This week in AP Biology we reran our cellular respiration
lab. We had tried to run it last week but unfortunately the lab went wrong. To
begin the lab again we put the peas in water so they would germinate. Then, to prevent
our lab going wrong from last time we hot glued the respirameters to the rubber
cork they were supposed to be attached to. The next day in AP Biology we
prepared for the lab even more. In the bottom of each test tube we placed a
cotton ball and then put 1 mL of KOH solution on them. After that we placed a
rayon ball which is considered a nonabsorbent cotton ball on top of them. The
KOH solution attaches to the CO2 released in cellular respiration
that way in the experiment you are only measuring the amount of oxygen
consumed. We finally ran our lab the next day after putting 10 germinating peas
in test tubes 1 and 4 and then putting dry peas and beads of equal volume in
test tubes 2 and 5 and glass beads of equal volume in test tubes 3 and 6. We
placed the repirameters on top of the test tubes and put them in water baths of
10 and 25 degrees Celsius.
After a five minute resting period we began to take measure on the
respirameters of the amount of data consumed. Unfortunately our data was very
irregular and did not make sense. We attributed this to the fact that we moved
the test tubes while they were in the water baths which caused the red dye at
the top of the respirameters to leak out. In the end though the germinating
peas consumed the most oxygen in the 25 degree Celsius water bath. The colder
temperatures affected the peas because it slowed down the process of cellular
respiration.
Monday, November 25, 2013
Saturday, November 16, 2013
Oops!!!
This week in AP Biology we attempted to do two labs. Our
first lab involved enzymes. In this lab we used hydrogen peroxide as a substrate
and the enzyme in this lab would be peroxidase, an enzyme that is found in potatoes.
In this lab we would dilute the hydrogen peroxide with water and add blended
potato and water. When putting the two substances together the peroxidase in
the potato would catalyze hydrogen peroxide into water and oxygen. We were
going to see the rate of reaction of this catabolic reaction in different pHs,
but unfortunately we prepared our different pH solutions too early and they
began to mold. We now have to make more solutions of different pH and then we
will be able to perform the lab. Our second lab dealt with cellular
respiration. In this lab we were going to compare the amount of air produced by
germinating peas, non-germinating peas and glass beads, and glass beads. We had
six vials that we numbered one through six. In vial one we placed ten
germinating peas. In vial two we put 10 non-germinating peas and a certain
number of glass beads that made the volume of the germinating peas and
non-germinating equal. In vial three we put only glass beads that equaled the
volume of the germinating peas. We repeated this in vials four through six.
After this was finished we placed vials one through three in a room temperature
water bath and four through six in cool (10⁰C) water bath. The lab was not
successful because the vials had repirometers on top of them and when the vials
fell into the water the repirometers did also which screwed up the lab. This
upcoming week in AP Biology we will restart the cellular respiration lab and
will soon restart the enzyme lab.

Sunday, November 10, 2013
The Rehash of Cellular Respiration
This week in AP Biology we expanded even more on the
catabolic process that is cellular respiration. Cellular respiration can be
broken down into three smaller processes. These processes are glycolysis,
Citric Acid or Krebs’s Cycle, and Oxidative phosphorylation which is made up of
the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis.
The first reaction that occurs is glycolysis in the
cytoplasm in this reaction glucose is broken down from a six carbon molecule
into two three carbon molecules called pyruvate if oxygen is present. The
result of this is four molecules of ATP although we had to use two molecules of
ATP to start giving us a net profit of two ATPs and two molecules NADH or FADH2.
If the process has to occur anaerobically rather than aerobically the glucose
molecule is still broken down and the ATP is till produced, but lactic acid fermentation
and alcohol fermentation may occur. In muscle cells when the muscle needs more
energy than cellular respiration is giving out it performs lactic acid
fermentation. When the glucose is broken down into pyruvate the pyruvate is
then reduced by NADH and lactate is formed as a waste product. The lactic acid builds up and can only be
removed by exposure to oxygen. In certain prokaryotes and other anaerobic
organisms alcohol fermentation is the source of energy. The pyruvate produced
by glycolysis is changed into ethanol in alcohol fermentation.
After the glucose is broken down into two pyruvates the
pyruvates must then be converted to acetyl CoA and diffuse across the
mitochondria membrane before it can enter the Citric Acid Cycle. After the
pyruvates are changed into acetyl CoA they enter the Citric Acid Cycle. The
Citric Acid Cycle ends up reeasing the original six carbon atoms that were part
of glycolysis at the begging as well as 3 NADH, 1 FADH2, and 1 ATP
for every turn. Since there are 2 acetyl CoAs the cycle has two turns giving it
at the end 4NADH, 2 FADH2, and 2 ATPs.
The energy held in the NADH and FADH2 electron
carriers is then used by the electron transport system. Unlike glycolysis and
the Citric Acid Cycle which produces ATP through substrate level
phosphorylation the electron transport chain and chemiosmosis produce ATP
through oxidative phosphorylation. The electron carriers then deposit electrons
to the electron transport chain. The loss of energy from the electrons is used
to pump protons across the mitochondria’s inner membrane. Once the electrons
are done they then combine with two hydrogen ions and oxygen to form water. The
large concentration of protons or H+ ions then power the enzyme ATP
synthase which starts pumping out ATP. This part of the process is called
chemiosmosis. The end result of this can produce up to 26 or 28 ATPs.

