AQA (B) AS Module 1: "Sharing Will Enrich Everyone With More Knowledge."
AQA (B) AS Module 1: "Sharing Will Enrich Everyone With More Knowledge."
AQA (B) AS Module 1: "Sharing Will Enrich Everyone With More Knowledge."
http://hixamstudies4u.blogspot.com/
Sharing will enrich everyone with more knowledge.
AQA(B) AS Module 1
Contents
Specification
Biological Molecules
Cells
Chemical bonds
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Proteins
Biochemical Tests
Enzymes
Eukaryotic Cells
Prokaryotic Cells
Cell Fractionation
Microscopy
The Cell Membrane
Movement across Cell Membranes
Exchange
Disease
Lifestyle and Disease
The Digestive System
Cholera
The Gas Exchange System
Lung Diseases
The Circulatory System
Heart Disease
The Immune System
Immunisation
Monoclonal Antibodies
2
4
5
7
9
15
16
22
27
29
30
34
36
42
43
45
47
51
53
57
61
65
67
76
77
NCM/9/08
Module 1 Specification
Biochemistry
Biological Molecules
Biological molecules such as carbohydrates and proteins are often polymers and are based on a small
number of chemical elements.
Proteins have a variety of functions within all living
organisms. The general structure of an amino acid.
Condensation and the formation of peptide bonds
linking together amino acids to form polypeptides.
The relationship between primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure, and protein function.
Monosaccharides are the basic molecular units
(monomers) of which carbohydrates are composed.
The structure of -glucose and the linking of glucose by glycosidic bonds formed by c ondensation to form maltose and starch. Sucrose is a disaccharide formed by condensation of glucose and
fructose. Lactose is a disaccharide formed by condensation of glucose and galactose.
Glycerol and fatty acids combine by condensation
to produce triglycerides. The R-group of a fatty acid
may be saturated or unsaturated. In phospholipids,
one of the fatty acids of a triglyceride is substituted
by a phosphate group.
Biochemical Tests
Iodine/potassium iodide solution for starch. Benedicts
reagent for reducing sugars and non-reducing sugars.
The biuret test for proteins. The emulsion test for
lipids.
Enzymes
Enzymes as catalysts lowering activation energy
through the formation of enzyme-substrate complexes. The lock and key and induced fit models of
enzyme action. Use the lock and key model to explain
the properties of enzymes. Recognise its limitations
and be able to explain why the induced fit model provides a better explanation of specific enzyme properties. The properties of en zymes relating to their tertiary structure.
Description and explanation of the effec ts of temperature, competitive and non-competitive inhibitors, pH
and substrate concentration. Investigate the effec t of a
specific variable on the rate of reaction of an en zymecontrolled reaction.
Cell Biology
Cells
The appearance, ultrastructure and function of plasma
membrane; microvilli; nucleus; mitochondria; lysosomes; ribosomes; endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi
apparatus. Apply their knowledge of these features in
explaining adaptations of other eukaryotic cells.
NCM/9/08
Biological Molecules
Life on Earth evolved in the water, and all life still depends on water. At least 80% of the mass of
living organisms is water, and almost all the chemical reactions of life take place in aqueous solution. The other chemicals that make up living things are mostly organic macromolecules belonging
to the four groups carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, or nucleic acids. These macromolecules are
polymers, made up from specific monomers as shown in the table below. Between them these
four groups make up 93% of the dry mass of living organisms, the remaining 7% comprising small
organic molecules (like vitamins) and inorganic ions.
Group name
Elements
Monomers
Polymers
Carbohydrates
CHO
monosaccharides
polysaccharides
15
Lipids
Proteins
CHOP
CHONS
triglycerides
polypeptides
10
50
Nucleic acids
CHONP
nucleotides
polynucleotides
18
The first part of this unit is about each of these groups. We'll look at each of these groups in detail, except nucleic acids (DNA and RNA), which are studied in unit 2.
Chemical Bonds
In biochemistry there are two important types of chemical bond: the covalent bond and the hydrogen bond.
Covalent bonds are strong. They hold together all the organic molecules in
living organisms. Because they are strong, covalent bonds cannot be broken
or made at the temperatures found in living cells. So in biology covalent
bonds are always made or broken by the action of enzymes. Covalent bonds
H
H
covalent
bonds
Hydrogen bonds are much weaker. They are formed between an atom
(usually hydrogen) with a slight positive charge (denoted +) and an atom
-
NCM/9/08
Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates contain only the elements carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. The group includes
monomers, dimers and polymers, as shown in this diagram:
Carbohydrates
Sugars
Monosaccharides
(monomers)
Disaccharides
(dimers)
Polysaccharides
(polymers)
e.g. sucrose,
maltose, lactose
e.g. starch,
cellulose, glycogen
Monosaccharides
These all have the formula (CH2 O)n, where n can be 3-7. The most common and important monosaccharide is glucose, which is a six-carbon or hexose sugar, so has the formula C6H12 O6. Its structure is:
OH
H C H
C
H
O
O
H
C
HO
or more simply
C
OH
OH
HO
OH
OH
Glucose
Glucose forms a six-sided ring, although in three-dimensions it forms a structure that looks a bit
like a chair. In animals glucose is the main transport sugar in the blood, and its concentration in
the blood is carefully controlled. There are many isomers of glucose, with the same chemical formula (C6 H12 O6 ), but different structural formulae. These isomers include galactose and fructose:
O
O
HO
OH
HO
Galactose
Fructose
Common five-carbon, or pentose sugars (where n = 5, C5 H10 O5 ) include ribose and deoxyribose
(found in nucleic acids and ATP, see unit 2) and ribulose (which occurs in photosynthesis). Threecarbon, or triose sugars (where n = 3, C3 H6 O3 ) are also found in respiration and photosynthesis
(see unit 4).
NCM/9/08
Disaccharides
Disaccharides are formed when two monosaccharides are joined together by a glycosidic bond
(COC). The reaction involves the formation of a molecule of water (H2 O):
O
HO
OH
HO
OH
H2O
HO
OH
glycosidic bond
This shows two glucose molecules joining together to form the disaccharide maltose. This kind of
reaction, where two molecules combine into one bigger molecule, is called a condensation reaction. The reverse process, where a large molecule is broken into smaller ones by reacting with
water, is called a hydrolysis reaction.
In general:
Glucose
Glucose
O
HO
OH
Glucose
O
O
HO
Fructose
O
HO
Galactose
Glucose
OH
mammals.
Starch
Starch is a polysaccharide found in plants. It is a long chain of many glucose monomers joined together by glycosidic bonds:
NCM/9/08
Lipids
Lipids are a mixed group of hydrophobic compounds composed of the elements carbon, hydrogen,
oxygen and sometime phosphorus (CHOP). The most common lipids are triglycerides and phospholipids.
Triglycerides
Triglycerides, or triacylglycerols, are made of glycerol and fatty acids.
H C
OH OH OH
Carboxyl
acid group
H C
O
OH
or
or
R COOH
O
C OH
O
C OH
O
C OH
1 glycerol
molecule
1 triglyceride
molecule
H
HO C
HO C
HO C
O
C
O
C
O
C
3 water
molecules
H
O
3 H2O
H
3 ester bonds
Triglycerides are commonly known as fats or oils, and are insoluble in water. They are used for
storage, insulation and protection in fatty tissue (or adipose tissue) found under the skin (subcutaneous) or surrounding organs. When oxidised triglycerides yield more energy per unit mass
than other compounds so are good for energy storage. However, triglycerides can't be mobilised
quickly since they are so insoluble, so are no good for quick energy requirements. Tissues that
need energy quickly (like muscles) instead store carbohydrates like glycogen.
HGS A-level notes
NCM/9/08
If the fatty acid chains in a triglyceride have no C=C double bonds, then
they are called saturated fatty acids (i.e. saturated with hydrogen).
