f4 Biology
f4 Biology
Animal cells
 Centriole         ● Small and cylindrical, exist in pairs.       ● Forms spindle fibre during cell division.
                   ● A complex microtubules arrangement.
 Golgi             ● A stack of parallel flattened sacs coated    ● Processes, modifies, packs, and
 apparatus           by a single cell membrane.                     transports chemicals like protein,
                   ● New membrane is added at one end,              carbohydrate and glycoprotein.
                     vesicles bud off from the other.
 Plasma            ● Outer membrane surrounding cell              ● Separates cell content from external
 membrane            contents, made of proteins and                 environment.
                     phospholipids.                               ● Controls movement of substances into
                   ● Selectively permeable, thin, and elastic.      and out of the cell. Allows exchange of
                                                                    nutrients, respiratory gases, and waste.
 Lysosome          ● A small spherical sac enclosed in a single   ● Hydrolyses complex organic molecules
                     membrane                                       (protein, nucleic acid, lipid).
                   ● Contains hydrolytic enzymes.                 ● Breaks down bacteria and components
                                                                    of damaged cells.
 Component                   Description                                   Function
 Vacuole       ● Cell-sap filled sac, surrounded by a tonoplast         ● Water is absorbed into the
                 membrane.                                                vacuole, the cell becomes
               ● Young cells have many small vacuoles. Mature cells       turgid.
                 have one large vacuole.
               ● Cell sap: water, organic acids, sugars, amino acids,
                 enzymes, mineral salts, oxygen, carbon dioxide,
                 metabolic by-products.
 Cytoplasm     ● Jelly-like medium that contains suspended cell         ● A medium for biochemical
                 components.                                              reactions in cells.
               ● Contains organic compounds (protein, lipid,
                 carbohydrate) and inorganic compounds
                 (potassium ions).
 Nutrition        ● Cilium beats transfer food into the oral     ● Extends its pseudopodia to trap food by
                    groove.                                        phagocytosis.
                  ● The food vacuole combines with               ● The food vacuole combines with
                    lysosome. The enzyme lysozyme in the           lysosome. The enzyme lysozyme in the
                    lysosome hydrolyses the food.                  lysosome hydrolyses the food.
                  ● Nutrients are absorbed into the              ● Nutrients are absorbed into the
                    cytoplasm.                                     cytoplasm.
                  ● Undigested food is discharged when it        ● Undigested food is discharged through
                    moves.                                         the anus.
Respiration ● Gaseous exchange occurs through the plasma membrane by simple diffusion.
Cell specialisation
               Smooth muscle contracts and relaxes to enable involuntary activities (e.g. peristalsis).
   Muscle
   tissue      Skeletal muscle contracts and relaxes to generate controlled movement in bones and limbs.
Cardiac muscle (builds heart walls) contracts and relaxes to pump blood to the body.
    Nerve       ● Made of neurons (nerve cells). Consists of a dendrite (body) and axon (fibre).
    tissue      ● Detects stimuli and sends information as nerve impulses to muscles/glands.
                ● Regulates and controls body activity.
 Connective Loose connective tissue links epithelial tissue to the tissue below. It fixes organs in their
   tissue   positions.
Adipose tissue keeps fat under skin and the surface of main organs.
               Vascular    Xylem tissue transports water and mineral salts from the roots to the rest of the
               tissue      plant. Ligneous xylem tissue provides support and mechanical strength.
                            Phloem tissue transports organic matter (sucrose) from the leaves to the rest of the
                            plant.
2.4 Levels of Organisation in Multicellular Organisms
Cell -> Tissue -> Organ -> System -> Multicellular organism
Human systems
Endocrine Endocrine gland Coordinates body activities and the nervous system.
Respiratory Trachea, nose, lungs, diaphragm Gaseous exchange between body and environment.
 Muscular            Skeletal muscle, smooth muscle,         Contracts and relaxes to generate body movement.
                     cardiac muscle
Reproductive (M) Testes, prostate gland, penis Produce sperm and male sex hormones.
 Reproductive (F)    Ovary, uterus, Fallopian tube,          Produce ovum and female sex hormones.
                     vagina, cervix
 Lymphatic           Spleen, lymph nodes, lymph              Maintains bodily fluid balance and prevents
                     vessels                                 infections.
 Nervous             Brain, spinal cord, peripheral          Detects and sends information, coordinates body
                     nerves                                  activities.
