Biology

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Biology

Cells

Organisms can be prokaryotes and eukaryotes


 Prokaryotes – smaller and simpler (e.g. bacteria)
 Eukaryotes – complex and include all animal and plant cells

Animal cells
Subcellular structures – different parts of a cell

 Nucleus – genetic material that controls the activity of the cell


 Mitochondria – where most of the aerobic respiration. Respiration transfers energy that the
cell needs to work
 Cytoplasm – gel-like substance where most of the chemical reactions happen. Contains
enzymes which control these chemical reactions
 Cell membrane – holds the cell together and controls what goes in and out
 Ribosomes – where proteins are made in the cell

Plant cells
 Rigid cell wall – made of cellulose. Supports and strengthens cell
 Chloroplasts – where photosynthesis occurs, which makes food for the plant. Contains green
substance called chlorophyll which absorbs light needed for photosynthesis
 Permanent vacuole – contains cell sap a weak solution of sugar and salts.
 + EVERYTHING IN ANIMAL CELLS

Bacterial cells are much smaller


 Bacteria are prokaryotes
 Don’t have nucleus – instead single circular strand of DNA that floats in cytoplasm
 May also contain one or more small rings of DNA called plasmids
 Don’t have chloroplasts or mitochondria
Microscopy

 Light microscopes – use light and lenses to form an image and magnify it. Can see individual
cells and large subcellular structures e.g. nuclei
 Electron microscopes – use electrons to form and image and magnify it. Have a much higher
magnification than light microscopes; higher resolution; see smaller things in more detail,
e.g. internal structure of mitochondria and chloroplasts, ribosomes and plasmids

Formula of magnification

magnification=image ¿ ¿ real ¿ ¿ ¿ ¿

REQUIRED PRACTICAL – MICROSCOPY

1. Add a drop of water to the middle of a clean slide


2. Cut an onion and separate into different layers. Use tweezers to peel off some epidermal tissue from
the bottom of one of the layers.
3. Using the tweezers, place the epidermal tissue into the water on the slide
4. Add a drop of iodine solution – used to highlight objects in a cell by adding colour to them
5. Place a cover slip on top.
6. Use a light microscope to see the slide
7. Clip the slide on the stage
8. Select the lowest power objective lens
9. Use the coarse adjustment knob to move the stage up to just below the objective lens
10. Look into the eyepiece. Use the coarse adjustment knob to move the stage downwards until the
image is roughly in focus
11. Adjust the focus with the fine adjustment knob until there is a clear image
Cell differentiation and specialisation

Cells differentiate to become specialised

Differentiation – the process by which a cell changes to become specialised for its job
 As cells change, they develop different subcellular structures and turn into different types of cells. This
allows them to carry out specific functions.
 Most differentiation occurs as an organism develops. In most animal cells, the ability to differentiate is
then lost at an early stage, after they become specialised. However, lots of plant cells don’t ever lose
this ability.
 Cells that differentiate in mature animals are mainly used for repairing and replacing cells such as, skin
or blood cells

Examples of specialised cells


Sperm cells are specialised for reproduction
 Function – to get male DNA to the female DNA
 Has a long tail and streamlined head – to help swim to the egg
 Lots of mitochondria in the cell to provide the energy needed
 Also carries enzymes in its head to digest through the egg cell membrane

Nerve cells are specialised for rapid signalling


 Function – to carry electrical signals from one part of the body to another.
 Are long – to cover more distance; branched connections at their ends – to connect to other nerve
cells and form a network throughout the body.

Muscle cells are specialised for contraction


 Function – contract quickly
 Are long – space to contract; contain lots of mitochondria – to generate the energy needed for
contraction

Root hair cells are specialised for absorbing water and minerals
 Are cells on the surface of plant roots, which grow into the long “hairs” that stick out into the soil
 Gives the plant a big surface area for absorbing water and mineral ions from the soil

Phloem and xylem cells are specialised for transporting substances


 Function – transport substances such as food and water around plants
 To form the tubes, the cells are long and joined end to end
 Xylem cells are hollow in the centre
 Phloem cells have very few subcellular structures so that stuff can flow through them
Stem cells

Embryonic stem cells can turn into ANY type of cell

Undifferentiated cells (stem cells) – can divide to produce lots more undifferentiated cells. They can
differentiate into different types of cells, depending on what instructions they’re given

 Stem cells are found in human embryos


 Adults have stem cells, but can only be found in certain places, e.g. bone marrow
 Unlike embryonic stem cells, adult stem cells cannot turn into any other type of cell – only
certain ones such as, blood cells
 Stem cells are grown in labs to produce clones (genetically identical cells) and made to
differentiate into specialised cells to use in medicine or research

Stem cells may be able to cure many diseases


 Medicine already uses adult stem cells to cure disease. E.g. stem cells transferred from the bone
marrow of a healthy person can replace faulty cells in sick people in the patient who receives them
 Embryonic stem cells could also be used to replace faulty stem cells in sick people – can make insulin
producing cells for people with diabetes, nerve cells for people paralysed by spinal injuries etc.
 In therapeutic cloning an embryo could be made to have the same genetic information as the patient
– this means the stem cells produced will contain the same genes and so would not be rejected by the
patient’s body if used to replace faulty cells
 Risks – stems cells grown in labs may become contaminated with a virus and can make the person
sicker.