Triglycerides with saturated fatty acids have a high melting point and
tend to be found in warm-blooded animals. At room temperature they
saturated
acids with more than one double bond are called poly-unsaturated fatty
H
unsaturated
Phospholipids
Phospholipids have a similar structure to triglycerides, but with a phosphate group in place of one
fatty acid chain. There may also be other groups attached to the phosphate. Phospholipids have a
polar hydrophilic "head" (the negatively-charged phosphate group) and two non-polar hydrophobic
"tails" (the fatty acid chains).
glycerol
H
fatty acid
fatty acid
R
R
O
C
O
C
OP
O
hydrophobic
tails
phosphate
hydrophilic
head
or
phospholipid
bilayer
aqueous
compartment
NCM/9/08
Proteins
Proteins are the most complex and most diverse group of biological compounds. They have an
astonishing range of different functions, as this list shows.
structure
enzymes
transport
pumps
motors
hormones
receptors
antibodies
e.g. immunoglobulins
storage
blood clotting
lubrication
toxins
antifreeze
Amino Acids
Proteins are made of amino acids. Amino
hydrogen
H
H
C C
R
O
OH
carboxy
acid
group
R group
attached to it:
1. a hydrogen atom
2. a basic amino group (NH2 or NH+3 )
3. an acidic carboxyl group (COOH or COO-)
4. a variable "R" group (or side chain)
HGS A-level notes
NCM/9/08
Polypeptides
Amino acids are joined together by peptide bonds. The reaction involves the formation of a molecule of water in another condensation polymerisation reaction:
H
N
H
C C
R
H
N
OH
C C
R
H
N
OH
C C
C C
R
O
H2 O
OH
peptide bond
When two amino acids join together a dipeptide is formed. Three amino acids form a tripeptide.
Many amino acids form a polypeptide. e.g.:
N-terminus
C-terminus
H2 N-Gly Pro His Leu Tyr Ser Trp Asp Lys Cys-COOH
In a polypeptide there is always one end with a free amino (NH2) group, called the N-terminus,
and one end with a free carboxyl (COOH) group, called the C-terminus.
In a protein the polypeptide chain may be many hundreds of amino acids long. Amino acid polymerisation to form polypeptides is part of protein synthesis. It takes place in ribosomes, and is special because it requires an RNA template. The sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain is
determined by the sequence of the bases in DNA. Protein synthesis is studied in detail in unit 5.
NCM/9/08
Basic R groups
Glycine
Gly G
Lysine
Lys K
CH2
CH2
CH2
CH2
NH3
Alanine
Ala A
CH3
Arginine
Arg R
CH2
CH 2
CH 2
NH
Valine
Val V
CH3
CH
CH3
Histidine
His H
Leucine
Leu L
Isoleucine
Ile I
NH 2
CH
CH2
CH2
CH3
CH
CH3
Asparagine
Asn N
CH2
CH
CH2
Glutamine
Gln Q
CH2
CH2
CH3
Threonine
Thr T
CH2
OH
CH
OH
CH3
CH2
SH
Methionine
Met M
CH2
CH2
CH3
O
C
NH2
Acidic R groups
O
Aspartate
Asp D
CH2
Glutamate
Glu E
CH2
CH2
CH2
NH
CH2
CH2
OH
O
C
OH
Ringed R groups
Phenylalanine
Phe F
CH2
Tyrosine
Tyr Y
CH2
Cyclic R group
Proline
Pro P
CH
NH2
Sulphur R groups
Cysteine
Cys C
Hydroxyl R groups
Serine
Ser S
NH2
C
NH
CH3
CH2
Tryptophan
Trp W
OH
CH
CH
NH
NCM/9/08
Protein Structure
Polypeptides are just strings of amino acids, but they fold up and combine to form the complex
and well-defined three-dimensional structure of working proteins. To help to understand protein
structure, it is broken down into four levels:
1. Primary Structure
This is just the sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide chain, so is not really a structure at
all. However, the primary structure does determine the rest of the protein structure.
2. Secondary Structure
This is the most basic level of protein folding, and consists of a few basic motifs that are found in almost all proteins. The secondary structure
is held together by hydrogen bonds between the carboxyl groups and
C O
H N
hydrogen bond
the amino groups in the polypeptide backbone. The two most common
secondary structure motifs are the -helix and the -sheet.
The -helix. The polypeptide chain is
wound round to form a helix. It is held together by hydrogen bonds running parallel
with the long helical axis. There are so
many hydrogen bonds that this is a very
stable and strong structure. Do not confuse
polypeptide backbone
N
C
C=O
H-N
hydrogen bonds
C
H-N
C=O
C
C=O
H-N
C
C=O
H-N
H-N
C=O
C C N
C C N
C N C
C N C
H
N
C C
C C N
C C
N H
C
C N
C N C
C C N
C C N
C C N
C C
O
C N
C O
C C
O
NCM/9/08
So the secondary structure is due to backbone interactions and is thus largely independent of
primary sequence, while tertiary structure is due to side chain interactions and thus depends on
the amino acid sequence.
4. Quaternary Structure
Almost all working proteins are actually composed of more than one polypeptide chain, and the
arrangement of the different chains is called the quaternary structure. There are a huge variety
-S-S-
-S
-S
-
NCM/9/08
The vast majority of proteins are globular, i.e. Fibrous proteins are long and thin, like ropes.
they have a compact, ball-shaped structure. This They tend to have structural roles, such as colgroup includes enzymes, membrane proteins, lagen (bone), keratin (hair), tubulin (cytoskelereceptors and storage proteins. The diagram ton) and actin (muscle). They are always combelow shows a typical globular enzyme mole- posed of many polypeptide chains. This diagram
cule. It has been drawn to highlight the different shows part of a molecule of collagen, which is
secondary structures.
helix
sheet
A few proteins have both structures: for example the muscle protein myosin has a long fibrous tail
and a globular head, which acts as an enzyme (see unit 4).
Protein Denaturing
Since the secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures are largely held together by hydrogen
bonds, the three-dimensional structure of proteins is lost if the hydrogen bonds break. The polypeptide chain just folds up into a random coil and the protein loses its function. This is called denaturing, and happens at temperatures above about 50C or at very low or high pH. Covalent bonds
are not broken under these conditions, so the primary structure is maintained (as are sulphur
bridges).
NCM/9/08
Biochemical Tests
These five tests identify the main biologically-important chemical compounds. For each test take a
small sample of the substance to test, and shake it in water in a test tube. If the sample is a piece
of food, then grind it with some water in a pestle and mortar to break up the cells and release the
cell contents. Many of these compounds are insoluble, but the tests work just as well on a fine
suspension.
1. Starch (iodine test). Add a few drops of iodine/potassium iodide solution to the sample. A
blue-black colour indicates the presence of starch as a starch-polyiodide complex is formed.
2. Reducing Sugars (Benedict's test). All monosaccharides and most disaccharides (except sucrose) are called reducing sugars because they will reduce ions like Cu2+. Add a few mL of
Benedicts reagent (which is a copper (II) sulphate solution) to the sample. Shake, and heat for a
few minutes at 95C in a water bath. A coloured precipitate of copper (I) oxide indicates reducing sugar. The colour and density of the precipitate gives an indication of the amount of reducing sugar present, so this test is semi-quantitative. The original pale blue colour means no
reducing sugar, a green precipitate means relatively little sugar; a brown or red precipitate
means progressively more sugar is present.
3. Non-reducing Sugars (Benedict's test). Sucrose is called a non-reducing sugar because it
does not reduce copper sulphate, so there is no direct test for sucrose. However, if it is first
hydrolysed to its constituent monosaccharides (glucose and fructose), it will then give a positive
Benedict's test. So sucrose is the only sugar that will give a negative Benedict's test before hydrolysis and a positive test afterwards. First test a sample for reducing sugars, to see if there
are any present before hydrolysis. Then, using a separate sample, boil the test solution with dilute hydrochloric acid for a few minutes to hydrolyse the glycosidic bond. Neutralise the solution by gently adding small amounts of solid sodium hydrogen carbonate until it stops fizzing,
then test as before for reducing sugars.
4. Lipids (emulsion test). Lipids do not dissolve in water, but do dissolve in ethanol. This characteristic is used in the emulsion test. Do not start by dissolving the sample in water, but instead
vigorously shake some of the test sample with about 4 mL of ethanol. Decant the liquid into a
second test tube of water, leaving any undissolved substances behind. If there are lipids dissolved in the ethanol, they will precipitate in the water, forming a cloudy white emulsion.
5. Protein (biuret test). Add a few mL of biuret solution to the sample. Shake, and the solution
turns lilac-purple, indicating protein. The colour is due to a complex between nitrogen atoms in
the peptide chain and Cu2+ ions, so this is really a test for peptide bonds.
