the following year.
This has gone on for thousands of years, but is a very slow process.
New plants are produced by spontaneous mutation, which may be induced by chemicals or
radiation. Many die, but some are fertile and useful.
If a plant doesn’t normally self-pollinate, inbreeding depression can occur: a loss of size,
yield and fertility.
Two inbred lines can be crossed resulting in hybrid vigour: plants more vigorous than either
parent.
Hybridising two different species of plants is possible: wheat currently used in bread making
was produced in this way.
Antibiotic resistance marker genes are used to identify successfully modified cells, which are
then micropropagated to produce parent plants.
So long as food is clearly labelled, people Increased herbicide use to control resistant
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have the choice of eating GM products, or crops.
not.
Companies hold patents for the GM crops
and developing countries can’t afford them.
2.4.15
The atmosphere is a thin layer of gases extending 100km above the Earth’s surface. It keeps the
Earth’s average temperature stable and suitable for living organisms.
1. The Sun radiates energy (mostly visible light) and the Earth absorbs some of it.
2. Earth warms up and radiates infra-red back into space.
3. Some is absorbed by greenhouse gases and the atmosphere (and the Earth) is warmed.
Although methane absorbs more infrared radiation than carbon dioxide does, it breaks down
quicker and there is less of it.
Greenhouse factor 1 20
2.4.16
See Figure 4.68 on page 206 for a full diagram of the carbon cycle.
Two factors are likely to be mainly responsible for the imbalance in the carbon cycle and the
increased levels in carbon dioxide concentration:
combustion of fossil fuels: coal is formed over millions of years from plants which
photosynthesised converting CO2 into carbohydrate. It remains as a carbon sink until the
CO2 is released back into the atmosphere through combustion.
deforestation: mature forests are stable releasing the same amount of CO2 through
respiration (and decay) as they absorb in photosynthesis. Cutting the trees down and
either burning them or leaving them to decay adds CO2 to the air.
Carbon dioxide levels are not rising as fast as calculations predict. This may be because:
increased levels stimulate photosynthesis
more is dissolving in the ocean
more is stored as organic compounds in the soil
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A biofuel eg wood, straw, dried chicken litter is any source of energy produced, directly in
plants or indirectly in animals, by recent photosynthesis.
This provides a renewable energy source and is carbon dioxide neutral. When combusted,
there is no net increase in CO2 levels, unless transporting the biofuel involves combustion of
fossil fuels.
In Brazil, alcohol produced from the refining of sugar cane is added to petrol to make gasohol.
Reafforestation involved planting young trees which, because of rapid growth, absorb a lot of
CO2 for photosynthesis. As the forest matures, in will no longer be a net absorber.
2.4.17
Practical on investigating how carbon dioxide may affect global warming (Activity 4.23)
2.4.18
Evidence for global warming comes from a range of sources. Look carefully at the graphs and
tables of data on pages 190-195 – you need to be able to describe and analyse them.
TEMPERATURE RECORDS
Some have been kept since the 17th century – they are useful although not as accurate as current
data.
PEAT BOGS
Climate information for up to 12000 years ago can be obtained by studying plant and insect
remains, the decay of which has been slowed or stopped by the anaerobic or acidic conditions
in a peat bog.
Pollen Vast amounts of pollen, protected by a tough outer layer can be carbon dated to indicate
the species of trees which grew in a particular period of time. Since different
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species flourish in different environmental conditions, information on the climate
at that time can be discerned.
Beetles On the same basis, climatic information can be obtained from the exoskeletons of
preserved bog beetles, which responded to climate change faster than plants.
DENDROCHRONOLOGY
The study of tree rings gives a clue to past climatic conditions. Each year a new layer of xylem
is laid down: wide vessels in spring, narrower vessels in summer. The wider the ring, the more
the tree grew – more than likely because the conditions were warmer or wetter.
ICE SAMPLES
Bubbles of air trapped in ice can be analysed to estimate carbon dioxide levels. The ratio of
different oxygen isotopes gives an indication of the temperature at that time.
A combination of information from these sources helps provide evidence to support the various
theories on global warming which have been proposed.
2.4.19
Actual data gathered can be extrapolated to predict future changes. While a straight line graph
is easy to extrapolate, a curve is best dealt with by a computer.
These predictions don’t account for change in the future period of time eg reductions in carbon
dioxide emissions, or increased levels due to better living conditions in developing nations.
Global warming due to increased carbon dioxide levels is only one factor which may affect
climate change.
Other include:
other greenhouse gases eg methane, CFCs and nitrous oxide
aerosols – extremely small liquid particles in the atmosphere
cloud cover
the fraction of the earth covered with ice and snow and the consequent reflection
Modelling climate change is done by computer on programmes which take all these factors into
account and predict the interaction between them.
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Several major climate models are in use, but they differ (one predicts a fall of 50C for the UK
and another a rise of 50C) and have limitations due to:
limited data
limited knowledge of how the climate system works
limited computer resources
failure to consider all factors affecting climate change
changing trends in snow/ice cover and CO2 emissions
2.4.20
DISTRIBUTION OF SPECIES
A community is a group of species found in the same place at the same time. Climate change
affects the balance between species: some flourish and become dominant in the new conditions,
others die. If they are mobile, or have good seed dispersal the distribution of the species may
change. Pests and diseases may also spread to new areas.
Plant growth is determined mainly by the rate of photosynthesis. This is affected by the
interaction of a number of factors such as temperature, carbon dioxide concentration and
light intensity according to the law of limiting factors.
Overall, crop production in cooler climates will benefit from climate change, whereas warmer
tropical regions may suffer from poorer yields.
Spawning, hatching and growth rates in animals eg trout are often cued by temperature. In
these fish, growth ceases when a critical temperature is reached, so global warming could result
in underweight organisms.
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In reptiles, the male:female ratio could be affected, as this is determined by temperature.
Phenology is the study of natural events in the lives of animals and plants eg time of flowering,
fruiting, egg laying, hatching, migration. These events are frequently related to seasonal
change.
Life cycles of organisms are intricately related eg hatching of marine worm eggs to coincide
with a high level of phytoplankton. The eggs hatch in response to day length
(photoperiodism) while the phytoplankton grow in response to temperature. A mismatch in
timing could result in a lack of food supply for the worms.
2.4.21
The rate of metabolic reactions is controlled by enzymes, which are temperature dependent.
A reaction occurs when the substrate binds with the active site of the enzyme forming an
enzyme-substrate complex.
The likelihood of this happening depends on a collision occurring between the two molecules
and this is determined by their kinetic energy ie how fast they are moving.
Up to a certain point, increasing temperature increases the rate of reaction. The kinetic energy
of substrate and enzyme molecules is increased, they collide more frequently and more ES
complexes are formed.
After the optimum temperature (at which the rate of reaction is highest)increasing
temperature causes the atoms in the enzyme to vibrate. Bonds holding its 3D structure in place
break. The active site changes shape so that the substrate no longer fits in – the enzyme is
denatured.
2.4.22
Practical on the effects of temperature on the development of brine shrimps. (Activity 4.18)
2.4.23
Climate change is a controversial issue with major political and economic implications.
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While scientific method aims to be objective, the evidence in this case is limited, arguably
imprecise and open to differing interpretation by different people.
Business interests, political manoeuvring, cultural and ethical issues all influence the way
conclusions are drawn and action implemented.
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