Circulatory Heart, artery, vein, capillary Transports nutrients, respiratory gases, and waste.
 Digestive           Mouth, oesophagus, stomach,             Digests food into simpler forms for easy absorption.
                     liver, pancreas, small intestine,
                     large intestine
Urinary Kidney, ureter, urethra, bladder Eliminates waste (urea, uric acid).
 Skeletal            Bone, cartilage, ligament, tendon       Supports the body, protects internal organs, and is
                                                             the base for muscle adhesion.
Plant systems
 ● Stems, leaves, shoots, flowers, fruits.                  ● All roots absorb water and mineral salts.
 ● Stems, twigs: support systems, keep leaves              ● Provides support to plants.
   vertical for maximum sunlight absorption.
 ● Flowers: pollination.
F4 C3: Movement of Substances Across a Plasma Membrane
The plasma membrane regulates the movement of substances into and out of the cell to maintain living processes.
Plasma membrane
   ● Protein molecules float within the phospholipid bilayer, forming a mosaic pattern that changes frequently.
   ● Each phospholipid consists of a hydrophilic polar head and a hydrophobic nonpolar tail. The heads of the
      outer layer face the extracellular fluid, the heads of the inner layer face the cytoplasm. The tails of both
      layers face each other.
   ● Cholesterols make the phospholipid bilayer stronger, more flexible, and less permeable to water-soluble
      substances (ions).
The plasma membrane is selectively permeable. It only allows free movement of certain molecules across it, and
prevents/limits the movement of other substances. This property is due to the plasma membrane’s building
structure, determined by the phospholipid bilayer and proteins.
3.2 Concept of Movement of Substances Across a Plasma Membrane
The size, polarity, and ionic charge of a molecule determine whether it can pass through the plasma membrane.
Passive transport
 Simple        ● The movement of molecules/ions from an area of high concentration to an area of low
 diffusion       concentration, down the concentration gradient, until dynamic equilibrium is achieved.
               ● Occurs with/without a plasma membrane.
               ● e.g. Lipid-soluble molecules diffuse through the phospholipid bilayer.
 Osmosis       ● The net movement of water molecules from an area of high water potential to an area of low
                 water potential randomly through a selectively permeable membrane (permeable to water,
                 impermeable to some solutes).
 Facilitated   ● Lipid-insoluble molecules (ions, large molecules, amino acids, glucose) are unable to pass
 diffusion       through the phospholipid bilayer.
               ● They move across the plasma membrane with the aid of channel or carrier proteins.
               ● This does not require energy, as it occurs down the concentration gradient, until dynamic
                 equilibrium is achieved.
               ● Channel proteins allow small solutes and ions to diffuse across the plasma membrane. Their
                 channels/canals have specific internal characteristics, only specific ions can pass through.
               ● Carrier proteins have specific sites, and can only bind to specific molecules.
Active transport
Protein pumps in the epithelial cells of the stomach cavity transports hydrogen ions into the extracellular fluid
through the carrier proteins. The accumulation of hydrogen ions causes acid production in the stomach cavity,
resulting in the acidity of the stomach.
Occurs down the concentration gradient. Occurs against the concentration gradient.
Concentration of solutions
 Hypotonic solution     ● Water diffuses into the cell by           ● Water diffuses into vacuoles by
 ● Low solute             osmosis, causing the cell to swell and      osmosis, causing them to expand and
    concentration         burst.                                      push the cytoplasm and plasma
 ● High water           ● The plasma membrane is too thin to          membrane against the cell wall.
    potential             withstand the osmotic pressure.           ● Cell becomes turgid.
                        ● The burst of red blood cells is           ● Cells do not burst as the cell wall is
                          haemolysis.                                 rigid and strong.
                                                                    ● The turgor pressure provides plant
                                                                      support and maintains cell shape.
 Isotonic solution      ● Water diffuses into and out of the cell   ● Water diffuses into and out of the cell
  ● Equal                 by osmosis at equal rates. No net           by osmosis at equal rates. No net
      concentration       movement of water.                          movement of water.
                        ● Normal cell shape is maintained.          ● Cell becomes flaccid.
 Hypertonic solution    ● Water diffuses out of the cell by         ● Water diffuses out of vacuoles by
 ● High solute            osmosis, causing the cell to shrink.        osmosis, causing them and the
    concentration       ● The cell undergoes crenation.               cytoplasm to shrink.