NCM/9/08
Enzymes
Enzymes are biological catalysts. There are about 40,000 different enzymes in human cells, each
controlling a different chemical reaction. They increase the rate of reactions by a factor of between 106 to 1012 times, allowing the chemical reactions that make life possible to take place at
normal temperatures. They were discovered in fermenting yeast in 1900 by Buchner, and the
name enzyme means "in yeast". As well as catalysing all the metabolic reactions of cells (such as
respiration, photosynthesis and digestion), they also act as motors, membrane pumps and receptors.
substrate
R-groups of amino
acids at the active
substrate
protein
chain
NCM/9/08
(There may be more than one substrate and more than one product, but that doesn't matter
here.) In an enzyme-catalysed reaction, the substrate first binds to the active site of the enzyme to
form an enzyme-substrate (ES) complex, then the substrate is converted into product while attached to the enzyme, and finally the product is released. This mechanism can be shown as:
E+S
ES
EP
E +P
The enzyme is then free to start again. The end result is the same (S
is taken, so that the S
P reaction as such never takes place. In by-passing this step, and splitting
the reaction up into many small steps rather than one big step, the reaction can be made to happen much more quickly.
energy of molecules
activation
energy
(EA)
ES
enzyme
catalysed
reaction
EP
energy
change
P
progress of reaction
called the activation energy (EA). The larger the activation energy, the slower the reaction will be
NCM/9/08
2H2O + O2):
rate of reaction
1. Temperature
50
temperature (C)
100
from the arctic snow flea work at -10C, and enzymes from thermophilic bacteria work at
90C.
Up to the optimum temperature the rate increases geometrically with temperature (i.e. it's a
curve, not a straight line). The rate increases because the enzyme and substrate molecules both
have more kinetic energy so collide more often, and also because more molecules have sufficient energy to overcome the (greatly reduced) activation energy. The rate is not zero at 0C,
so enzymes still work in the fridge (and food still goes off), but they work slowly. Enzymes can
even work in ice, though the rate is extremely slow due to the very slow diffusion of enzyme
and substrate molecules through the ice lattice.
This increase in rate with temperature would continue indefinitely except that the enzyme
molecule itself is affected by temperature. Above about 40C there is enough thermal energy
to break the weak hydrogen bonds holding the secondary, tertiary and quaternary structures of
NCM/9/08
rate of reaction
2. pH
14
pH
(COOH) in acid pH but negatively charged (COO) in alkali pH. Similarly amino R-groups are
positively charged ( NH+3 ) in acidic pH but uncharged (NH2) in alkali pH. These changes can affect the shape as well as the charge of the active site, so the substrate can no longer bind and
the reaction isn't catalysed.
As the enzyme concentration increases the rate of the reaction increases linearly, because there are more enzyme molecules available to catalyse the reaction. At very high enzyme concentration
the substrate concentration may become rate-limiting, so the rate
rate of reaction
3. Enzyme concentration
enzyme concentration
low concentrations.
The rate of an enzyme-catalysed reaction shows a curved dependence on substrate concentration. As the substrate concentration
increases, the rate increases because more substrate molecules can
collide with enzyme molecules, so more reactions will take place.
rate of reaction
4. Substrate concentration
substrate concentration
with substrate, so there are few free enzyme molecules, so adding more substrate doesn't
make much difference (though it will increase the rate of ES collisions).
NCM/9/08
rate of reaction
5. Inhibitors
while those that bind tightly and cannot be washed out are called
inhibitor concentration
non-competitive inhibitors
substrate
enzyme
enzyme-substrate
complex
S
E
reaction
reaction
inhibitor
competition
I
active site
I
inhibitor
no reaction
enzyme-inhibitor
complex
S
I
substrate
can't
bind
no reaction
The two types of inhibitor can be distinguished experimentally by carrying out a substrate vs. rate experiment
in the presence and absence of the inhibitor. If the inhibition is reduced at high substrate concentration then
rate of reaction
no inhibitor
+ competitive
inhibitor
+ non-competitive
inhibitor
NCM/9/08
signal
curve).
3. How do you obtain a rate from this time-course? One thing that
is not a good idea is to measure the time taken for the reaction,
for as the time-course shows it is very difficult to say when the
signal
rate of reaction
substrate concentration
Be careful not to confuse the two kinds of graph (the time-course and rate graphs) when interpreting data.
NCM/9/08
Cells
All living things are made of cells, and cells are the smallest units that can be alive. There are thousands of different kinds of cell, but the biggest division is between the cells of the prokaryote kingdom (the bacteria) and those of the other four kingdoms (animals, plants, fungi and protoctista),
which are all eukaryotic cells. Prokaryotic cells are smaller and simpler than eukaryotic cells, and
do not have a nucleus.
Prokaryote = without a nucleus (think "before carrier bag")
Eukaryote = with a nucleus (think "good carrier bag")
We'll examine these two kinds of cell in detail, based on structures seen in electron micrographs.
These show the individual organelles inside a cell.
Euakryotic Cells
cell wall
small vacuole
cell membrane
Golgi body
cytoskeleton
rough
endoplasmic
reticulum
large vacuole
chloroplast
nucleus
mitochondrion
nucleoplasm
nucleolus
nuclear envelope
80S ribosomes
smooth
endoplasmic
reticulum
nuclear pore
lysosome
centriole
undulipodium
Not all eukaryotic
cells have all the
parts shown here
10 m
Cytoplasm (or Cytosol). This is the solution within the cell membrane. It contains enzymes
for glycolysis (part of respiration) and other metabolic reactions together with sugars, salts,
amino acids, nucleotides and everything else needed for the cell to function.
NCM/9/08
nuclear
envelope
RER
nucleolus
nuclear pore
nucleoplasm
(containing
chromatin)
comes condensed into discrete observable chromosomes. The nucleolus is a dark region of chromatin, involved in making ribosomes.
Mitochondrion (pl. Mitochondria). This is a sausageshaped organelle (8m long), and is where aerobic respi-
outer membrane
inner membrane
christa (fold)
matrix
stalked particles
(ATP synthase)
ribosomes
DNA
tains small circular strands of DNA. The inner membrane is studded with stalked particles, which are the
site of ATP synthesis.
Chloroplast. Bigger and fatter than mitochondria,
outer membrane
inner membrane
thylakoid
membrane
granum
(thylakoid stack)
stalked particles
(ATP synthase)
starch grain
stroma
NCM/9/08
large
subunit
where they make proteins for the cell's own use, or they are found
attached to the rough endoplasmic reticulum, where they make pro-
small
subunit
teins for export from the cell. All eukaryotic ribosomes are of the
larger, "80S", type.
Endoplasmic Reticulum (ER). This is a series of membrane
channels involved in synthesising and transporting materials. Rough
cisternae
ribosomes
teins, which are processed in the RER (e.g. by enzymatically modifying the polypeptide chain, or adding carbohydrates), before being
exported from the cell via the Golgi Body. Smooth Endoplasmic Reticulum (SER) does not have ribosomes and is used to process materials, mainly lipids, needed by the cell.
Golgi Body (or Golgi Apparatus). Another series of flattened
membrane vesicles, formed from the endoplasmic reticulum. Its job
is to transport proteins from the RER to the cell membrane for export. Parts of the RER containing proteins fuse with one side of the
Golgi body membranes, while at the other side small vesicles bud off
and move towards the cell membrane, where they fuse, releasing
their contents by exocytosis.
Vacuoles. These are membrane-bound sacs containing water or dilute solutions of salts and other solutes. Most cells can have small
vacuoles that are formed as required, but plant cells usually have one
very large permanent vacuole that fills most of the cell, so that the
cytoplasm (and everything else) forms a thin layer round the outside.
cell wall
cell membrane
cytoplasm
tonoplast
membrane
permanent
valuole
nucleus
Plant cell vacuoles are filled with cell sap, and are very important in
keeping the cell rigid, or turgid. Some unicellular protoctists have
feeding vacuoles for digesting food, or contractile vacuoles for expelling water.
NCM/9/08
ity. The cytoskeleton is attached to the cell membrane and gives the
cell its shape, as well as holding all the organelles in position. The cytoskeleton is also responsible for cell movements such as: chromosome movement and cytoplasm cleavage in cell division, cytoplasmic
streaming in plant cells, cilia and flagella movements, cell crawling and
even muscle contraction in animals.
Centriole. This is a special pair of short cytoskeleton fibres involved
in cell division. They initiate the spindle that organises and separates
the chromosomes (see unit 2).
Undulipodium (Cilium or Flagellum). This is a long flexible tail
present in some cells and used for motility. It is an extension of the
cytoplasm, surrounded by the cell membrane, and is full of micro-
cilia
Flagellum
much smaller and there are usually very many of them (e.g. trachea,
ciliates).
Microvilli. These are small finger-like extensions of the cell mem-
Microvilli
brane found in certain cells such as in the epithelial cells of the intestine and kidney, where they increase the surface area for absorption
of materials. They are just visible under the light microscope as a
brush border. Dont confuse microvilli (sub-cellular structures) with
villi (much bigger multi-cellular structures).
NCM/9/08
cell wall
cell membrane
are made mainly of cellulose, but can also contain hemicellulose, pec-
middle
lamella
plasmodesmata
cytoplasm
through plant cell walls called plasmodesmata, which link the cytoplasms of adjacent cells. Fungal cell walls are made of chitin.