Some people are against stem cell research


 Human embryos shouldn’t be used for experiments since it could be a potential human life
 Others think curing patient who already exist and who are suffering is more important than
the rights of the embryos
 However, embryos used in research are usually unwanted ones from fertility clinics which if
not used for research, would probably be destroyed
 Although, scientists should concentrate more on finding and developing other sources of
stem cells, so people can be helped without having to use embryos
 In some countries, stem cell research is banned but it’s allowed in the UK as long as it
follows strict guidelines

Stem cells can produce identical plants


 In plants, stem cells are found in the meristems (parts of the plant where growth occurs)
 Throughout the plants entire life, cells in the meristem tissues can differentiate into any type
of plant cell
 These stem cells, can be used to produce clones of whole plants quickly and cheaply
 Can be used to grow more plants or rare species
 Can also be used to grow crops of identical plants that have desired features for farmers,
e.g. disease resistance
Chromosomes and mitosis

Chromosomes contain genetic information

Chromosomes – coiled up lengths of DNA molecules

 Nucleus contains genetic materials in the form of chromosomes


 Each chromosome carries a large number of genes. Different genes control the development of
different characteristics, e.g. hair colour
 Body cells normally have two copies of each chromosome – one from ‘mother’ and the other from
‘father’
 23 pairs of chromosomes in a human cell

The cell cycle makes cells for growth, development and repair

Cell cycle – where body cells in multicellular organisms divide to reproduce new cells.
The stage of the cell cycle when the cell divides is called mitosis

 Multicellular organisms use mitosis to grow or replace cells that have been damaged
 Then end of the cell cycle results in two new cells identical to the original cell, with the same number
of chromosomes.

Growth and DNA replication


1. In cell that’s not dividing, the DNA is all spread out in long strings
2. Before it divides, the cell ahs to grow and increase the amount of subcellular structures such as
mitochondria and ribosomes
3. It then duplicates its DNA – so there’s one copy for each new cell. The DNA is copied and forms X-
shaped chromosomes. Each new ‘arm’ of the chromosome is an exact duplicate of the other.

Mitosis
4. The chromosomes lined up at the centre of the cell and cell fibres pull them apart. The two arms of
each chromosome go to opposite ends of the cell
5. Membranes form around each of the sets of chromosomes. These become the nuclei of the two new
cells – the nucleus has divided.
6. Lastly the cytoplasm and cell membrane divide

The cell has now produced two new daughter cells. The daughter cells contain the same DNA – they’re
identical. Their DNA is also identical to the parent cell.
Diffusion

Diffusion – is the spreading out of particles from an area of higher concentration to an area of lower
concentration

 Happens in both solutions and gases – because the particles in these substances are free to move
around randomly
 The simplest type is when different gases diffuse through each other. E.g. perfume

The bigger the concentration gradient (the difference in concentration), the faster the diffusion
rate.
A higher temperature will also give a faster diffusion rate because the particles have more energy,
so move around faster.

Cell membranes…
 Holds the cell together and let things in and out
 Dissolved substances can move in and out of cells by diffusion
 Very small molecules can diffuse through cell membrane – e.g. oxygen, amino acids, and
water
 Big molecules cannot like starch and protein can’t fit though the membrane
 Like diffusion in air, particles flow through the cell membrane from where there is a higher
concentration to a lower concentration.

The larger the surface area of the membrane, the faster the diffusion rate because more particles
can pass through at once.
Osmosis

Osmosis – the movement of water molecules across a partially permeable membrane from a region
on higher water concentration to a region of lower concentration.

Partially permeable membrane – membrane with very small holes. Only molecules like water can
pass through

 Water molecules pass both ways through the membrane during osmosis – because water
molecules move randomly all the time
 But because there are more water molecules on one side than on the other, there’s a steady
net flow of water into the region with fewer water molecules, e.g. into the stronger sugar
solution.
 Means the strong sugar solution gets more dilute
 Osmosis is a type of diffusion – passive movement of water particles from an area of higher
water concentration to an area of lower water concentration
Active Transport

Root hairs take in minerals using active transport


 Active transport allows the plant to absorb minerals from a very dilute solution, against a
concentration gradient. This is essential for its growth. But active transport needs energy
from respiration to make it work
 Also happens in humans – e.g. taking glucose from the gut and from the kidney tubules

Active transport is used in the gut when there is a lower concentration of nutrients in the gut but a
higher concentration of nutrients in the blood.
 When there is a higher concentration of glucose and amino acids in the gut, they diffuse
naturally into the blood
 BUT – sometimes there is a lower concentration of nutrients in the gut than there is in the
blood
 This means that the concentration gradient is the wrong way
 The same process used in plants roots is used – active transport
 Active transport allowed the nutrients to be taken into the blood, despite the fact that the
concentration gradient is the wrong way.
This means that glucose can be taken into the bloodstream when its concentration in the blood is
already higher than in the gut. It can then be transported to cells, where it is used for respiration.
Cell Organisation

Large multicellular organisms are made up of organ systems

 Cells are the basic building blocks that make up all living organisms
 Large multicellular organisms (e.g. humans) have different systems inside them for exchanging and
transporting materials

Similar cells are organised into tissues


Tissue – a group of similar cells that work together to carry out a particular function.
 Can include more than one type of cell
 Exp. of tissues
o Muscular tissue – contracts to move whatever it is attached to
o Glandular tissue – makes and secretes chemicals like enzymes and hormones
o Epithelial tissue – covers some parts of the body, e.g. the gut