 ● Low water                                                        ● Plasmolysis occurs. The plasma
    potential                                                         membrane is pulled away from the
                                                                      cell wall. Leaves and stems wilt.
                                                                    ● Partially plasmolysed cells can regain
                                                                      turgidity by deplasmolysis if
                                                                      immediately returned to a hypotonic
                                                                      solution.
F4 C4: Chemical Composition in a Cell
4.1 Water
1. Polarity
    ● Water molecules are polar molecules.
    ● Polarity produces hydrogen bonds, allowing water to act as a universal solvent.
    ● Water allows solutes (glucose, electrolytes) to be transported into cells for reactions.
4.2 Carbohydrates
4.3 Protein
Importance of proteins:
   ● Build new cells.
   ● Repair damaged tissues.
   ● For the synthesis of enzymes, hormones, antibodies, and haemoglobin.
   ● Form keratin in the skin, collagen in bones, and myosin in muscle tissues.
   ● Breakdown by enzymes provide energy for daily activities.
4.4 Lipids
                     ● Only single bonds between carbon.           ● At least 1 double bond between carbon.
                     ● Do not form chemical bonds with             ● Double bonds can receive additional
                       additional hydrogen atoms.                    hydrogen atoms.
                     ● Room temp: solid.                           ● Room temp: liquid.
                     ● More cholesterol (butter, animal fat).      ● Less cholesterol (olive/fish oil).
 Waxes              ● Contains one molecule of alcohol that combines with one molecule of fatty acid.
                    ● Waterproof.
                    ● Found on cuticles of epidermis of leaves, and in sebum from sebaceous gland in skin.
 Phospholipids      ● Consists of one phosphate group (head) and one molecule of glycerol that combines with
                      two molecules of fatty acid (tail).
                    ● Main component of plasma membranes.
Importance of lipids
   ● Fats as reserved energy for animals.
   ● Fats line internal organs for physical protection.
   ● Fats as a heat insulator in animals.
   ● Glycolipids ensure plasma membrane stability, and help in cell identification.
4.5 Nucleic Acids
3. mRNA diffuses out of the nucleus, and attaches to the ribosomes in cytoplasm (known as rRNA).
4. tRNA at the ribosome translates genetic code into amino acids. Every 3 genetic codes form 1 amino acid.
   6. Amino acid links to another by peptide bond, forming a long linear polypeptide chain (primary structure of
       protein).
Formation of chromosomes
   ● Chromosomes are formed from DNA polynucleotide chains wound around a histone protein.
   ● Histones do not carry genetic information.
   ● DNA molecules combine with histone proteins, forming nucleosomes.
   ● Nucleosomes intertwine to form the chromosome structure.
F4 C5: Metabolism and Enzymes
5.1 Metabolism
Catabolism Anabolism
 ● Breaks down complex substances into simple          ● Synthesis of complex molecules from simple
   substances.                                            molecules.
 ● Releases energy.                                    ● Absorbs energy.
 ● A (substrate) → B + C (products)                    ● A+B (substrate) → C (product)
 ● Eg. Cellular respiration                            ● Eg. Photosynthesis
   - Glucose + O2 → CO2 + H2O +                        - CO2 + H2O → Glucose + O2
   Energy
5.2 Enzyme
     ● Organic catalysts, made up of proteins.
     ● Substrate + Enzyme active site → Enzyme-substrate complex
CHARACTERISTICS
  ● Act rapidly.
  ● Small quantities required, reusable.
  ● Structure remains unchanged after reaction.
  ● Specific reactions. (Must fit active site)
  ● Reversible for most reactions.
  ● Slowed down/stopped by inhibitors. (Eg. lead, mercury)
  ● Some need cofactors for efficiency. (Eg, vitamin B, magnesium ion)
  ● Speed up biochemical reactions.
(b) pH
     ● Range for optimal pH: ph 6 - 8
       - Eg. Salivary amylase (pH 6.8)
         - Pepsin (pH 1.5 - 2.5)
         - Trypsin (pH 8.5)
     ● Changes charge (ion H+) on the active site of enzymes and substrate surfaces. Therefore, enzyme-
       substrate complexes cannot be formed.
     ● When pH returns to optimal level, charge is restored. Enzymes will function as normal.
     ● Extreme change in pH breaks structural chemical bonds and denature active sites.
                                           G1 PHASE
                                           ● Cells grow.
                                           ● Mitochondria and endoplasmic reticulum are produced.