Fungi
(chitin)
Plants
(cellulose)
Animals
NCM/9/08
Prokaryotic Cells
Prokaryotic cells are smaller than eukaryotic cells and do not have a nucleus or indeed any membrane-bound organelles. All prokaryotes are bacteria. Prokaryotic cells are much older than eukaryotic cells and they are far more abundant (there are ten times as many bacteria cells in a human than there are human cells). The main features of prokaryotic cells are:
Cytoplasm.
Contains all
capsule
cell wall
cell membrane
mesosome
plasmid
nucleoid
DNA
in the cytoplasm and never attached to membranes. Used for protein synthesis.
flagellum
1 m
NCM/9/08
Eukaryotic cells
always unicellular
no nucleus
or any membrane-bound organelles
often multicellular
always have nucleus
and other membrane-bound organelles
DNA is linear and associated with proteins
to form chromatin
ribosomes are large (80S)
no cytoskeleton
motility by rigid rotating flagellum,
made of flagellin
cell division is by binary fission
Endosymbiosis
Prokaryotic cells are far older and more diverse than eukaryotic cells. Prokaryotic cells have
probably been around for 3.5 billion years, while eukaryotic cells arose only about 1 billion years
ago. It is thought that eukaryotic cell organelles like nuclei, mitochondria and chloroplasts are derived from prokaryotic cells that became incorporated inside larger prokaryotic cells. This idea is
called endosymbiosis, and is supported by these observations:
organelles contain circular DNA, like bacteria cells.
organelles contain 70S ribosomes, like bacteria cells.
organelles have double membranes, as though a single-membrane cell had been engulfed and
surrounded by a larger cell.
organelles reproduce by binary fission, like bacteria.
organelles are very like some bacteria that are alive today.
NCM/9/08
Cell Fractionation
This means separating different parts and organelles of a cell, so that they can be studied in detail.
All the processes of cell metabolism (such as respiration or photosynthesis) have been studied in
this way. The most common method of fractionating cells is to use differential centrifugation:
NCM/9/08
Microscopy
Of all the techniques used in biology microscopy is probably the most important. The vast majority of living organisms are too small to be seen in any detail with the human eye, and cells and their
organelles can only be seen with the aid of a microscope. Cells were first seen in 1665 by Robert
Hooke (who named them after monks' cells in a monastery), and were studied in more detail by
Leeuwehoek using a primitive microscope.
m
mm
m
nm
pm
=1 m
= 10-3 m (never use cm!)
= 10-6 m
= 10-9 m
= 10-12 m
= 10-10 m (obsolete)
Magnification and Resolution. The magnification of a microscope simply indicates how much
bigger the image is that the original object. It is usually given as a magnification factor, e.g. x100. By
using more lenses microscopes can magnify by a larger amount, but this doesn't always mean that
more detail can be seen. The amount of detail depends on the resolution of a microscope, which
is the smallest separation at which two separate objects can be distinguished (or resolved). Resolution is therefore a distance (usually in nm) and is calculated by the formula:
resolution =
0.6
(you dont need to know this formula)
n. a.
where is the wavelength of light, and n.a. is the numerical aperture of the lens (which ranges
from about 0.5 to 1.4). So the resolution of a microscope is ultimately limited by the wavelength of
light (400-600nm for visible light). To improve the resolution a shorter wavelength of light is
needed, and sometimes microscopes have blue filters for this purpose (because blue has the
shortest wavelength of visible light).
NCM/9/08
objective lens
specimen
condenser lens
illuminator (lamp)
Light microscopy has a resolution of about 200 nm, which is good enough to see tissues and
cells, but not the details of cell organelles. There has been a recent resurgence in the use of
light microscopy, partly due to technical improvements, which have dramatically improved the
resolution far beyond the theoretical limit. For example fluorescence microscopy has a resolution of about 10 nm, while interference microscopy has a resolution of about 1 nm.
2. Electron Microscope. This uses a beam of electrons, rather than electromagnetic radiation,
to "illuminate" the specimen. This may seem strange, but electrons behave like waves and can
easily be produced (using a hot wire), focused (using electromagnets) and detected (using a
phosphor screen or photographic film).
illuminator (wire)
condenser lens
specimen
objective lens
projector lens
screen
A beam of electrons has an effective wavelength of less than 1 nm, so can be used to resolve small
sub-cellular ultrastructure. The development of the electron microscope in the 1930s revolution-
NCM/9/08
electron microscope
electrons from hot wire
focusing
glass lenses
electromagnets
detection
magnification
eye or film
1 500 x
200 nm
tissues, cells and small organisms
living or dead
1 nm
cell organelles, microbes and
viruses
dead
coloured dyes
cheap to expensive
heavy metals
very expensive
resolution
used to observe
specimen
staining
cost
NCM/9/08
Magnification Calculations
Microscope drawings and photographs (micrographs) are usually magnified, and you have to be
able to calculate the actual size of the object from the drawing. There are two ways of doing this:
magnification =
image length
I
, or
actual length
M A
is
x 1000,
then
the
object's
actual
length
is:
I
40
=
= 0.04mm = 40 m . Always convert your answer to approM 1000
x 1000
I
40
=
= 1600 . Remember, the
A 0.025
image and actual length must be in the same units. Magnifications can also be less than one (e.g.
x 0.1), which means that the drawing is smaller than the actual object.
image length
bar scale . The image size and bar length must be measured in the
bar length
same units (usually mm), and the actual size will come out in the same units as the bar scale.
For example if this drawing of an object is 40 mm long and the 5 m
scale bar is 10 mm long, then the object's actual size is:
40
5m = 20 m .
10
5m
It's good to have a rough idea of the size of objects, to avoid silly mistakes. A mitochondrion is not
30 mm long! Scale bars make this much easier than magnification factors.
NCM/9/08
peripheral
protein on
outer surface
carbohydrate
attached to
protein
phospholipid
fatty acid chains
polar head
part of
cytoskeleton
peripheral
protein on
inner surface
integral protein
forming a channel
The phospholipids form a thin, flexible sheet, while the proteins "float" in the phospholipid sheet
like icebergs, and the carbohydrates extend out from the proteins. This structure is called a fluid
mosaic structure because all the components can move around (its fluid) and the many different
components all fit together, like a mosaic.
The phospholipids are arranged in a bilayer (i.e. a double layer), with their polar, hydrophilic
phosphate heads facing out towards water, and their non-polar, hydrophobic fatty acid tails facing
each other in the middle of the bilayer. This hydrophobic layer acts as a barrier to most molecules, effectively isolating the two sides of the membrane. Different kinds of membranes can contain phospholipids with different fatty acids, affecting the strength and flexibility of the membrane,
and animal cell membranes also contain cholesterol linking the fatty acids together and so stabilising and strengthening the membrane.
The proteins usually span from one side of the phospholipid bilayer to the other (integral proteins), but can also sit on one of the surfaces (peripheral proteins). They can slide around the
HGS A-level notes
NCM/9/08
hormone
receptor
binding
site
(more in digestion).
Proteins can be antigens. Antigen proteins are involved in cell recognition and are often glycoproteins, such as the A and B antigens on
red blood cell membranes.
Proteins can be structural. Structural proteins are on the inside
surface of cell membranes and are attached to the cytoskeleton. They
are involved in maintaining the cell's shape, or in changing the cell's
shape for cell motility.
The carbohydrates are found on the outer surface of all eukaryotic cell membranes, and are
attached to the membrane proteins or sometimes to the phospholipids. Proteins with carbohydrates attached are called glycoproteins, while phospholipids with carbohydrates attached are
called glycolipids.
NCM/9/08
random
movement
low
concentration
of solute
Cell membranes are a barrier to most substances, so we say that membranes are selectively permeable. This means that cell membranes can allow some substances through but not others. This
selective permeability allows materials to be concentrated inside cells, excluded from cells, or simply separated from the outside environment. This is compartmentalisation is essential for life, as it
enables reactions to take place that would otherwise be impossible. Eukaryotic cells can also compartmentalise materials inside organelles.