Tissues are organised into organs


Organ – a group of different tissues that work together to perform a certain function
 Exp, the stomach is an organ made up of these tissues…
o Muscular tissue – moves the stomach wall to churn up the food
o Glandular tissue – makes digestive juices to digest food
o Epithelial tissue – covers the outside and inside of the stomach

Organs are organised into organ systems


Organ system – a group of organs working together to perform a certain function
 Exp, the digestive system breaks down and absorbs food and is made up of these organs…
o Glands – (e.g. the pancreas and salivary glands) which produce digestive juices
o Stomach and small intestine – digest food
o Liver – produces bile
o Small intestine – absorbs soluble food molecules
o Large intestine – absorbs water from undigested food, leaving faeces
Orans systems work together to make entire organisms.
Enzymes

Enzymes are catalysts produces by living things


 Living things have thousands of different chemical reactions going on inside them all the time. These
reactions need to be carefully controlled – to get the right amounts of substances
 Reactions can happen quicker if the quicker if the temperature is raised.
 BUT there is a limit to how far you can raise the temperature before the cells becomes denatured

Catalyst – a substance which increases the speed o a reaction, without being changed or used up in
the reaction

 Enzymes are all large proteins and all proteins are made up of chains of amino acids. These chains are
folded into unique shapes, which enzymes need to do their jobs

Enzymes have special shapes so they can catalyse reactions


 Chemical reactions usually involve things either being split apart or joined together
 Every enzyme has an active site with a unique shape that fits onto the substance involved in the
reaction
 Enzymes usually only catalyse one specific reaction - because for the enzyme to work, the substrate
has to fit into its active site. If the substrate doesn’t match the enzyme’s active site, then the reaction
won’t be catalysed
 ‘Lock and key’ method

Enzymes need the right temperature…


 Changing the temperature changed the rate of a reaction
 Higher temperature increases the rate at first
 But if it is too hot, some of the bonds holding the enzyme together break. This changes the shape of
the enzyme’s active site, so the substrate will not fit anymore – enzyme is denatured.
 All enzymes have an optimum temperature that they work best at.

… and the right pH


 If pH is too high or too low, it interferes with the bonds holding the enzyme together
 This changed the shape of the active site and denatures the enzyme
 All enzymes have an optimum pH that they work best at – often pH 7
 But not always, e.g. Pepsin is an enzyme used to break down protein in the stomach. It works best at
a pH 2.
Enzymes and Digestion

Digestive enzymes break down big molecules


 Starch, proteins and fats are big molecules. There too big to pass through the walls of the digestive
system, so digestive enzymes break these big molecules down into smaller ones like sugars (e.g.
glucose and maltose), amino acids, glycerol, and fatty acids. These smaller, soluble molecules can pass
easily through the walls of the digestive system, allowing them to be absorbed into the bloodstream.

Carbohydrases convert carbohydrates into smaller sugars


- Amylase is an example of carbohydrase. It breaks down starch
Amylase is made in three places
 Salivary glands
 Pancreas
 Small intestine

Protease convert protein into amino acids


Proteases are made in three places
 Stomach (called pepsin there)
 Pancreas
 Small intestine

Lipases convert lipids into glycerol and fatty acids


Lipases are made in two places
 Pancreas
 Small intestine

The body makes good use of the products of digestion. They can be used to make new carbohydrates, proteins
and lipids. Some of the glucose (a carbohydrate) that is made is used in respiration

Bile neutralises the stomach acid and emulsifies fats


 Bile is produced in the liver
 Stored in the gall bladder before it’s released into the small intestine.
 The hydrochloric acid in the stomach makes the pH too acidic for enzymes in the small intestine to
work properly.
 Bile is alkaline – it neutralises the acid and makes conditions alkaline. The enzymes in the small
intestine work best in these alkaline conditions
 It emulsifies fats – breaks them down into tiny droplets. Gives a bigger surface area of fat for the
enzyme lipase to work on which makes digestion faster.
Enzyme and Digestion

The breakdown of food is catalysed by enzymes


 Enzymes used in the digestive system are produced by specialised cells in glands and in the gut lining
 Different enzymes catalyse the breakdown of different food molecules

Salivary glands – produce amylase enzyme in the saliva


Gullet – oesophagus
Liver – where bile is produced
Gall bladder – where bile is stored, before it is release into the small intestine
Stomach –
1. It pummels the food with its muscular walls
2. Produces the protease enzyme, pepsin
3. Produces hydrochloric acid for two reasons,
a. To kill bacteria
b. To give the right pH for the protease enzymes to work
Pancreas – produces protease, amylase and lipase enzymes. It releases these into the small intestine
Large intestine – where excess water is absorbed from the food
Small intestine –
1. Produces protease, amylase and lipase enzymes to complete digestion
2. Also where digested food is absorbed out of the digestive system into the blood
Rectum – where the faeces (made up of mainly indigestible food) are stored before they are
excreted
The Lungs

The lungs are in the thorax (top part of the body)


 Thorax is separated from the lower part of the body by the diaphragm
 Lungs are protected by the rib cage and surrounded by pleural membranes
 Air breathed in goes through the trachea. This splits into two tubes called bronchi one going into each
lung
 The bronchi split into progressively smaller tubes called bronchioles
 The bronchioles end at small bags called alveoli where the gas exchange takes place.

