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Biology - Bios (Life) Logos (Study) : Earth and Life Science Reviewer

The document provides an overview of biology and its branches, including microbiology, botany, zoology, and more. It discusses key topics like biotechnology, how life began, evolution, chemical evolution, the cell theory, prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, cell structures like the cell membrane, cytoplasm, and organelles. Some major points covered include the disproving of spontaneous generation through experiments by Redi, Spallanzani, and Pasteur, Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection, and the cell theory stating that all living things are made of cells.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views

Biology - Bios (Life) Logos (Study) : Earth and Life Science Reviewer

The document provides an overview of biology and its branches, including microbiology, botany, zoology, and more. It discusses key topics like biotechnology, how life began, evolution, chemical evolution, the cell theory, prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells, cell structures like the cell membrane, cytoplasm, and organelles. Some major points covered include the disproving of spontaneous generation through experiments by Redi, Spallanzani, and Pasteur, Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection, and the cell theory stating that all living things are made of cells.

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Earth and Life Science Reviewer

(magsi)

Biology - bios (life) ; logos (study)


● deals with the structures, functions, and relationships of living organisms with the
environment
● (deals with) molecular, cellular, organismal, population, community, ecosystem, and
biome

Branches of Biology
● Microbiology : deals with microorganisms
● Botany : plants
● Zoology : animals
● Mycology : fungi
● Phycology : algae
● Taxonomy: naming and classifying organisms
● Cytology : cells
● Embryology : formation and development of organisms
● Anatomy : structured and body parts
● Physiology : functions of organisms and its parts
● Biochemistry : chemical processes
● Genetics : genes, genetic variation, heredity
● Evolution
● Ecology : relationships of organisms with their environment and other organisms
● Molecular Biology : chemical structures and processes of molecules
● Genomics : structure, function, evolution, mapping, and editing of genomes
● Proteomics : proteins
● Immunology : immune systems in all organisms
● Bioinformatics : biological data

Biotechnology
● application of biological concepts to make beneficial products
● used basic molecules of life to make new products
● BT Corn : farmers put viruses in crops to prevent insects from flocking them
● Helps in the following:
1. energy production
2. agriculture
3. food processing
4. bioremediation
5. disease treatment
6. pharmaceuticals
7. waste treatment

How did life begin?


● Divine Creation
● Filipino version of Malakas at Maganda (Spanish)
● Spontaneous Generation : living things originated spontaneously from inanimate objects;
abiogenesis ; proposed by Aristotle ; believed by many for at least 2,000 years

John Needham (1713 - 1781)


● put a medium in a flask and boiled / sterilized it, then covered it
● did not heat the medium long enough to kill the microorganisms

Law of Biogenesis
● life came from pre-existing life
● proven through a series of experiments
● “In nature, life comes only from life and that of its kind.”

Francesco Redi (1626 - 1697)


● first to disprove spontaneous generation
● 3 jars (open, gauze, sealed), meat inside

Lazzaro Spallanzani (1729 - 1799)


● also helped debunk spontaneous generation
● flask with medium ; also sterilized it ; one sealed, one open

Louis Pasteur (1822 - 1895)


● one of the first to disprove spontaneous generation
● boiled a medium inside a flask with a thin tube, waited, there was no growth

Evolution
● Empedocles (493 - 435 B.C.)
> Greek Philosopher
> all living organism types gradually evolved by the process of trial-and-error ; recombination of
animal parts
> Father of Evolutionary Naturalism
● Pierre Louis Moreau de Maupertuis (1698 - 1759)
> particles from both mother and father are responsible for the characteristics of the child
> child embryo goes through various stages
● Carl von Linné (Linnaeus) (1707 - 1778)
> morphological and anatomical
> homologous organs belong to species of the same evolutionary origin and serves a different
function, like the arm of a man and a seal’s flippers
> analogous organs are from species with different evolutionary origin and serve a similar
purpose
● Charles Darwin (1809 - 1882)
> all species of life have descended over time from common ancestors
> natural selection - struggle for existence
> Survival of the Fittest
● Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744 - 1809)