Obviously materials need to be able to enter and leave cells, and there are four main methods by
which substances can move across a cell membrane:
1. Lipid Diffusion
2. Osmosis (Water Diffusion)
3. Facilitated Diffusion
4. Active Transport
A few substances can diffuse directly through the lipid bilayer part of the membrane. The only substances that can do this are lipid-soluble molecules such as steroids, or very small molecules, such
as H2O, O2 and CO2. For these molecules the membrane is no barrier at all. Since lipid diffusion
HGS A-level notes
NCM/9/08
membrane
solute molecules
hydration
shell
Water Potential. Osmosis can be quantified using water potential, so we can calculate which
way water will move, and how fast. Water potential (, the Greek letter psi, pronounced "sy") is
simply the effective concentration of free water. It is measured in units of pressure (Pa, or usually
kPa), and the rule is that water always "falls" from a high to a low water potential (in other words
it's a bit like gravity potential or electrical potential). 100% pure water has = 0, which is the
highest possible water potential, so all solutions have < 0, and you cannot get > 0. An example of water potentials is shown in this diagram:
NCM/9/08
water diffuses
from 0kPa to -200kPa
water diffuses
from -20kPa to -500kPa
Cells and Osmosis. The water potential of the solution that surrounds a cell affects the state of
the cell, due to osmosis. The effects of these solutions on cells are shown in this diagram:
Surrounding solution
has high (e.g. seawater)
Surrounding solution
has equal
Surrounding solution
has low (e.g. freshwater)
Animal
cell
Plant
cell
These are problems that living cells face all the time. For example:
Simple animal cells (protozoans) in fresh water habitats are surrounded by a hypotonic solution
(high so water tends to diffuse in by osmosis. These cells constantly need to expel water using
contractile vacuoles to prevent swelling and lysis.
Cells in marine environments are surrounded by a hypertonic solution (low , so water tends
to diffuse out by osmosis. These cells must actively pump ions into their cells to reduce their
water potential and so reduce water loss by osmosis.
NCM/9/08
f li p
carrier
protein
or
NCM/9/08
4. Active Transport.
protein
pump
change
shape
ATP
active
site
ADP + Pi
K+
Na+
glucose
Na+
Na/glucose
cotransporter
pump
ATP
ADP + Pi
Na+
Na+
1. All animal cell membranes contain a sodium/potassium ATPase (Na/K pump). This pump continually uses ATP to actively pump sodium ions out of the cell and potassium ions into the cell.
This creates a sodium ion gradient across the cell membrane, so there is a tendency for sodium
ions to diffuse down their gradient back into the cell.
2. The only route the sodium ions can take is through the sodium/glucose cotransporter, and for
every sodium ion that enters a glucose molecule must also be carried in. But while the sodium
HGS A-level notes
NCM/9/08
whereas lipid diffusion shows a linear relationship, facilitated diffusion has a curved relationship with a maximum
rate. This is due to the rate being limited by the number
rate of transport
active transport
lipid
diffusion
facilitated
diffusion
uses energy
controllable gradient
NCM/9/08
Exchange
All organisms need to exchange substances such as food, waste, gases and heat with their surroundings. These substances must diffuse between the organism and the surroundings. The rate at
which a substance can diffuse is given by Fick's law:
Rate of Diffusion
From Fick's law we can predict that, in order to support a fast rate of diffusion, exchange surfaces
must have:
a large surface area
a small distance between the source and the destination
a mechanism to maintain a high concentration gradient across the gas exchange surface.
This table summarises how these requirements are met in the human digestive and gas exchange
systems.
system
small distance
high concentration
gradient
Human small
intestine
stirred by peristalsis
and by microvilli
Human lungs
constant ventilation
replaces the air
For comparison, a tennis court has an area of about 260 m and a football pitch has an area of
about 5000 m.
NCM/9/08
Infectious Disease
To most people disease means an infectious disease, and these are the diseases you can "catch".
Infectious diseases are caused by a variety of pathogens, including viruses, bacteria, fungi and
protoctists. A few of the common pathogens are shown in this table:
NCM/9/08
Viral Diseases
Bacterial Diseases
Fungal Diseases
Protoctist Diseases
Disease
common cold
influenza
measles
mumps
chickenpox
AIDS
tuberculosis
typhoid
cholera
tetanus
whooping cough
pneumonia
thrush
athletes foot
ringworm
malaria
amoebic dysentery
sleeping sickness
Pathogen
Rhinovirus
Myovirus
Paramyxovirus
paramyxovirus
Varicella zoster virus
HIV
Mycobacterium tuberculosis
Salmonella typhi
Vibrio cholerae
Clostridium tetani
Bordetella pertussis
Streptococcus pneumoniae
Candida albicans
Tinea pedis
Tinea capititis
Plasmodium vivax
Entamoeba histolytica
Trypanosoma spp.
Some pathogens are more harmful than others; in other words they are have a greater pathogenicity or virulence. For a pathogen to cause a disease these steps must take place:
1. The pathogen must be transmitted to the human host. Pathogens can be transmitted through
drinking water, eating food, breathing aerosol droplets, animal bites, or direct contact.
2. The pathogen must gain entry inside the human body. The human body is protected by a tough
layer of skin, but pathogens can enter via cuts in the skin (e.g. rabies, malaria); or the thinner interfaces, such as the digestive system (e.g. cholera, typhoid); gas exchange system (e.g. influenza,
tuberculosis) or reproductive system (e.g. AIDS).
3. The pathogen must evade the defences of the host. Humans have a range of defences, such as
stomach acid, lysozyme enzymes and the immune system, and these defences are usually very
effective at preventing disease. But it only takes a few pathogen cells resisting the defences to
multiply and cause a disease.
4. The pathogen must harm the host. Pathogens harm their hosts in two ways. First, by reproducing inside host cells, using up cellular resources and preventing the cell from carrying out its
normal reactions. The microbes then usually burst out of the host cell, rupturing the cell membrane and killing the cell in the process. Second, by producing toxins chemicals that interfere
with the body's reactions. These chemicals may inhibit enzymes, bind to receptors, bind to
DNA causing mutations, interfere with synapses and so on.
NCM/9/08
Different disease have specific risk factors, i.e. factors that specifically increase the risk of getting
that disease. A few examples are:
For lung cancer the main risk factors are smoking and cleanliness of the environment.
For skin cancer the main risk factors are exposure to sunlight and colour of skin.
For coronary heart disease the main risk factors are diet, age, genetics and exercise.
For diabetes the main risk factors are genetics, diet and exercise.
For AIDs the main risk factors are sexual habits, drug habits and genetics.
Some of these risk factors are beyond our control, e.g. genes and age. But the others are lifestyle
factors and so within our power to change.
NCM/9/08
50
40
30
20
10
0
0
20
40
60
Annunal income (1000)
tor.
200
100
0
0
10
20
30
ciga rettes smoke d per day
40
10
8
6
2
0
0
10
20
30
40
50
Arsenic concentration (mM)
we have a mechanism to explain the previous correlation, so we have evidence for a causal relationship, and
we can say that smoking is a risk factor in lung cancer.
60
40
20
0
0
20
40
60
alcohol consumption (units per we ek)
NCM/9/08
tongue
the anus, together with a number of associated salivary
glands
epiglottis
stomach
pancreas
duodenum
colon
rectum
anus
lus is swallowed by an involuntary reflex action through the pharynx (the back of the
mouth). During swallowing the trachea is blocked off by the epiglottis to stop food entering the
lungs.
2. Oesophagus (gullet). This is a simple tube through the thorax, which connects the mouth to
the rest of the gut. No digestion takes place here. The oesophagus is a soft tube that can be
closed, unlike the trachea, which is a hard tube, held open by rings of cartilage. The oesophagus
NCM/9/08
circular muscle
circular muscle
contracted
relaxed
+
+
longitudinal muscle longitudinal muscle
relaxed
contracted
circular muscle
circular muscle
relaxed
contracted
+
+
longitudinal muscle longitudinal muscle
contracted
relaxed
3. Stomach. This is an expandable bag where the food is stored for up to a few hours. There
are three layers of muscle to churn the food into a liquid called chyme. This is gradually released in to the small intestine by a sphincter, a region of thick circular muscle that acts as a
valve. The cells of the stomach wall secrete a solution containing: hydrochloric acid (pH 1) to
kill bacteria (the acid does not help digestion, in fact it hinders it by denaturing most enzymes);
mucus to lubricate the food and to line the epithelium to protect it from the acid; and some
protease enzymes. No other digestion takes place in the stomach.
4. Small Intestine. The first 30cm of the small intestine is called the duodenum. Although this is
short, almost all the digestion takes place here, due to two secretions: pancreatic juice and bile.
Pancreatic juice is secreted by the pancreas into the duodenum through the pancreatic duct. It
contains numerous amylase, protease and lipase enzymes. Bile is secreted by the liver, stored in
the gall bladder, and released into the duodenum through the bile duct. Bile doesnt contain any
enzymes, but it does contain bile salts to aid lipid digestion, and the alkali sodium hydrogen carbonate to neutralise the stomach acid. This give chyme in the duodenum a pH of around 7.5, so
the pancreatic enzymes can work at their optimum pH.