Monday, November 4, 2013
Cellular Respiration
This week in AP Biology we learned about Cellular Respiration.
Cellular Respiration is the process of taking food with 02 and
creating ATP. Cellular Respiration takes place in and outside of the
mitochondria. It can be performed both aerobically and anaerobically although,
it is more productive aerobically. The equation for cellular respiration is C6H12O6+6O6
à 6CO2+6H2O.
There are three steps in cellular respiration they are
glycolysis, The Krebs’s Cycle, and the electron transport chain. Glycolysis is
taking glucose and breaking it down into two pyruvates. It occurs outside of
the mitochondria in the cytoplasm. This produces two ATPs. After glycolysis the
pyruvates are diffused across the mitochondria’s membrane where it is changed
to acetyl CoA. From there the acetyl CoA enters the Krebs’s or citric acid
cycle. This process produces 6 NADH, 2 FADH2, and 2 ATPs. After the
Krebs’s Cycle the NADH and FADH2 go to the electron transport chain.
There the NADH and FADH2 release hydrogen atoms across the
mitochondria’s membrane. When the outside of the mitochondria is saturated with
hydrogen atoms it propels the enzyme ATP synthase to start producing ATP and it
can produce up to thirty-four ATPs.
If cellular respiration occurs anaerobically it does not
produce as much ATPs. Anaerobic respiration only has one step which is
glycolysis. Lactic Acid Fermentation happens when muscle cells are placed under
extreme pressure. The muscles cannot get enough oxygen so they start to perform
cellular respiration anaerobically. This builds lactic acid in the cells and it
can only go away by getting oxygen to the cells. When cellular respiration is
performed anaerobically it is not as successful as when performe
d aerobically.

Saturday, October 19, 2013
The O word!
This week in AP Biology we did a lab over osmosis. Last week
we learned osmosis is a type of diffusion, but it only applies to water. The
definition of osmosis is the diffusion of water across a selectively permeable
membrane.
There are three terms often mentioned when dealing with
osmosis and they are hypertonic, hypotonic, and isotonic. Hypertonic is the
solution when comparing two solutions has the higher concentration gradient.
When cells are placed in hypertonic solutions the water in the cell will rush
out of the cell, and the cell will start to shrivel up. In plants this causes
plasmolysis, which is when the plasma membrane detaches from the cell wall.
Salt water is hypertonic to the cell in our bodies, so if you are ever
dehydrated salt water will not hydrate you but will dehydrate you faster. A hypotonic solution is the solution when
comparing two solutions has the lower gradient concentration. Cell placed in a
hypotonic solution will most likely bust because the water rushes into the cell
because of osmosis, except in plant cells. The cells in plants like to be in a
hypotonic solution because it keeps the cell turgid. An isotonic solution is
when comparing two solutions and them having the same concentration gradient.
This is how people want their cells to be at most times. In plant cells though,
this is not the prime environment for the cells. Plant cells in an isotonic
solution become flaccid which causes the plant to look wilted.
The lab we did was centered around these terms and how the solutions affect cells.