Chemical Evolution
● life originated from chemicals and molecules
● Alexander Oparin (1894 - 1980)
> simple organic and inorganic materials might have combined into complex organic
compounds and then the latter might have formed the primordial organism
● Friedrich Wöhler (1800 - 1882)
> living organisms are fundamentally different from nonliving organisms because they contain a
non-physical element
● Miller-Urey experiment : life came from inorganic molecules that were converted by
lightning to organic molecules which became the first precursor for living things

Panspermia / Cosmozoic Theory


● Svante August Arrhenius (1859 - 1927)
> life might have been carried from planet to planet by the transport of spores

Characteristics of Life
1.Movement / Locomotion
● self-initiated change in an organism’s position
● motion of internal parts
● possible with the use of locomotory organs
● microorganisms, plants, animals, humans
● search for food, reproduction, and response to the changing environment
● peristalsis
2. Responsiveness / Irritability
● ability to sense changes taking place inside or outside the body and to react to these
changes
● capability of an organism to respond to stimuli or external factors like light, temperature,
pressure, sound, presence of chemical substances, food sources, etc.
3. Growth and Development
● increase in body size
● occurs whenever an organism produces new body materials faster than the old ones
● Growth - increase in all parts of the body brought about by cellular development
● Development - improvement in the level of functioning
4. Reproduction
● process by which microscopic cells produce others like themselves
● body parts
● cell division (unicellular)
● production of new individuals
● sexual and asexual reproduction
● Sexual - male and female gametes
● Asexual - an organism makes copies of itself
5. Death
● all living things die.
6. Cellular Organization
 all living organisms are composed of 1 or more cells
7. Heredity
 all organisms possess a genetic system that is inherited
8. Evolution
 changes in characteristics of a group of organisms over time
9. Adaptation
 capability to make adjustments to the changes in the environment
10. Circulation
 movement of substances in our body
11. Respiration
 obtaining oxygen
12. Digestion / Metabolism
● catabolism – breaking down of organic matter to harvest energy and molecules
● anabolism – use of energy to build up molecules (ex. Photosynthesis)
13. Homeostasis
 ability to maintain a constant internal environment despite the changes in the external
environment

Maintenance of Life
● water
● food
● oxygen
● heat
● pressure

The Cell
Robert Hooke (1635 - 1703)
● Micrographia, 1665
● microscopic observation of thin slices of cork
● first to use the term ‘cell’

Cell Theory
1. all organisms are made up of cells
2. the cell is the basic unit of life / organization of all organisms
3. all cells come from pre-existing cells

Cell
Prokaryotes (pro - ‘before’ ; karyon - ‘nut’ or ‘kernel’)
● Bacteria
● Archaea
● DNA is naked, circular, and has no introns
● Has no nucleus
● is not membrane-bound
● 70S ribosomes
● Binary fission
● Haploids
● Are smaller (~1-5μm)
Eukaryotes (eu - ‘good’ or ‘true’)
● Eukarya
● DNA is bound to protein, is linear, and has introns
● Has a nucleus
● is membrane-bound
● 80S ribosomes
● diploid or more
● mitosis / meiosis
● are larger (~10-100μm)

Eukaryotic Cells
Cell Membrane / Plasma Membrane
● barrier that contains cell contents, separates them from the surrounding environment
● controls the exit and entrance of substances
> selectively permeable membrane
> permeable membrane
● protection & regulation
● two phospholipid layers (bilayer) arranged tail to tail in which protein molecules float
> hydrophilic heads - phosphate groups
> hydrophobic tails
Cell Transport
● Active Transport
> needs the help of ATP
> bulk transport
> solute pumping
> against concentration gradient
> sodium-potassium pump
> Vesicular Transport (vesicles)
> exocytosis and endocytosis
1. Exocytosis
- moves substances out of the cell
- means to actively secrete hormones, mucus, and other cell products
2. Endocytosis
- engulf extracellular substances
- Phagocytosis : cell-eating ; pseudopods
- Pinocytosis : cell-drinking
- Receptor-mediated endocytosis : receptor proteins binds only with certain substances ;
enzymes, some hormones, cholesterol, iron, and unfortunately, the flu viruses
● Passive Transport
> does not require energy
1. Osmosis
- movement of solvent molecules from a region of lower concentration to a region of
higher concentration through a selectively permeable membrane
- only solvent particles move
- involves semipermeable membrane
2. Diffusion
- can pass through freely
- more concentration (solute) to less concentration
- solvent and solute particles move to equalize concentration
- no semipermeable membrane involved
3. Facilitated Diffusion
- needs assistance of protein membrane channels (non-specific & specific transporters)
- aquaporins (water channels/pores) created by proteins in the membranes
- Cell Tonicity (solute concentration)
● Hypotonic : more water outside, less water inside
● Hypertonic : more water inside, less water outside
● Isotonic : equal water inside and outside