The rest of the small intestine is called the Ileum. This is the site of final digestion and absorption. To maximise the rate of absorption the ileum has the three features dictated by Ficks law:
The ileum has a huge surface area. It is over 6m long; the internal surface has large and
small folds (villi); and the epithelial cells lining the ileum have microvilli. Don't confuse
these two: villi are large structures composed of hundreds of cells that can easily be seen
NCM/9/08
villi
microvilli
1 m
500 m
epithelial cell
40 mm
There is a short diffusion distance. Between the lumen of the gut and the blood there is
just a single layer of epithelial cells and the single-celled wall of the capillaries.
A high concentration gradient is maintained by mixing the fluids on either side of the exchange surface. On the lumen side, the circular and longitudinal muscles propel the chyme
by peristalsis, and mix the contents by pendular movements (bi-directional peristalsis).
The microvilli can also wave to stir the contents near the epithelial cells. On the blood
side, the blood flow ensures there is always a low concentration of nutrients.
The layer of cells that line the ileum are called the epithelium, and the epithelial cells are highly
specialised for their role. They contain microvilli; membrane proteins for facilitated diffusion
and active transport; mitochondria; and membrane-bound enzymes.
5. Large Intestine. The large intestine comprises the caecum, appendix, colon and rectum. Food
can spend 36 hours in the large intestine, while water is absorbed to form semi-solid faeces.
Faeces is made up of plant fibre (cellulose mainly), cholesterol, bile, mucus, mucosa cells (250 g
of cells are lost each day), bacteria and water, and is released by the anal sphincter. This is a
rare example of an involuntary muscle that we can learn to control (during potty training).
Digestion of carbohydrates
By far the most abundant carbohydrate in the human diet is starch (in bread, potatoes, cereal, rice,
pasta, biscuits, cake, etc), but there may also be a lot of sugar (mainly sucrose) and some glycogen
(in meat). Starch is digested to glucose in two stages:
amylase
maltase
starch
maltose
glucose
NCM/9/08
takes place, since amylase is quickly denatured in the stomach, but is does help to clean the
mouth of starch and reduce bacterial infection.
2. Pancreatic amylase digests all the remaining starch in the duodenum. Amylase digests starch
molecules from the ends of the chains in two-glucose units, forming the disaccharide maltose.
Glycogen is also digested here.
3. Disaccharidases in the membrane of the ileum epithelial cells complete the digestion of disac-
charides to monosaccharides. This includes maltose from starch digestion as well as any sucrose and lactose in the diet. There are three important disaccharidase enzymes:
maltase
maltose
glucose
sucrase
sucrose
glucose + fructose
lactase
lactose glucose + galactose
The disaccharidase enzymes are unusual in that they are located in the membrane of the ileum
epithelial cells.
Absorption of Monosaccharides
The monsaccharides (glucose, fructose and galactose) are absorbed by coupled active transport
into the epithelial cells of the ileum, as shown in this diagram:
lumen
of gut
Na+
2
1
+
Na
epilthelium
3
tissue
fluid
blood
capillary
K+
5
+
Na
NCM/9/08
Lactose Intolerance
Some people cant eat food containing milk because it makes them ill, with symptoms including
flatulence and explosive diarrhoea. This happens because they dont have a lactase enzyme, so they
cant digest lactose. Since lactose cant be absorbed it passes through to the large intestine, where
it is fermented by the bacteria in the colon, who produce acids and gases like methane and carbon
dioxide. The gases cause flatulence and the other products cause diarrhoea by lowering the water
potential of the colon so causing less water to be absorbed.
In fact most humans (and all other adult mammals) are lactose intolerant, and this is the normal
state. Lactose is only found in milk, which is produced by the mammary glands of female mammals
to feed their young. Baby mammals all make lactase in order to digest the lactose in milk, but
when they are weaned (eat solid food) they stop drinking milk and the gene for lactase production
is switched off. Humans are unique in that, in some human societies, adults drink animal milk.
These humans generally have a mutation that causes lactase to be produced throughout life, so
these people are lactose tolerant and can drink milk without any ill effects.
NCM/9/08
lumen
low
brane.
2. This causes chloride ions to diffuse out of the cells into
the lumen.
epilthelium
Cl -
lumen
epilthelium
H2O
Na
Na+
low
ducing diarrhoea.
NCM/9/08
larynx
pleural
membrane
rib
trachea
cartilage
bronchus
intercostal
muscles
bronchiole
alveolus
lung
heart
sternum
diaphragm
The gas exchange system is also referred to as the respiratory system, but this can be confusing as
respiration takes place in all cells, and is quite distinct from gas exchange. The actual gas exchange
surface is on the alveoli inside the lungs. This surface meets the three requirements of Ficks law:
A large surface area. Although each alveolus is tiny, an average adult has about 600 million alveoli, giving a total surface area of about 100m, so the area is huge.
A small distance between the source and the destination. The walls of the alveoli are composed
of a single layer of flattened epithelial cells, as are the walls of the capillaries, so gases need to
diffuse through just two thin cells.
alveoli
bands of smooth
muscle around
bronchiole
bronchiole
ciliated epithelial cells
mucus-secreting
epithelial cells
alveolus
epithelium
of alveolus
blood capillary
endothelium
of capillary
red blood cells
NCM/9/08
Ventilation
Ventilation means the movement of air over the gas exchange surface (also known as breathing).
Lungs are not muscular and cannot ventilate themselves, but instead the whole thorax moves and
changes size, due to the action of two sets of muscles: the intercostal muscles and the diaphragm.
These movements are transmitted to the lungs via the pleural sac surrounding each lung. The
outer membrane is attached to the thorax and the inner membrane is attached to the lungs. Between the membranes is the pleural fluid, which is incompressible, so if the thorax moves, the
lungs move too. The alveoli are elastic and collapse if not held stretched by the thorax.
The muscle contractions change the volume of the thorax, which in turn changes the pressure in
the lungs (by Boyle's law), which in turn causes air to move. Ventilation in humans is tidal, which
NCM/9/08
Rest
Volume
of lungs
Expiration
Pressure
in alveoli
above
atmospheric
pressure
atmospheric pressure
below
atmospheric
pressure
Inspiration
2
Time (s)
1. The diaphragm contracts and flattens downwards and the external intercostal
muscles contract, pulling the ribs up and out.
2. This increases the volume of the thorax and the lungs, and stretches the elastic-walled alveoli.
3. This decreases the pressure of air in the alveoli below atmospheric.
4. Air flows in from high pressure to low pressure.
Normal
expiration
1. The diaphragm relaxes and curves upwards and the external intercostal muscles relax, allowing the ribs to fall.
2. This decreases the volume of the thorax and the lungs, and allows the alveoli
and bronchioles to shrink by elastic recoil.
3. This increases the pressure of air in the alveoli above atmospheric.
4. Air flows out from high pressure to low pressure.
Forced
expiration
NCM/9/08
In the uterus the lungs of a fetus are largely collapsed and filled with amniotic fluid. Very soon after
birth the baby takes its first breath by contracting its diaphragm with a force 20 times usual. This
stretches the alveoli and fills the lungs with air. The alveoli then remain stretched throughout life.
ventilation
rate
pulmonary
ventilation
tidal
x
= ventilation
rate
volume
tidal
volume
-1
pulmonary
ventilation
-1
-1
(cm min )
at rest
12
500
6 000
at exercise
18
1000
18 000
When the body exercises the ventilation rate and depth increases so that
Oxygen can diffuse from the air to the blood faster
Carbon dioxide can diffuse from the blood to the air faster
These changes allow aerobic respiration in muscle cells to continue for longer.
NCM/9/08
Lung Diseases
The features of the lungs that make them so good at gas exchange also makes them susceptible to
disease. The large volumes of air passing through the lungs may carry infectious pathogens or
other microscopic particles that cause disease. We shall look at four diseases of the lungs: Tuberculosis; asthma; fibrosis and emphysema.
Pulmonary Tuberculosis
Pulmonary Tuberculosis (or TB) is an infectious disease caused by the bacterium Mycobacterium
tuberculosis. In 19th-century England one in five died of TB, and although the disease has been al-
most eradicated in the developed world, it is still a major killer in the developing nations, responsible for 1.5 million deaths in 2006. The symptoms are a persistent cough with chest pains, tiredness, a loss of appetite and weight loss, and in serious cases coughing up blood, wasting away and
death.
TB is transmitted by aerosol droplets from coughs and sneezes of infected persons. Infection is
most likely to result from prolonged exposure, such as in crowded slums or hospitals.
The bacterial cells are breathed in and invade the
epithelial cells of the alveoli and bronchioles.