Alveoli carry out gas exchange in the body


 The lungs contain millions of air sacs called alveoli, surrounded by a network of blood
capillaries. This is where gas exchange happens.

 The blood passing next to alveoli has just returned to the lungs from the rest of the body, so
it contains lots of carbon dioxide and very little oxygen
o Oxygen diffuses out of the alveolus (high concentration) into the blood (low
concentration)
o Carbon dioxide diffuses out of the blood (high concentration) into the alveolus (low
concentration) to be breathed out.

 When the blood reaches the body cells, oxygen is released from the red blood cells (where
there is a high concentration) and diffuses into the body cells (where concentration is low).

 At the same time carbon dioxide diffuses out of the body cells (where there is a high
concentration) into the blood (where there is a low concentration). It is then carried back to
the lungs.
Circulatory System – The Heart

It’s a double circulatory system


The circulatory system is mase of the heart, blood vessels and blood. Humans have a double
circulatory system.
 In the first one, the right ventricle pumps deoxygenated blood to the lungs to take in oxygen. The
blood then returns to the heart.
 In the second one, the left ventricle pumps oxygenated blood around to all the other organs of the
body. The blood gives up its oxygen at the body cells and the deoxygenated blood returns to the heart
to be pumped out to the lungs again

The heart contracts to pump blood around the body


 The heart is a pumping organ that keeps the blood flowing around the body. The walls of the heart
are made up of muscle tissue (mostly)
 The heart has valves to make sure the blood flows in the right direction – it prevents backward flow.

 Four chambers of the heart…


o Right atrium
o Right ventricle
o Left atrium
o Left ventricle
 How the heart uses the four chambers to pump blood around…
o Blood flows into the two atria from the vena cava and the pulmonary vein
o The atria contract, pushing blood into the ventricles
o The ventricles contract, forcing the blood into the pulmonary artery and the aorta, and out of
the heart
o The blood then flows to the organs through arteries and, returns through veins
o The atria fill again and the cycle starts over

 The heart also needs its own supply of deoxygenated blood. Arteries called the coronary arteries
branch of the aorta and surround the heart, making sure it gets the oxygenated blood that it needs.

The heart has a pacemaker


 The resting heart is controlled by a group of cells in the right atrium wall that act as a pacemaker.
 These cells produce a small electric impulse which spreads to the surrounding muscle cells, causing
them to contract.
Circulatory System – Blood Vessels

Blood vessels are designed for their function


The are three different types of blood vessels…
 Arteries – these carry the blood away from the heart
 Capillaries – these are involved in the exchange of materials at the tissues
 Veins – these carry the blood to the heart

Arteries carry blood under pressure


 The heart pumps the blood at high pressure so the artery walls are strong and elastic
 The walls are thick compared to the lumen (Hole in the middle)
 The contain thick layers of muscle to make them strong and elastic fibres to allow them to stretch and
spring back

Capillaries are really small


 Arteries branch into capillaries
 The carry the blood really close to every cell in the body to exchange substances with them
 The have permeable walls so substances can diffuse in and out
 They supply food and oxygen, and take away wastes like CO2
 Their walls are usually one cell thick. This increases the rate of diffusion by decreasing the distance
over which it occurs

Veins take blood back to the heart


 Capillaries eventually join up to form veins
 The blood is at lower pressure in the veins so the walls do not have to be thick
 They have a bigger lumen than arteries to help the blood flow despite the lower pressure
 They also have valves to help the blood flow in the right direction
Circulatory System – Blood

Red blood cells carry oxygen…


 … from the lungs to all the cells in the body
 Shape – biconcave disc, gives a large surface area for absorbing oxygen
 Don’t have a nucleus – allows more room to carry oxygen
 Haemoglobin – red pigment
 In the lungs, haemoglobin binds to oxygen to become oxyhaemoglobin. In the body tissues, the
reserve happens – oxyhaemoglobin splits up into haemoglobin and oxygen, to release oxygen to the
cells

White blood cells defend against infection


 Phagocytosis – changing of shape to engulf unwelcome microorganisms
 Others produce antibodies to fight microorganisms, as well as antitoxins to neutralise any toxins
produced by the microorganisms
 Have a nucleus

Platelets help blood clot


 Small fragments of cells
 No nucleus
 Lack of platelets can cause excessive bleeding and bruising

Plasma is the liquid that carries everything in blood


 Carries….
o Red and white blood cells and platelets
o Nutrients like glucose and amino acids – soluble products of digestion absorbed by gut
o Carbon dioxide – from organs to lungs
o Urea – from liver to kidney
o Hormones
o Proteins
o Antibodies and antitoxins produced by white blood cells.
Cardiovascular Disease

Coronary heart disease – where the coronary arteries that supply blood to the heart, get blocked by
layers of fatty material building up
Causes the arteries to become narrow so blood flow is restricted and there is a lack of oxygen to the
heart muscle – can result in a heart attack

Stents – tubes that are inserted inside arteries. They keep them open, making sure blood can pass
through to the heart
 Are a way of lowering the risks of a heart attack in people with coronary heart disease.
 Are effective for a long time and the recovery time post-surgery is relatively quick
 There are risks of complications during the operation (e.g. heart attack) and infection; developing
blood clots near the stent too