Tuesday, October 15, 2013
The Gatekeeper
This week in AP Bio we learned about the gatekeeper of the cell. This guardian of the cell is called the plasma membrane. The plasma membrane is made of a phospho-lipid bi-layer and proteins. The phospho head of the bi-layer is hydrophillic, while the lipid tail is hydrophobic this characteristic of is called amphipathic. The along with proteins embedded in membrane allows the cell to be selectively permeable. The function of the plasma membrane is to maintain homeostasis by controlling what goes in and out of the cell.
There is two different ways the plasma membrane diffuses what goes in and out of the cell. One is passive transport that requires no energy; there is two types of passive transport diffusion and facilitated diffusion. Diffusion is when molecules move from a high concentration gradient to a low concentration gradient. Osmosis is also diffusion, but it is when water diffuses across the plasma membrane. Facilitated Diffusion is when molecules move from an are of high concentration to an area of low transportation using a transport protein. The other type of transport that the plasma membrane uses is active transport, and it does require energy. The molecules are moving from an area of low concentration to high concentration, and the cell uses energy from the mitochondria called ATP.
When cells require to move large particles into or out of the cells they use endocytosis ans exocytosis. Endocytosis is when when the membrane is taking the particles into the cell by vesicles created by the membrane. Once the particles are taken to their destination the membrane is reabsorbed by the cell. There are three types of endocytosis. Phagocytosis although it is also called cell eating; it is when the vacuole or vesicle the material is contained in is sent to the lysosomes to be digestive. In pinocytosis, when the plasma membrane engulfs the materials is also takes in the extracellular fluid this is very important in red blood cells. The third type of endocytosis is receptor-mediator endocytosis it is when the cell binds itself to specific particles. Exocytosis is used when the cell is moving molecules out of the cell. The large particle exiting the cell is enveloped by a vesicle that is fused with the membrane once it's materials exit.
Each of our cells have a surrounding plasma membrane, even prokaryote cells have one. Is is very crucial to all organisms in maintaining homeostasis.
There is two different ways the plasma membrane diffuses what goes in and out of the cell. One is passive transport that requires no energy; there is two types of passive transport diffusion and facilitated diffusion. Diffusion is when molecules move from a high concentration gradient to a low concentration gradient. Osmosis is also diffusion, but it is when water diffuses across the plasma membrane. Facilitated Diffusion is when molecules move from an are of high concentration to an area of low transportation using a transport protein. The other type of transport that the plasma membrane uses is active transport, and it does require energy. The molecules are moving from an area of low concentration to high concentration, and the cell uses energy from the mitochondria called ATP.
When cells require to move large particles into or out of the cells they use endocytosis ans exocytosis. Endocytosis is when when the membrane is taking the particles into the cell by vesicles created by the membrane. Once the particles are taken to their destination the membrane is reabsorbed by the cell. There are three types of endocytosis. Phagocytosis although it is also called cell eating; it is when the vacuole or vesicle the material is contained in is sent to the lysosomes to be digestive. In pinocytosis, when the plasma membrane engulfs the materials is also takes in the extracellular fluid this is very important in red blood cells. The third type of endocytosis is receptor-mediator endocytosis it is when the cell binds itself to specific particles. Exocytosis is used when the cell is moving molecules out of the cell. The large particle exiting the cell is enveloped by a vesicle that is fused with the membrane once it's materials exit.
Each of our cells have a surrounding plasma membrane, even prokaryote cells have one. Is is very crucial to all organisms in maintaining homeostasis.
Saturday, October 5, 2013
The Endomembrane System!!!
The Endomembrane System is very important in our cells. Eukaryotic cells are the only cells that have the endomembrane system. It consists of the the nuclear envelope, the endoplasmic reticulum (smooth and rough), the golgi apparatus, lysosomes, different types of vesicles and vacuoles, and the plasma membrane. The function of the Endomembrane System deals mostly with proteins. It includes the making, modification, sorting, and transport of proteins. All of the Endomembrane System is related by either physically touching or by vesicles transferring between the related organelles.
Within the Endomembrane System there are many different organelles that have certain responsibilities in the cell. The nuclear envelope is a bi-layer membrane that encompasses the nucleus of cells. The endoplasmic reticulum is the place that proteins are synthesized and transported. Proteins are modified and also transported to other parts of the cell in the golgi apparatus. Lysosomes have a digestive enzyme that allows them to digest macromolecules in the cell. Vesicles are small bits of membranes that are used to transport substances in the cell. Vacuoles are used to store waste products and maintaining the shape of cells. The gatekeeper or plasma membrane of the the cell is used to regulates what enters and exit the cells.
Endomembrane System consists of most of the membranes in the cells and has many different resposibilities in our cells that are imperative to our bodies.
Within the Endomembrane System there are many different organelles that have certain responsibilities in the cell. The nuclear envelope is a bi-layer membrane that encompasses the nucleus of cells. The endoplasmic reticulum is the place that proteins are synthesized and transported. Proteins are modified and also transported to other parts of the cell in the golgi apparatus. Lysosomes have a digestive enzyme that allows them to digest macromolecules in the cell. Vesicles are small bits of membranes that are used to transport substances in the cell. Vacuoles are used to store waste products and maintaining the shape of cells. The gatekeeper or plasma membrane of the the cell is used to regulates what enters and exit the cells.
Endomembrane System consists of most of the membranes in the cells and has many different resposibilities in our cells that are imperative to our bodies.

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