Biology
Biology
Introduction
It deals with the study of life and living organisms, which is essential for
understanding the world around us and solving real-world problems related to
health, environment, and biodiversity.
Equal Importance
Environmental Conservation
Conclusion
2. Science vs. Engineering: Eye vs. Camera & Bird vs. Aircraft
Fundamental Differences
Science Engineering
Human Eye:
o Evolutionary marvel.
o Functions with a complex interplay of cornea, lens, retina, and optic nerve.
Camera:
Bird Flight:
o Adaptable, self-healing.
Aircraft:
o Rigid structure.
Conclusion
Emergent Properties
Complexity from simplicity—how individual cells organize into organs and systems.
Interdisciplinary Nature
Personalized medicine.
Conclusion
Understanding Life
Medical Advances
Sustainable Living
Industrial Applications
Ethical Understanding
Conclusion
Biology is foundational for individual health, societal progress, and planetary survival.
Significance
These observations:
Introduction
Major Criteria
Significance
A Common Thread
Unicellular: Single cell performs all life functions (e.g., Amoeba, E.coli).
Prokaryotes:
o No membrane-bound organelles.
Eukaryotes:
Aminotelic:
Ureotelic:
Uricotelic:
Aquatic:
o Freshwater or marine.
Terrestrial:
Example: Cyanobacteria
Unicellular (Cellularity)
Prokaryote (Ultrastructure)
Ammonia-excreting (Aminotelic)
Aquatic (Habitat)
Conclusion
Arabidopsis thaliana (weed) Small genome, rapid growth Plant genetics, photosynthesis
Extra Points
Introduction
Genetics is the foundational principle of heredity, much like Newton's laws form the
basis of classical mechanics.
It provides predictive power, explanatory depth, and a unifying framework for all
biological sciences.
Significance
Just as Newton's laws predict physical motion, Mendelian laws predict inheritance
patterns.
Modern Impact
Law of Segregation
Each organism has two alleles for a gene; during gamete formation, alleles separate
so each gamete carries one.
Example: In pea plants, yellow (Y) and green (y) seed colors segregate in F2
generation as 3:1.
Proven through dihybrid crosses (e.g., seed shape and seed color).
Importance
Holds true for genes on different chromosomes or far apart on the same
chromosome.
3. Concept of Allele
Definition
Alternative forms of the same gene found at the same locus on homologous
chromosomes.
Example: Eye color gene may have blue and brown alleles.
Types
Codominant and Incomplete dominance (e.g., red and white snapdragon flowers
give pink offspring).
Mutations
4. Gene Mapping
Definition
Types
Significance
Gene Interaction
Epistasis
Types:
o Recessive Epistasis: 9:3:4 ratio (e.g., coat color in mice).
Significance
Mitosis
Meiosis
Emphasis
Dominant Allele
Recessive Allele
Molecular Basis
Often, dominant alleles produce functional proteins, while recessive alleles do not.
Exceptions
Genotype to Phenotype
Techniques
Example
Significance
Sickle Cell Anemia HBB Autosomal recessive Misshaped red blood cells
Phenylketonuria (PKU) PAH Autosomal recessive Brain damage without dietary control
Importance
Definition
Two mutants with the same phenotype produce a normal phenotype in offspring if
mutations are in different genes.
Example
Complementation Test
Applications
Extra Points
Model Organisms: Drosophila (fruit fly), Mouse, and Zebrafish used for studying
inheritance and development.
Introduction
All living organisms—from bacteria to humans—are made up of the same fundamental
chemical components called biomolecules. Despite this unity in building blocks, life forms
exhibit immense diversity due to how these molecules are structured and combined.
Monomers
Examples:
o Amino acids
o Nucleotides
Polymers
Examples:
o Proteins
Significance
o Order of monomers
o Type of bond/linkage
Monosaccharides (Sugars)
Disaccharides
Examples:
Polysaccharides
Starch:
o Digestible by humans
Cellulose:
o Made of β-glucose
Significance
Amino Acids
Functions
Hormones (insulin)
Transport (hemoglobin)
Nucleotides
Consist of:
o Phosphate group
Sugar: Deoxyribose
Single-stranded
Sugar: Ribose
o mRNA: Messenger
o tRNA: Transfer
o rRNA: Ribosomal
Significance
Blueprint of life
Fatty Acids
Glycerol
Triglycerides
Phospholipids
Steroids
Two-Carbon Units
Significance
Energy reserve
Structural components (cell membrane)
Conclusion
Biomolecules are the chemical foundation of life. Despite their simplicity and universality,
the way they are arranged and interact leads to the incredible diversity observed in nature.
From unicellular bacteria to complex human beings, the same sugars, amino acids,
nucleotides, and lipids play central roles—proving that unity exists in biological diversity.
Extra Points
Introduction
Enzymes are biological catalysts that dramatically increase the rate of chemical reactions
essential for life. Without them, even basic metabolic processes would occur too slowly to
sustain life. Every living organism depends on enzymes for survival, growth, and
reproduction.
Definition
Enzymology is the branch of biochemistry that studies enzymes, their mechanisms, kinetics,
and functions.
o Substrate disappearance
o Product formation
Methods include:
Enzyme Units
Activity Unit (U): Amount of enzyme that converts 1 µmol of substrate per minute.