Statins reduce cholesterol in the blood


 Cholesterol is an essential lipid that your body produces and need to function properly. LDL
cholesterol can cause health problems – can cause fatty deposits to form inside arteries

Statins – drugs that can reduce the amount of LDL cholesterol present in the bloodstream. This
slows the rate of fatty deposits forming.
 Advantages…
o Can reduce the risks of strokes, coronary heart disease and heart attacks
o Can increase the amount of HDL cholesterol in bloodstream
o May prevent some other diseases
 Disadvantages…
o Long-term drug – must be taken regularly
o Negative side effects – headaches, kidney failure, liver damage, memory loss
o Effects not instant

An artificial heart can pump blood around the body


 Heart transplant using donor organs from people who have recently died, however, doctors may use
an artificial heart
Artificial hearts – mechanical devices that pump blood for a person whose own heart has failed.
Usually a temporary fix, until a heart donor can be found. Sometimes a long-term fix
 Main advantage is they are less likely to be rejected by the body’s immune system than a heart donor
 Disadvantage – in surgery lead to bleeding and infection. Also, don’t work as well as natural ones.
Blood doesn’t flow through artificial hearts as smoothly, which can cause blood clots and lead to
strokes. The patients has to take drugs to thin their blood.

Faulty heart valves can be replaced


 Can be damaged due to old age, heart attacks or infection
 Damage may cause the valve tissue to stiffen so it won’t open properly. Or a valve may become leaky
allowing blood to flow in both directions rather than just forward. This means blood doesn’t circulate
as effectively as normal
 Severe damage of valve can be treated by replacing it.
 Replacement valves can be taken from humans or other mammals (e.g. cows or pigs) – biological
valves
 Or can be man-made – mechanical valves
 Fitting an artificial valve is major surgery and there can still be problems with blood clots.
Artificial blood can keep someone alive in an emergency
 When someone loses a lot of blood there heart can still pump the remaining red blood cells as long as
the volume of their blood can be topped up
Artificial blood – is a blood substitute (e.g. a salt solution) which is used to replace the lost
volume of blood. This may give the patient enough time ot produce new blood cells. If not, blood
transfusion is needed
Health and Disease

Diseases are a major cause of ill disease


Health – the state of physical and mental wellbeing
Diseases – often responsible for causing ill health

Diseases can be communicable and non-communicable

Communicable diseases – those that spread from person to person, or between animals and people.
 Can also be caused by things like bacteria, viruses, parasites and fungi.
 Often described as contagious or infectious diseases
 Exp. measles and malaria

Non- communicable diseases – those that cannot spread between people or between animals and
people
 Generally last a long time and get worse slowly
 Exp. asthma, cancer, coronary heart disease

Different types of diseases sometimes interact


Exp.
 People with weak immune systems have an increased chance of suffering from
communicable diseases e.g. influenza – body is less likely to defend itself against the
pathogen that causes the disease.
 Some types of cancer can be triggered by infection by certain viruses. For example, infection
with some types of hepatitis virus can cause long-term infections in the liver, where the virus
lives in the cells – can lead to an increased chance of developing liver cancer.
 HPV – cervical cancer in women
 Immune system reactions in the boy cause by infection by a pathogen can sometimes trigger
allergic reactions such as skin rashes or worsen the symptoms of asthma
 Mental health issues such as depression can be triggered when someone is suffering from
severe physical health problems, particularly if they have an impact in the person’s ability to
carry out everyday activities or they affect the person’s life expectancy.

Other factors can also affect health


 Good and balanced diet – provides the body with everything it needs in the right amounts.
 Stress
 life situation – whether someone has an easy access to medication when ill or things that
can prevent you from getting ill in the first place e.g. buying healthy food

Non-communicable diseases can be costly


 Human cost…
o Dying
o People with these diseases may have a lower quality of life or a shortened life span
 Financial cost…
o NHS cost of researching and treating these diseases
o Families have to move or adapt their home to help a family member with a disease.
o Person may have to give up work – family’s income is reduced
o Reduction in workforce can affect the country’s economy
Risk Factors for Non-Communicable Diseases

Risk factors increase your chance of getting a disease


Risk factors – things that are linked to an increase in the likelihood that a person will develop a
certain disease during their life time
 Often aspects of a person’s lifestyle
 Can be the presence of certain substances in the environment (e.g. air pollution) or
substances in the body (e.g. asbestos fibres – fibres build up in the airways and cause
diseases later in life)
 Caused by several different risk factors interacting with each other rather than one factor
alone
 Lifestyle factors can have different impacts locally, nationally and globally.
E.g. in developed countries – non- communicable diseases are more common as people
generally have a higher income and can buy high-fat food. Nationally, people from deprived
areas are more likely to smoke, have a poor diet and not do exercise – means cardiovascular
disease, obesity and type 2 diabetes is higher in those areas

