Biology Syllabus

Instructor: Cheryl Massengale
Textbook: Modern Biology  by Holt, Reinhart, & Winston

Updated April 10, 2006

 

First Semester
Subject Weeks of Instruction Chapters
Chemistry of Life 2.5 
Cells 6.5
Genes 6.5
Second Semester
Mechanics of evolution 2
Biological Diversity 2.5
Plant Form & Function 3.5
Animal Form & Function 7.0
Ecology 2.0

 

 

First Nine Weeks – Molecules and Cells   

Date Topic of Study Chapters to read  Labs Tutorial Links
8/21

to

9/12

 

 

Chemistry & Biochemistry

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Lab 2: Enzyme Catalysis

Wildflower Collection

Organic Models

Periodic Table

Chemistry Review

Macromolecule Problems

Acids & Bases

pH Problems

Unit one Test – Biochemistry
9/13

to

10/6

Cells Chapter  7
Chapter  8
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Lab 1: Osmosis & Diffusion

Microscopy Lab

 

Cell Size

Cells Alive!

Cell Cycle & Mitosis

Meiosis

Onion Root Tips

Unit 2 Test over Cells (chapters 7,8,11,12,13)
10/9

to

10/24

Cellular Energetics Chapter 6

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Lab 5: Cell Respiration

Lab 4: Plant Pigments & Photosynthesis

Photosynthesis Problem Set 1

Photosynthesis Problem Set 2

Metabolism Problem Sets

Unit 3 Test over Cellular Energetics (chapters 6, 9, & 10)
Second Nine Weeks –  Genetics
10/25

to

11/14

Heredity Chapter 14

 

Chapter 15

Lab 3: Mitosis & Meiosis

 

Cry of the Kalahari

 

The Cell Cycle & Mitosis Tutorial

Online Onion Root Tip Activity

Cell Division Laboratory Tutorial

Problem sets Genetics

Problem sets Human Biology Genetics

On-line Activity Web Karyotyping

Unit 4 Test over Heredity (chapters 14 & 15)
11/15

to

12/20

Molecular Genetics Chapter 16

chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Lab 6: Molecular Biology

 

J. Watson bio

DNA diagrams

Nucleic Acids Practice Test

Molecular Biology

Bacterial Genetics and Recombinant DNA

Unit 5 Test over Molecular Genetics (chapters 16 – 21)
Third Nine Weeks – Evolution, Taxonomy, Plants
1/9

to

1/30

Evolutionary Biology Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Lab 7: Genetics of Drosophila The Museum of Paleontology (UCMP)

Galapagos Website

Unit 6 Test over Evolution (chapters 22-25)
   1/31

     to

   2/13

Diversity of Organisms Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 31

Lab 8: Population Genetics & Evolution

Gram Staining Lab

Introduction to Viruses

Introduction to Protists

Protist Image Data

Introduction to the Fungi

Unit 7 Test over Taxonomy, Prokaryotes, & Simple Eukaryotes
(chapters 26, 27,28, and 31)
    2/14

     to

   3/13

Structure & Function of Plants Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Lab 9: Transpiration

 

Angiosperm Structure and Function
Units 8A & 8B Tests over Plants  ( Chapters 29 & 30, 35 – 39 )
Fourth Nine Week – Animals & Ecology 
3/14

to

4/17

Invertebrates & Vertebrates Chapter 32

Chapter33

Chapter34

Invertebrate/Vertebrate Dissections Interactive Animal Diversity Test

Insects

Netfrog

Whole Frog Project

Unit 9A & 9B Test over Vertebrates & Invertebrates (chapters 32-34)
4/18

to

4/30

Structure & Function of Animals Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Lab 10: Physiology of Circulatory System

 

Fetal Pig Dissection

 

Arteriosclerosis

Explore the brain

Human Biology

Human Anatomy Online

Human Developmental Biology

Units 10A & 10 B Tests over Animal Systems ( Chapters40 – 49 )
5/1

to

5/11

Ecology Chapter 50
Chapter 51Z
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Lab 11: Behavior

Lab 12: Dissolved Oxygen & Aquatic Primary Productivity

Tall-grass prairie

Tundra Biome

Taiga

Major world biomes

Unit 11 Test over Ecology ( Chapters 50 – 55 )
AP Exam – May 14       Final Exam – May 23

Biology Web Quests

 

Web Quests
Outbreak — WebQuest About Epidemics  by Shannan Muskopf
Australia’s Animals  by Shannan Muskopf
Hello Dolly —  A Web Quest on Cloning  by Keith Nuthall
Conflict — Yellowstone Wolves
A Cell is a Small City
Galapagos Islands Suspended in Time
Evolution WebQuest  by Shannan Muskopf
Classification WebQuest by Liza Monteith
Genes — The Building Blocks of Life
DNA Profiling Investigating Disease & Prevention
I Am Joe or Jane’s Worms!
Dolphin Safe Tuna Freaky Frogs
Origin of Birds Save the Whales!
Laser Eye Surgery Marine Biology WebQuest
The Lowly Cockroach Is It Alive?
Stem Cells — Promise or Problem? Understanding Eating Disorders
Evidence for Evolution Lizzie Borden Mock Trial
Bacteria — Wanted Dead or Alive! The Gene Wars
Human Anatomy & Physiology Genetic Detectives
Scientist Brochure Taxonomy