Cytoplasm
● outside nucleus, inside plasma membrane
● is made up of water and nutrients
● site of most cellular activities - “factory area”
● removes waste
● converts glucose to energy
● cell respiration

Centrosome
● microtubule organizing center
● directs the migration of chromosomes
Centriole
● made up of microtubules
● 2 centrioles in animal cells
● creates a network of threads across the cell

Endoplasmic Reticulum
● almost half the cell membrane
● provides a network for carrying substances from one part of the cell to another
● fluid-filled tube-like structures
● Rough (R.E.R.)
- studded with ribosomes
- cell’s membrane factory (building materials of cellular membranes are formed in or
around it)
- folds and transports proteins
● Smooth (S.E.R.)
- no ribosomes
- lipid metabolism
- manufacture of steroid hormones
- cell detox

Ribosomes
● site of protein synthesis
● amino acids

Golgi Apparatus
● stack of flattened membranous sacs called cisternae
● processing, packaging, and delivering proteins and other substances

Vesicles
● phospholipid membranes
● ships Golgi body products
● active transport (vesicular)

Lysosomes
● “breakdown bodies”
● powerful digestive enzymes
● cell demolition site
● abundant in phagocytes

Peroxisomes
● enzymes that use O2 to detoxify harmful or poisonous substances
● disarm dangerous free radicals
● converts free radicals to H2O2. enzyme catalase converts excess H2O2 to H2O
● Free Radicals : molecule that contains 1 or more unpaired electrons in its outermost
orbital ; steals electrons from healthy cells ; starts a chain reaction
● Antioxidants : have an extra electron and give it to free radicals

Nucleus
● control center
● takes shape of cell
● contains the genetic information (DNA)

Chromatin
● macromolecule synthesis
● during cell division, it threads coil and condenses to form dense chromosomes
● protein (histone) and DNA molecules
Nucleolus
● little nucleus
● RNA and proteins
● no surrounding membrane
● produces ribosomes

Mitochondria
● cell respiration
● powerhouse
● provides most of ATP needed for all cellular work

Flagella
● cell appendage
● extension of cell membrane
● locomotion

Cilia
● whip-like cellular extension
● move substances along the cell surface
● for locomotion
● absorbing nutrients (digestive system)

Cell Wall
● made of cellulose and lignin
● structural support and protection
● filtering mechanism
● prevents over-expansion when water enters the cell ; pressure vessel

Plastids
● plants and protists have these
● for pigment
● Chloroplasts - contains chlorophyll, the green pigment
● Chromoplasts - yellow, orange, red colored plastids
● Leucoplasts - colorless plastids (ex. starch in potatoes) ; iodine is used to locate the
presence of starch

Chloroplasts
● organelles that conduct photosynthesis
● captures energy from sunlight, converts it into sugar

Central Vacuole
● supports cell structure
● stores water
● also stores proteins and soluble carbohydrates
Animal Cells
● have no cell wall
● eats other cells
● cannot absorb liquid
● variety of shapes
● has lysosomes
Plant Cells
● have chloroplasts
● have vacuoles
● can absorb liquids
● food by photosynthesis
● has cell wall made of cellulose

Similarities:
● have nucleus
● are eukaryotes
● size

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