Some risk factors can cause a disease directly


Exp.
 Smoking – has been proven to directly cause cardiovascular disease, lung disease and lung
cancer. It damages the walls of arteries and the cells in the lining of the lungs
 Obesity – can directly cause type 2 diabetes by making the body less sensitive or resistant to
insulin meaning that it struggles to control the concentration of glucose in the blood.
 Drinking too much alcohol – can cause liver disease. Liver breaks down alcohol, but the
reaction can damage its cells. Liver cells may also be damaged when the toxic chemicals leak
from the gut due to damage to the intestines caused by alcohol. Can also affect the brain
function – can cause damage in the nerve cells, causing the brain to lose volume
 Smoking when pregnant – reduces the amount of oxygen the baby receives in the womb.
Drinking alcohol has similar effects. Alcohol can damage the baby’s cells affecting its
development and causing a wide range of issues
 Cancer can be directly caused by exposure to certain substances or radiation

Risk factors can be identified using correlation


 Correlation doesn’t always = the cause
 Exp.
o A lack of exercise and a high fat diet are heavily linked to an increased chance of
cardiovascular disease, but they can’t cause the disease directly. Is the resulting high
blood pressure and LBL cholesterol that actually causes it.
Cancer

Cancer is caused by uncontrollable cell growth and division


This uncontrolled growth and division is a result of changes that occur to the cells and result in the
formation of a tumour (a mass of cells). Not all tumours are cancerous. They can be benign or
malignant…

 Benign – where the tumour grows until there is no more room


o Tumour stays in one place (usually within a membrane) rather than invading other
tissues in the body
o This type isn’t normally dangerous, and the tumour isn’t cancerous

 Malignant – where the tumour grows and spreads to neighbouring healthy tissues
o Cells can break off and spread to other parts of the body by travelling in the
bloodstream
o Malignant cells invade healthy tissues and form secondary tumours
o Are dangerous and can be fatal – they are cancers

Risk factors can increase the chance of some cancers

Risk factors can be associated with lifestyle


 Smoking – linked to lung cancer and mouth, bowel, stomach and cervical cancer
 Obesity – linked to bowel, liver and kidney cancer. Second biggest preventable cause of
disease after smoking
 UV exposure – increased chance of developing skin cancer.
 Viral infections – infection with hepatitis B and C viruses can increase the risk for developing
liver cancer. The likelihood of becoming infected with these viruses sometimes depends of
lifestyle – e.g. can spread between people through unprotected sex or sharing needles

Risk factors can also be associated with genetics


 Mutations in the BRCA genes have been linked to an increased likelihood of developing
breast and ovarian cancer.
Plant Cell Organisation

Plant cells are organised into tissues and organs


Plants are made up of organs like stems, roots and leaves.
Plant organs work together to make organ systems
These can perform various tasks that a plant needs to survive and grow, e.g. transporting substances
around the plant.
Plant organs are made of tissues
 Exp of plant tissues
o Epidermal tissue – covers the whole plant
o Palisade mesophyll tissue – part of the leaf where most of photosynthesis happens
o Spongy mesophyll tissue – also in the leaf; contains big air spaces to allow gases to
diffuse in and out
o Xylem and phloem – transport things like water, mineral ions and food around the
plant
o Meristem tissue – found at the growing tips of shoots and roots and is able to
differentiate into different types of plant cells, allowing the plant to grow

The leaf is an organ made up of several types of tissue


1. Epidermal tissues – covered with a waxy cuticle layer. Helps reduce water loss in the plant
by evaporation
2. Upper epidermis – transparent so light can pass through it to the palisade layer
3. Palisade layer – lots of chloroplasts. Near the top of the leaf where they can get the most
light
4. Xylem ad phloem – form a network of vascular bundles, which deliver water and other
nutrients to the entire leaf and take away the glucose produced by photosynthesis. They
also help support the structure.
5. Tissues – also adapted for efficient gas exchange. E.g. the lower epidermis is full of stomata
which let CO2 diffuse directly into the leaf. The opening and closing of the stomata is
controlled by guard cells in response to environmental conditions. The air spaces in the
spongy mesophyll tissue increase the rate of diffusion of gases.
Transpiration and Translocation

Phloem tubes transport food


 Made up of elongated living cells with small pores in the end walls to allow cell sap to flow
through
 Transport food substances (mainly dissolved sugars) made in the leaves to the rest of the
plant for immediate use (e.g. in growing regions) or for storage
 Translocation – the transport foes in both directions

Xylem tubes take water up


 Made up of dead cells joined together end to end with no end walls between them and a
hole down the middle. They’re strengthened with a material called lignin
 They carry water and mineral ions from the roots to the stem and leaves
 Transpiration stream - the movement of water from the roots, through the xylem and out of
the leaves.

Transpiration and Stomata

Transpiration is the loss of water from the plant


 Transpiration is caused by the evaporation and diffusion of water from a plant’s surface.
Most transpiration happens in the leaves
 This evaporation created a slight shortage of water in the leaf and so more water is drawn
up the rest of the plant through the xylem vessels to replace it.
 This in turn means more water is drawn up from the roots, and so there’s a constant
transpiration stream of water through the plant

Transpiration is a side effect of the way leaves are adapted for photosynthesis. They have to have
stomata in them so tat gases can be exchanged easily. Because there is more water inside the plant
that in the air outside the water escapes from the leaves through the stomata by diffusion
Developing Drugs

There are three main stages in drug testing

1. In preclinical testing, drugs are tested on human cells and tissues in the lab – cannot use
these to test drugs for whole or multiple body systems, e.g. testing a drug for blood pressure
must be done on a whole animal because it has an intact circulatory system