Specific Activity: Activity per mg of total protein; used to assess enzyme purity.
Mechanism Overview
Steps in Catalysis
Enzymes are classified into 6 major classes based on the type of reaction they catalyze:
Active Site
Catalytic Mechanisms
Acid-base catalysis
Covalent catalysis
Enzymes bind best to the transition state, lowering the energy barrier.
5. Examples of Enzymes and Their Mechanisms
Example 1: Catalase
Example 2: Chymotrypsin
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
Catalytic Efficiency
Helps in:
o Enzyme engineering
Examples
Self-splicing introns
Significance
Suggests an "RNA World Hypothesis": RNA could store genetic info and catalyze
reactions.
Conclusion
Enzymes are indispensable to life. By lowering activation energy, they allow biological
reactions to occur at physiological conditions with astonishing speed and specificity. From
monitoring reactions to understanding RNA catalysis, enzymes reveal the elegance and
efficiency of life at the molecular level. Enzymology bridges basic biology with applied
sciences like medicine, biotechnology, and pharmacology.
Cofactors & Coenzymes: Metal ions (Zn²⁺, Mg²⁺), vitamins (NAD⁺, FAD).
Introduction
All living organisms—from bacteria to humans—follow the same molecular principles for
storing, transmitting, and expressing genetic information. This shared molecular mechanism
underlines the universality of life, and highlights how DNA encodes the instructions for all
cellular functions.
Historical Proof
Universal Role
1. Primary Structure
Nucleotide composition:
o Sugar (deoxyribose)
o Phosphate
2. Secondary Structure
3. Tertiary Structure
Supercoiling in prokaryotes
Nucleosomes in eukaryotes:
Properties
Universal: Same codons used in almost all organisms (e.g., AUG = methionine)
Universality
Virtually all organisms (bacteria, plants, humans) use the same genetic code
Degeneracy
Importance
Traditional Definition
Molecular Definition
Complementation
Recombination
Importance
o Gene therapy
Conclusion
The molecular basis of genetic information transfer is elegantly simple yet universally
powerful. DNA’s structure allows precise coding, the genetic code ensures faithful
translation, and the principles of complementation and recombination define the functional
units of heredity. Understanding these processes is crucial for modern biology, medicine,
and biotechnology.
RNA World Hypothesis: Life may have started with RNA as both information carrier
and catalyst.
Epigenetics: Gene expression can be altered without changing DNA sequence.
CRISPR-Cas9: Gene editing tool that relies on understanding of DNA coding and
decoding.
Introduction
Definition
Importance
Crucial for:
o Drug discovery
o Synthetic biology
o Genetic engineering
Amino Acids
Each has:
Importance:
Even a single change (mutation) can cause disorders, e.g., sickle cell anemia (Glu →
Val in hemoglobin).
Major Types:
Examples:
o Hydrogen bonds
o Ionic bonds
o Hydrophobic interactions
Importance:
Examples:
Hemoglobin: 4 subunits (2 α, 2 β)
(i) Enzymes
(ii) Transporters
Examples:
(iii) Receptors
Examples:
o Insulin receptor
Examples:
Analytical Methods
Functional Assays
Conclusion
Proteins are the workhorses of the cell, and understanding their structure at every level—
from linear chains to complex multi-subunit assemblies—is vital for comprehending all
biological processes. The reductionist approach of dissecting life at the molecular level
allows us to unravel the intricacies of cell function, disease mechanisms, and
biotechnological applications.
Common Principle:
In both physical and biological systems, energy cannot be created or destroyed (First
Law of Thermodynamics).
Biological order (cells) is maintained by continuous energy input (e.g., from food or
sunlight).
Spontaneity:
Many biological reactions are coupled to ATP hydrolysis to make them spontaneous.
Structure of ATP
ATP Hydrolysis
Why ATP?
Key steps:
o Glucose → 2 Pyruvate
Fate of pyruvate:
Produces:
Overall Reaction
Stages:
Calvin Cycle (Stroma): Uses ATP + NADPH to convert CO₂ into glucose
Endergonic Reaction
Type Example ΔG
Definition:
Conclusion
Definition
Microorganisms that consist of only one cell and can carry out all life processes
independently.
Types:
Features:
High adaptability
Examples:
Species:
o DNA-DNA hybridization
o Physiological traits
Strain:
Example:
Classification Criteria:
Major Groups:
Bacteria
Archaea
Fungi
Protozoa
Modern Classification:
4. Microscopy in Microbiology
Purpose:
Types of Microscopy:
Electron Microscope Electron beam for high resolution Virus, detailed internal structure
Staining Techniques:
Ecological Roles:
Habitats:
Soil, water, air, inside animals, extreme environments (hot springs, salt lakes)
Biogeochemical Cycles:
Methods:
Physical:
Chemical:
Media Composition:
Formula:
Conclusion
Microbiology reveals the unseen world that governs ecosystems, human health, and
biotechnology. Understanding the structure, classification, growth, and ecological roles of
single-celled organisms forms the foundation for medicine, agriculture, and environmental
science. With tools like microscopy, sterilization, and media formulation, we can isolate,
identify, and study these diverse organisms in precise detail.