Here they multiply to form lumps called tubercles, in
chest x-ray
scar
tissue
tubercle
damaged
alveoli
NCM/9/08
400
350
300
250
200
antibiotics BCG
vaccination
150
100
50
0
1840
1860
1880
1900
1920
1940
1960
1980
Year
As this graph shows, the death rate from TB in the UK has steadily declined over the last 150
years. This decline is due to a combination of reasons:
Improved housing and hygiene. TB spreads most rapidly in crowded, slum conditions.
Improved diet. The immune system works less well with an unbalanced diet.
Pasteurisation of milk and improved animal husbandry. Before this, transmission of TB from
cows was common.
Antibiotics. As a bacterial disease, TB can be treated by antibiotics. The most effective antibiotic
was streptomycin, but now some M. tuberculosis bacteria have developed resistance to streptomycin, so usually a cocktail of four different antibiotics have to be used for several months.
Vaccination. TB can also be prevented by the BCG vaccine. This vaccine is named after the two
Frenchmen (Calmette and Guerin) who developed it at the Pasteur Institute in Paris in 1921.
The BCG vaccine contains a live but weak strain of M. bovis, a similar bacterium that causes TB
in cattle.
Unfortunately, the incidence of TB is currently rising due to resistance of the bacterium to the
BCG vaccine and to the increase in AIDs.
Asthma
Asthma is an allergic response that causes difficulty breathing, wheezing, tight chest and coughing.
It is thought to affect 10% of the world's population and is responsible for 2000 deaths per year in
the UK.
Asthma is not an infectious disease, but is caused by physical factors called allergens in the environment. These allergens include pollen, faeces of dust mites and animal fur. Other factors that
NCM/9/08
section
here
constricted
bronchioles
The constricted bronchioles also cause the breathing difficulties, wheezing and coughing, as the lungs
try to loosen the mucus.
Asthma can be treated by inhaling drugs that relax the smooth muscles and by anti-inflammatory
drugs.
Pulmonary Fibrosis
Pulmonary fibrosis is a severe shortness of breath caused by inhalation of fine dust particles or
chemicals. The particles stimulate an inflammatory response in the lungs, which results in the
growth of fibrous scar tissue around the alveoli. This scar tissue reduces the elasticity of the alveoli and compresses them, reducing air flow and gas exchange. There are hundreds of different
causes of pulmonary fibrosis, and since these are usually found in work-place environments, pulmonary fibrosis is known as an occupational disease. Some of the main causes are shown in this
table:
Disease
pneumoconiosis
asbestosis
silicosis
berylliosis
farmers lung
bird fanciers lung
ventilator pneumonitis
Cause
coal dust
asbestos
silica dust
beryllium
mould spores in hay
proteins in bird faeces
mould spores
Risk occupation
coal mining
demolition workers
quarrying, mining
electronics, nuclear power industries
farming
bird breeders, poultry farmers
air conditioning and heating workers
NCM/9/08
Emphysema
Emphysema is a lung disease characterised by severe breathing difficulties resulting in an inability to
do any exercise. It caused almost exclusively by smoking and 20% of all smokers suffer from emphysema; 10% of absence from work in the UK is due to emphysema and it kills 20 000 per year in
the UK.
The tar in cigarette smoke stimulates the white blood cells to release protease enzymes in the
lungs. These protease enzymes digest the proteins forming the elastic tissue in the epithelial cells
of the alveoli, so the alveoli cant expand and recoil, making ventilation difficult. In severe cases the
epithelial cells are destroyed completely, so alveoli merge to form large air sacs with a much
smaller surface area. These all reduce the rate of gas exchange, so reducing cellular respiration and
making any muscular activity very difficult.
normal alveoli
Emphysema is incurable, though giving up smoking prevents the symptoms getting any worse.
Breathing pure oxygen compensates for the poor efficiency of gas exchange, so allowing more respiration.
The four lung diseases are compared in this table.
Disease
TB
Cause
bacterial
infection
Symptoms
chest pain, coughing
blood, fever, death
Asthma
allergens
temporary breathing
difficulties; wheezing
breathing difficulty
Pulmonary dust
fibrosis
emphysema smoking
permanent breathing
difficulty
Effects
bacteria form tubercles
in lungs then reproduce
and consume tissues.
bronchiole muscles
contract, excess mucus
fibrous tissue
Risk Factors
overcrowding, poor
diet, AIDs
NCM/9/08
pulmonary artery
left pulmonary veins
right atrium
semilunar (pulmonary) valve
atrioventricular (tricuspid) valve
papillary muscle
right ventricle
inferior vena cava
left atrium
atrioventricular (bicuspid) valve
valve tendons
interventricular septum
left ventricle
cardiac muscle
The human heart has four chambers: two thin-walled atria on top, which receive blood, and two
thick-walled ventricles underneath, which pump blood. Veins carry blood into the atria and arteries carry blood away from the ventricles. Between the atria and the ventricles are atrioventricular
valves, which prevent back-flow of blood from the ventricles to the atria. The left valve has two
flaps and is called the bicuspid (or mitral) valve, while the right valve has 3 flaps and is called the
tricuspid valve. The valves are held in place by valve tendons (heart strings) attached to papillary
muscles, which contract at the same time as the ventricles, holding the valves closed. There are
also two semi-lunar valves in the arteries (the only examples of valves in arteries) called the pulmonary and aortic valves.
The left and right halves of the heart are separated by the inter-ventricular septum. The walls of
the right ventricle are 3 times thinner than on the left and it produces less force and pressure in
the blood. This is partly because the blood has less far to go (the lungs are right next to the heart),
but also because a lower pressure in the pulmonary circulation means that less fluid passes from
the capillaries to the alveoli. The internal volume of the left and right ventricles is the same.
The heart is made of cardiac muscle, composed of cells called myocytes. When myocytes receive
an electrical impulse they contract together, causing a heartbeat. Since myocytes are constantly
active, they have a great requirement for oxygen, so are fed by numerous capillaries from two
coronary arteries. These arise from the aorta as it leaves the heart. Blood returns via the coronary sinus, which drains directly into the right atrium.
NCM/9/08
Bundle of His
Purkinje fibres
which both contract, pumping blood into the ventricles. The ventricles are electrically insulated
from the atria, so they do not contract at this time. The blood can't flow back into the veins
because of the valves in the veins.
2. Ventricular Systole. The electrical impulse passes to the ventricles via the atrioventricular
node (AVN), the bundle of His and the Purkinje fibres. These are specialised fibres that do not
contract but pass the electrical impulse to the base of the ventricles, with a short but important
delay of about 0.1s. The ventricles therefore contract shortly after the atria, from the bottom
up, squeezing blood upwards into the arteries. The blood can't go into the atria because of the
atrioventricular valves, which are forced shut with a "lub" sound.
3. Diastole. The atria and the ventricles relax, while the atria fill with blood. The semilunar valves
in the arteries close as the arterial blood pushes against them, making a "dup" sound.
NCM/9/08
contract, making the atrium pressure higher than the ventricle pressure, so blood flows from the
atrium to the ventricle. The artery pressure is higher still, but blood cant flow from the artery
back into the heart due to the semi-lunar valves. The valves are largely passive: they are opened by
blood flowing through them the right way and are forced closes when blood tries to flow through
them the wrong way. Whenever lines cross in the pressure graph it means that a value opens or
closes.
Atrial Systole
Ventricular Systole
Diastole
atria contract
blood enters ventricles
ventricles contract
blood enters arteries
Events
Name
semilunar
valves open
0.1
0.2
semilunar
valves close
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
0.7
0.8
0.7
0.8
Pressure (kPa)
20
i n arter y
15
in artery
10
5
0
in atriu m
in ventricl e
in atriu m
in ventricle
atrioventricular
valves open
atrioventricular
valves close
PCG
"dup"
"lub"
ECG
Time (s) 0
0.1
0.2
0.3
0.4
0.5
0.6
NCM/9/08
60
cycle time (s)
Cardiac Output
The rate at which the heart beats and the volume of blood pumped at each beat (the stroke volume) can both be controlled. The product of these two is called the cardiac output the amount
of blood flowing in a given time:
heart
stroke
rate
volume
-1
-1
(beats min ) (cm beat )
cardiac
output
-1
(cm min )
75
75
5 600
180
120
22 000
As the table shows, the cardiac output can increase dramatically when the body exercises. There
are several benefits from this:
to get oxygen to the muscles faster
to get glucose to the muscles faster
to get carbon dioxide away from the muscles faster
to get lactate away from the muscles faster
to get heat away from the muscles faster
NCM/9/08
coronary
arteries
mand for oxygen and glucose. There are two coronary arteries that arise directly from the aorta, and these split into
left
ventricle
clean
artery
2. The atheroma can collect minerals and become hardened to form a rough plaque.
3. The plaque weakens the wall of the artery,
so the pressure of blood causes a local
swelling called an aneurism. If the wall is particularly weak the aneurism may burst caus-
Fatty
deposits
inside
artery
(atheroma)
NCM/9/08
1
Atheroma
(fat deposits)
2
Plaque
(hardened atheroma)
4
Coronary Thrombosis
(blockage due to blood clot)
Aneurism
(swelling due to weak wall)
5
Myocardial Infarction
(death of cardiac cells)
There are a number of risk factors that are associated with coronary heart disease. The more of
the factors that apply, the greater the risk of a heart attack. Some of the main factors are:
Blood Cholesterol. Cholesterol in the blood comes from the diet and from the liver, where it
is synthesised. Cholesterol is carried in large complexes with proteins, called lipoproteins. Highdensity lipoproteins (HDLs) remove cholesterol from tissues, so decrease the risk of atheromas,
while Low-density lipoproteins (LDLs) deliver cholesterol to tissues, so increase the risk of
atheromas.