2. Next step in preclinical testing is to test the drugs on live animals – to test if the drug works,
to find out its toxicity and to form the best dosage.
The law in Britain states that the new drug must be tested on two different live mammals.
Some think it is cruel to test on animals, others think it is the safest way to make sure a drug
isn’t dangerous before it is given to humans

3. If the drug passes the tests on animals, then it’s tested on human volunteers in a clinical
trial –
a. First, its tested on healthy volunteers – to make sure it doesn’t have any harmful
side effects. At the start, a very low dosage is given and it is gradually increased
b. If the results are good, the drug is tested on people with the illness. The optimum
dose is found.
c. To test how well the drug works, patients are randomly put into two groups. One is
given the new drug, the other is given a placebo (a substance that is like the drug
tested but doesn’t do anything). This is so the doctor can see the actual difference
d. Clinical trials are blind – patient in the study and the doctors don’t know what
they’re getting
e. The results of drug testing and drug trials aren’t published until they’ve been
through peer review. This helps to prevent false claims.
Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis produces glucose using light


 Photosynthesis uses energy to change carbon dioxide and water into glucose and oxygen.
 It takes place in the chloroplast – chlorophyll that absorbs light
 Energy is transferred to the chloroplasts from the environment by light
 Photosynthesis is endothermic – means energy is transferred from the environment in the
process

The word equation…


Carbon dioxide + water – (light) glucose + oxygen
The symbol equation…
6CO2 + 6H2O – (light)  C6H12O6 + 6O2
Plants use glucose in five main ways…
1. Respiration – transfers energy from glucose which enables the plants to convert the rest of
the glucose into various other useful substances
2. Making cellulose – glucose is converted into cellulose for making strong plant cell walls
3. Making amino acids – glucose is combined with nitrate ions to make amino acids, which are
then made into proteins
4. Stored as oils or fats – glucose is turned into lipids for storing seeds
5. Stored as starch – glucose is turned into starch and stored in roots, stems and leaves, ready
for use when photosynthesis isn’t happening, like in the winter Starch is insoluble which
makes it much better for storing than glucose – a cell with lots of glucose in would draw
loads of water and swell up
The Rate of Photosynthesis

Limiting factors affect the rate of photosynthesis


 At night the limiting factor is light
 In winter it is often the temperature
 If it is warm and bright enough, the amount of carbon dioxide is usually limiting
 Chlorophyll can be a limiting factor – can be affected by disease or environmental stress.
These factors cause the chloroplast to become damaged or to not make enough chlorophyll.
Means the rate of photosynthesis is reduced because they can’t absorb as much light

Not enough light slows down the rate of photosynthesis


 Light provides the energy needed for photosynthesis
 As the light level is raised, the rate of photosynthesis increases steadily – but only to a
certain point
 Beyond that, it will not make a difference because it will be either the temperature or CO2
level which is now the limiting factor

Too little carbon dioxide also slows it down


 The amount of CO2 will only increase the rate of photosynthesis up to a point
 After this, the graph flattens
 As long as light and CO2 are in plentiful supply, then the facto limiting photosynthesis must
be temperature.

The temperature has to be just right


Temperature affects the rate of photosynthesis because it affects the enzymes involved
 Usually, if temp is the limiting factor, its because it is too low – the enzymes needed for
photosynthesis work more slowly at low temps
 But if the plant gets to hot, the enzymes it needs for photosynthesis and its other reaction
will be damaged.
 This happens at about 45C
Exercise

When you exercise you respire more


 Muscles need energy from respiration to contract. When you exercise, some of your muscles
contact more frequently than normal so you need more energy. This energy comes from
increased respiration
 The increase in respiration in your cells means you need to get more oxygen into them
 Your breathing rate and breath volume increase to get more oxygen into the blood and your
heart rate increases to get this oxygenated blood around the body faster. This removes CO2
more quickly at the same time
 With really vigorous exercise – the body cannot supply enough oxygen quickly enough, so it
starts respiring anaerobically. NOT the best way – lactic acid builds up in the muscle, which is
painful
 Long periods of exercise cause muscle fatigue

Anaerobic respiration leads to an oxygen debt


Oxygen debt – amount of extra oxygen the body needs to react with the build up of lactic acid and
remove it from the cells. Oxygen reacts with the lactic acid to form harmless CO2 and water
 The pulse and breathing rate stay high with the high levels of lactic acid and CO2
 The blood that enters your muscle transports the lactic acid to the liver. In the liver it is
converted back to glucose.
The Nervous System

The nervous system detects and reacts to stimuli


 Organisms need to respond to stimuli in order to survive
 A single-celled organism can just respond to its environment, but the cells of multicellular
organisms need o communicate with each other at first

The nervous system is made up of different parts


1. Central nervous system (CNS) – in vertebrates (animals with back bones) this consists of the
brain and spinal cord only. In mammals, the CNS is connected to the body by sensory
neurons and motor neurons.
2. Sensory neurons – carry information as electrical impulses from the receptors to the CNS
3. Motor neurons – carry electrical impulses from the CNS to effectors
4. Effectors – all muscles and glands which respond to nervous impulses

Receptors and effectors can form part of complex organs


 Receptors are the cells that detect stimuli
 There are many different types of receptors, such as taste receptors on the tongue and
sound receptors in the ears
 Receptors can form part of larger, complex organs, e.g. the retina of the eye is covered in
light receptor cells
 Effectors respond to the nervous impulses and bring about a change
 Muscles and glands are known as effectors – they respond in different ways. Muscles
contract in response to a nervous impulse whereas glands secrete hormones

