BIOL107 Lecture Notes - Lecture 1: Peripheral Membrane Protein, Integral Membrane Protein, Fluid Mosaic Model

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BIO 107 LEC
VOCABULARY
Lecture 1
Archaea prokaryotic organisms often referred to as extremophiles,
closely resemble bacteria.
Eukarya organisms that can be seen by the eye, have membrane
bound nucleus and organelles; can be unicellular and multicellular.
Bacteria very small prokaryotic organisms.
Domain the highest taxonomic rank of organisms in which there are
three groupings: Archaea, Bacteria and Eukarya.
Kingdom a taxonomic rank that is composed of smaller groups
called phyla (or divisions, in plants).
Genus a taxonomic category ranking used in biological
classification that is below a family and above a species level, and
includes group(s) of species that are structurally similar or
phylogenetically related.
Species the lowest taxonomic rank, and the most basic unit or
category of biological classification.
Prokaryotic Lacking a true nucleus (not membrane bound).
Lecture 2
Peptide two or more amino acids linked in a chain.
Protein nitrogenous organic compound
Nucleotide
Phospholipid
Triacylglycerol
Polymer
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Monomer
Glycosidic bond
Peptide bond
Phosphodiester bond
Hydrophobic
Hydrophilic
Amphipathic
Primary structure
Secondary structure
Tertiary structure
Quaternary structure
Lecture 3
Fluid mosaic model
Compartmentalization
Integral membrane protein
Peripheral membrane protein
Phospholipid
Cholesterol
Glycoprotein
Glycolipid
Selectively permeable
Osmosis
Passive diffusion
Active transport
Facilitated diffusion
Endocytosis
Phagocytosis
Exocytosis
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BIO 107 LEC
CLASSIFICATION OF ORGANISMS
Focus: In this lecture we will look at the how different cell types are
classified. It will be important to keep in mind the differences
between eukaryotes, Bacteria and Archaea for both the course and the
lab.
Objectives:
Outline the characteristics of life
Explain the current criteria of classification and its logic
Describe the differences between Archaea, Bacteria and Eukarya
Give an example of both prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms
Define: Archaea, Eukarya, Bacteria, Domain, Kingdom, Genus,
species, prokaryotic
Lecture Outline:
Characteristics of living organisms
Organized - consist of cells (unicellular or multicellular)
Metabolism consume and transform energy to build a cell
Respond to stimuli interact with the environment
Reproduce to allow growth, therefore reproduction
Evolve adaptation to environment over many generations
What is classification?
A) What types of criteria are used to classify living things?
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BIOL107 Full Course Notes
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Document Summary

Archaea prokaryotic organisms often referred to as extremophiles, closely resemble bacteria. Eukarya organisms that can be seen by the eye, have membrane bound nucleus and organelles; can be unicellular and multicellular. Domain the highest taxonomic rank of organisms in which there are three groupings: archaea, bacteria and eukarya. Kingdom a taxonomic rank that is composed of smaller groups called phyla (or divisions, in plants). Genus a taxonomic category ranking used in biological classification that is below a family and above a species level, and includes group(s) of species that are structurally similar or phylogenetically related. Species the lowest taxonomic rank, and the most basic unit or category of biological classification. Prokaryotic lacking a true nucleus (not membrane bound). Peptide two or more amino acids linked in a chain. Focus: in this lecture we will look at the how different cell types are classified.

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