Blood Pressure. High blood pressure increases the risk of an aneurism and stimulates thickening of artery wall, increasing the risk of thrombosis. Stress, diet and lack of exercise can all increase blood pressure.
Genetics. Both blood pressure and fat metabolism are affected by genes, so genes undoubtedly
affect the chance of a coronary thrombosis. This doesnt mean that, for some people, a heart attack is inevitable; it just means some people have to be even more careful about their lifestyle
risk factors.
Diet . High levels of saturated fat increase the amount of cholesterol carried in the blood and so
increase the risk of atherosclerosis. High levels of salt increase blood pressure and so increase
the risk of aneurism. However, fibre and vitamin C reduce the risk of heart disease.
Smoking. Smokers are between two and six times more likely to suffer from coronary heart
disease than non-smokers. The carbon monoxide and nicotine in cigarette smoke both cause an
increase in blood pressure.
NCM/9/08
lymph nodes
in neck
thymus
lymph nodes
in groin
Phagocytes
Granulocytes
T Lymphocytes
B Lymphocytes
for
phagocytosis
for
inflamation
for
cell-mediated
immunity
for
antibody-mediated
immunity
Macrophages
Neutrophils
Monocytes
Mast cells
Eosinophils
Basophils
Helper T-cells
Cytoxic T-cells
Memory T-cells
Plasma B-cells
Memory B-cells
NCM/9/08
NCM/9/08
lysozome
bacterium
changing shape, and they flow over microbes, surrounding and ingesting them
nucleus
NCM/9/08
NCM/9/08
variable
region
constant
region
disulphide
bridges
antigen-binding
site
stylised diagram
antigens
membrane-bound
antibodies
soluble
antibodies
antigen
membrane
receptors
NCM/9/08
bacterium
toxin
phagocyte
1 Antigen Presentation
T-Cells
B-Cells
chemical
signaling
CytoxicT-cells
Memory
T-cells
cloning
Clonal Selection
cloning
Helper
T-cells
3 Cell-mediated immunity
Plasma Cells
Memory
B-cells
4 Antibody-mediated immunity
1. Antigen Presentation
Infection is started when cells with non-self antigens enter the blood or tissue fluid. The antigens
can be from a variety of sources:
a virus capsid protein or envelope protein
on the surface of a bacterial cell
on a cancerous cell
Macrophages are the most important antigen-presenting cells because they are the most numerous. They constantly inspect the surface of every cell they come into contact with in the blood,
spleen, lymph nodes, tissue fluid and alveolar spaces. If the antigens are not recognised as self antigens, then the macrophage ingests the antigen and its cell by phagocytosis. Some of the antigens
HGS A-level notes
NCM/9/08
At birth we have less than 100 copies of each type of B or T lymphocyte. Whenever a particular
antigen enters the body it comes into contact with all the various cells in the blood and lymph, including the lymphocytes. Sooner or later the antigen will encounter a lymphocyte with a matching
receptor molecule, to which it can bind tightly. It's a bit like Prince Charming trying to fit the glass
slipper (the antigen) onto all the girls in the kingdom (the different lymphocytes) until eventually
he finds Cinderella, who is an exact fit. As soon as a match is found, the binding of the antigen to
the receptor stimulates the lymphocyte to divide repeatedly by mitosis, making an army of about
106 identical cloned B and T lymphocyte cells. This is called clonal selection, because only the selected cell is cloned. This army of clones can now destroy the infecting microbe, as described below.
3. T-Cells and Cell-Mediated Immunity
NCM/9/08
Memory B cells continue to secrete antibodies in small quantities for many decades, and can
multiply rapidly to produce an instant supply of plasma cells if the same pathogen invades again.
NCM/9/08
Concentration of
antibody in blood
secondary
response
primary
response
antibody concentration
required for immunity
0
First
infection
10
20
30
40
Delay of
years
10
20
30
Time after
40 infection (days)
Second
infection
Antigenic Variability
This immunity works well for many diseases, such as chicken pox, measles or mumps. We think of
these as childhood diseases because it is common to catch them once as children and never catch
them again. However it appears that you can keep on catching some diseases, such as the common
cold and the flu. Why does the secondary immune response not work with these diseases? Because these microbes have constantly-changing antigens. This is referred to as antigenic variability,
and it is caused by mistakes in DNA or RNA replication (mutations) due to poor polymerase enzymes. The result is that each infection causes a new primary response, with all the trappings of
the accompanying disease. With some diseases the pathogen is so active and the toxins so effective that the first infection causes a disease that is fatal (e.g. cholera, smallpox, diphtheria, AIDS).
HGS A-level notes
NCM/9/08
Immunisation
We have been able to make use of the immune system's memory to artificially make people immune to certain diseases even without ever having caught them. The trick is to inject with an antigen that will promote the primary immune response, but has been modified so that it is nonvirulent (or non-pathogenic), i.e. will not cause the disease. The immune system is thus fooled into
making memory cells so that if the person is ever infected with the real virulent pathogen, the
more powerful secondary immune response is triggered and the pathogen is killed before it can
cause the disease. This technique is called vaccination and is commonly used to provide artificial
immunity to a number of potentially-fatal diseases. In the UK children are commonly vaccinated
against diphtheria, tetanus, whooping cough, polio, measles, mumps, rubella and TB.
Passive Immunity
Injecting antigens to promote an immune response is called active immunity, but it is also possible
to inject antibodies against certain pathogens into the blood. This is called passive immunity and is
used when someone has already been infected (or is likely to become infected) with a pathogen.
The antibodies in it assist the body's normal immune response and help it deal with serious diseases. Antibodies are either prepared from the blood serum of an infected human (or rarely animal), called an antiserum, or are made by genetic engineering. Passive immunisation is not very
common, but can be used for rabies, tetanus, measles and hepatitis B, and is being tried to combat
AIDS.
Passive immunity also occurs naturally when a mother passes antibodies to her child. Antibodies
can pass across the placenta to the foetus and are also found in colostrum, the milk produced in
the first few days after birth. Since the baby's digestive system does not function at this stage, the
immunoglobulin proteins can be absorbed intact. This passive immunity helps the new-born baby
survive in a world full of pathogens, and is one reason why breast feeding is so important.
The different kinds of active and passive immunity are summarised in the table.
Active Immunity
(antigens received)
Passive Immunity
(antibodies received)
Natural
Artificial
NCM/9/08
Monoclonal Antibodies
Scientists quickly realised that the remarkable specific binding property of antibody proteins in vivo
would make them very useful tools in medicine and research in vitro. [In vivo means in life, i.e. in a
living organism; and in vitro means in glass, i.e. in a test tube.] For example antigens could be used
as a magic bullet to target drugs at one specific cell type in the body, or antibodies could be used
to detect the presence of specific proteins in very low concentrations. So in 1975 Kohler and Milstein found a way to make pure monoclonal antibody proteins in the lab. This is their technique:
1
Inject mouse with antigens
spleen
obtain
B-lymphocytes
from spleen
myeloma cells
Fuse cells
4
hybridoma
cell
1. Inject a mouse with the antigen proteins that you want antibodies for. These antigens could be
from a human cancer cell or a particular protein. The mouse will show a primary immune response and make a clone army of B lymphocytes with antibodies specific for that antigen.
2. After a few days, kill the mouse and extract B lymphocyte cells from its spleen. Although these
B cells will make antibodies, there are two problems: B lymphocyte cells wont grow in vitro;
and the spleen extract contains a mixture of thousands of different B cells, each making their
own specific antibodies.
HGS A-level notes
NCM/9/08
NCM/9/08