The central nervous system (CNS) coordinates the response


Exp. – a small bird is eating some seeds…
 … when out of the corner of its eye, it spots a cat skulking towards it (this is the stimulus)
 The receptors in the bird’s eye are stimulated
 Sensory neurons carry the information from the receptors to the CNS
 The CNS decides what to do about it
 The CNS sends information to the muscles in the bird’s wings (the effectors) along motor
neurons
 The muscle contracts and the bird flies away to safety

Synapses connect neurons


Synapse – the connection between two neurones
The nerve signal is transferred by chemicals with diffuse across the gap
These chemicals then set off a new electrical signal in the next neurone
Reflexes

Reflexes help prevent injury


Reflexes – rapid, automatic responses to certain stimuli that don’t involve the conscious part of the
brain – they can reduce the chances of being injured
 Exp. – if someone shines a bright light in your eyes, your pupils automatically get smaller so
that less light gets into the eye – this stops it from getting damaged
 Exp. – if you get a shock the body releases the hormone adrenaline automatically
The passage of information in a reflex is called a reflex arc

The reflex arc goes through the central nervous system


 The neurones in reflex arcs go through the spinal cord or through the unconscious part of
the brain
 When a stimulus (e.g. a bee sting) is detected by receptors, impulses are sent along a
sensory neurone to the CNS
 When the impulses reach a synapse between the sensory neurone and a relay neurone, they
trigger chemicals to be released. Those chemicals cause impulses to be sent along the relay
neurone
 When the impulses reach a synapse between the relay neurone and a motor neurone, the
same thing happens. Chemicals are released and cause impulses to be sent along the motor
neurone
 The impulses then travel along the moto neurone to the effector
 The muscle then contracts and moves the hand away from the bee
REQUIRED PRACTICAL – Investigating Reaction Time

Caffeine is a drug that can speed up a person’s reaction time.


The effect of caffeine on reaction time can be measured…
1. The person being tested should sit with their arm resting on the edge of a table
2. Hold a ruler vertically between their thumb and forefinger. Make sure that the zero end of
the ruler is level with their thumb and finger. Then let go without giving any warning
3. The person being tested should try to catch the ruler as quickly as they can
4. Reaction time is measured by the number on the ruler where it’s caught – the further down
it is caught, the slower their reaction time
5. Repeat the test several times then calculate the mean distance that the ruler fell
6. Variables should be controlled to make this a fair test
a. Use the same person to catch the ruler each time
b. They should use the same hand each time
c. Ruler should always be dropped from the same height
REQUIRED PRACTICAL – Osmosis

1. Cut up a potato into identical cylinders, and get some beakers with different sugar solutions
in them. One should be pure water and the other should be a very concentrated sugar
solution
2. Measure the mass of the cylinders, then leave one cylinder in each beaker for 24hrs
3. Take them out, dry them with a paper towel and measure their masses again
4. If the cylinders have drawn in water by osmosis, they’ll have increased in mass. If the water
has been drawn out, they’ll have decreased in mass

Dependent variable – potato mass


Independent variable – concentration of sugar solution
All other variables (volume of solution; temp; time; type of sugar, etc.) must be kept the same in
each case or the experiment won’t be a fair test

Potential errors
 If the potato cylinders were not fully dried, the excess water would give a higher mass
 If the water evaporated from the beakers, the concentrations of the sugar solutions would
change.

final value−original value


percentage ( % ) change= ×100
original value
REQUIRED PRACTICAL – Food Tests

Prepare your food sample first


1. Get a piece of food and break it up using a pestle and mortar
2. Transfer the ground up food to a beaker and add some distilled water
3. Stir the mixture with a glass rod to dissolve some of the food
4. Filter the solution using a funnel lined with filter paper to get rid of the solid bits of food

Use the Benedict’s test to test for sugars


1. Transfer 5cm3 of the food sample to a test tube
2. Prepare a water bath so that it is set to 75 degrees
3. Add some Benedict’s solution to the test tube (10 drops) using a pipette
4. Place the test tube in the water bath using a test tube holder and leave it in there for 5
minutes
5. If the food sample contains sugar – GREEN, YELLOW or BRICK RED
6. If the food sample does not contain sugar – BLUE

Use the iodine solution to test for starch


1. Transfer 5cm3 of the food sample to a test tube
2. Add a few drops of iodine solution and gently shake to mix the contents
3. If the food sample contains starch – BLACK or BLUE-BLACK
4. If the food sample does not contain starch – BROWNY ORANGE

Use the Biuret test to test for proteins


1. Transfer 2cm3 of the food sample to a test tube
2. Add 2cm3 of Biuret solution to the sample and gently shake
3. If the food sample contains proteins – PURPLE
4. If the food sample does not contain proteins – BLUE

Use the Sudan III test to test for lipids


1. Transfer 5cm3 of the food sample to a test tube *does not need to be filtered)
2. Use a pipette to add 3 drops of Sudan III stain solution to the test tube and gently shake the
tube
3. Sudan III stain solution stains lipids.
4. If the sample contains lipids, the mixture will separate – TOP LAYER BRIGHT RED
5. If the sample does not contain lipids, no red layer will form

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