                                           ● Proteins used in the cell cycle are synthesised.
                                           ● The nucleus looks big.
                                           ● Chromosomes are in the form of chromatin.
                                           S PHASE
                                            ● DNA synthesis occurs.
                                            ● DNA in the nucleus is replicated.
                                            ● Each chromosome multiplies into two sister chromatids, joined at
                                               the centromeres.
G2 PHASE
   ● Cells continue to grow, and remain metabollically active.
   ● Cells gather energy to enter the next stage.
MITOSIS
   ● The division of the nucleus of a parent cell into two nuclei.
   ● Embryo development: mitosis enables rapid cell growth. Injuries: mitosis produces new cells.
1. Prophase 2. Metaphase
 ● Centromeres divide into two, and the sister          ● Chromatids at opposite poles are daughter
   chromatids separate.                                   chromosomes.
 ● Spindle fibres shorten and contract.                 ● Each pole has one set of complete, identical
 ● Sister chromatids are attracted to opposite poles.     chromosomes, shaped as fine chromatid threads.
   When they arrive, anaphase ends.                     ● Nucleoli form, spindle fibres disappear.
                                                        ● Nucleus membrane is formed.
CYTOKINESIS
   ● The division of cytoplasm that happens immediately after the nucleus is formed.
Animal cells                                            Plant cells
● Occurs when the plasma membrane constricts in          ● Vesicles combine to form cell plates at the centre of
    the middle of the cell between two nuclei.              the cell.
● Microfilaments contract, causing the cell to split     ● Cell plates are surrounded by new plasma
    into two daughter cells.                                membranes, and expand outwards to combine
                                                            with the plasma membranes.
6.3 Meiosis
     ● The process of cell division that occurs in reproductive organs to produce gametes, that contains a haploid
        number of chromosomes.
                       1. Prophase I                                           2. Metaphase I
 ●                                                         ●
                       3. Anaphase I                                            4. Telophase I
 ●                                                         ●
                      5. Prophase II                                           6. Metaphase II
 ●                                                         ●
                      7. Anaphase II                                           8. Telophase II
 ●                                                         ●
Respiration:
(a) External respiration
     ● Breathing
       - Mechanical process by which O2 is transferred from surrounding air/water into body cells, and CO2 is
       transferred from body cells to surrounding air/water.
       → Inhalation
       → Exhalation
(b) Internal respiration
     ● Cellular respiration
       - Biochemical process by which oxidation of organic molecules (glucose) results in release of energy, CO2,
       and H2O in living cells.
       → Aerobic respiration
       → Anaerobic respiration (Fermentation)
Metabolism:
(a) Anabolism
    ● Process of synthesising simple molecules to complex ones.
    ● Absorbs energy.
    ● Eg. Protein formation.
(b) Catabolism
    ● Process of breaking down complex molecules to simple ones.
    ● Releases energy.
    ● Eg. Glucose breakdown in cellular respiration.
 Aerobic respiration:
     Glucose → Pyruvate ⟶ CO2 + H2O + Energy
   ● Group of non-organic phosphate is added to adenosine diphosphate (ADP) to produce ATP molecules.
   ● ATP molecules have weak phosphate links.
   ● When phosphate links are broken, energy released is supplied to cells to help carry out daily activities.
  Glucose oxidation:
     Glucose + O2 → CO2 + H2O + Energy (2898 kJ)
7.3 Fermentation
     ● Incomplete breakdown of glucose in limited/no oxygen conditions.
     ● Differs from aerobic respiration after glycolysis
     ● Pyruvate undergoes either:
(a) Alcohol Fermentation
Glucose → Ethanol + CO2 + Energy (210 kJ)
(i) Yeast
      ● Ethanol used to make beer and wine.
      ● CO2 makes bread dough rise.
(ii) Plants
      ● Paddy plants in waterlogged areas with less O2.
      ● Ethanol produced is toxic to most plants, but paddy plants have higher tolerance.
      ● Paddy plants produce alcohol dehydrogenase enzymes which break down ethanol
          molecules → CO2
Comparison:
   ● Occurs in yeast, bacteria, animals, plants.
   ● Process begins with glycolysis when glucose → pyruvate.
   ● Produces chemical energy in the form of ATP.
   ● Breakdown of glucose and its conversion to chemical energy.
               Structure that
               helps breathing
Oxygen passage
               Breathing
               mechanism