HOME

Biomes of the World Solution

Biomes of the World Solution
T + + + C D A R + R L + T + + + S + + E I E B E + A + U + + + + E S + M T T I + D E N + + + + E R U E A O + O I M D H + + R + S O W R + I + T O R E R T + N + H F C O + B R I A R E + O + S + + N A V + E B C B C C + E + + + + I R I T + + I U + R S A V A N N A N N + + V D F E N I R A M + + R I M + O O G R A S S L A N D + A V O R R S U O U D I C E D G + + O E P + + + + + + + + I + + + + R + + + + + + + + A + + + + + + E + + + + + + T + + + + + + + + (Over,Down,Direction) ABIOTIC(7,1,SE) BIOME(12,7,N) BIOTIC(10,6,NW) CARNIVORE(7,6,SE) CONSUMER(1,8,NE) DECIDUOUS(9,12,W) DESERT(6,1,SW) FRESHWATER(1,10,NE) GRASSLAND(1,11,E) HERBIVORE(14,4,S) INTERTIDAL(11,10,N) MARINE(7,10,W) OMNIVORE(13,11,NW) PRODUCER(15,12,N) RAINFOREST(10,10,NW) SAVANNA(3,9,E) TAIGA(7,15,NE) TUNDRA(13,1,S)

 

Biotechnology Notes Bi

 

DNA Technology
All Materials © Cmassengale

Introduction:

  • Biotechnology refers to technology used to manipulate DNA
  • The procedures are often referred to as genetic engineering
  • DNA is the genetic material of all living organisms
  • All organisms use the same genetic code
  • Genes from one kind of organism can be transcribed and translated when put into another kind of organism
  • For example, human and other genes are routinely put into bacteria in order to synthesize products for medical treatment and commercial use
  • Human insulin, human growth hormone, and vaccines are produced by bacteria
  • Recombinant DNA refers to DNA from two different source
  • Individuals that receive genes from other species are transgenic

Viruses & their Structure:

  • Viruses contain genetic material but are not living
  • Host cells are required for their reproduction
  • Viruses are composed of an inner nucleic acid core (genetic material) and an outer protein coat (capsid)
  • Viruses that infect animals have an outer envelope (membrane) that is derived from the cell membrane of the host cell may surround the capsid
  • The genetic material in some viruses is DNA; in others it is RNA

 

 

Viral Reproduction:

  • When viral genetic material enters a cell, it is replicated, transcribed (mRNA is produced) and translated (proteins are produced from the mRNA) by the host cell
  • By this process, the host cell uses the genetic instructions in the virus to make more viruses

Viral DNA ® mRNA ® protein

  • If the viral genetic material is RNA, a DNA copy must first be made before transcription and translation can occur
  • The DNA copy of the viral RNA is called cDNA.

viral RNA ® cDNA ® mRNA ® protein

Bacteriophages:

  • Bacteriophages are viruses that infect bacteria
  • Not surrounded by a membrane as the animal-infecting viruses
  • Virus attaches to the bacteria cell, a viral enzyme digests away a part of the wall, and its viral DNA enters the host cell
  • Inside the host cell, the viral DNA is transcribed, translated, and replicated
  • Translation produces protein coats and the enzymes needed in the construction of new virus particles
  • Viral DNA is replicated
  • The protein coats and DNA are assembled into new viral particles
  • The host cell wall to ruptures releasing the newly formed viruses

  • Upon entering the cell, the viral DNA may instead, become integrated into the bacterial DNA
  • It is replicated along with the host DNA when the host reproduces
  • Eventually, it will become transcribed and translated

Retroviruses:

  • Contain RNA & the enzyme reverse transcriptase
  • Reverse transcriptase can make a DNA copy of the viral RNA
  • The new DNA produced from the RNA template is called cDNA
  • DNA synthesis follows the production of cDNA to produce a double-helix
  • cDNA then becomes incorporated into the host DNA (called a prophage)
  • The new viruses escape the host cell by budding
  • The AIDS virus (HIV) is an example of a retrovirus

 

Vectors

  • Vectors are used to transfer genes into a host cell
  • Plasmids & viruses are the most commonly used vectors
  • A vector must be capable of self-replicating inside a cell
  • Viruses are the vectors of choice for animal cells
  • Marker genes can be used to determine if the gene has been taken up

Plasmids:

  • Small rings of DNA in bacterial cells
  • Used to transfer genes to other organisms
  • Host bacterium takes up the plasmid, which includes the foreign gene
  • When bacteria reproduce, plasmids with the new gene are also reproduced 
  • This clones (copies) the gene each time the bacteria reproduces

Viruses:

  • Can accept larger amounts of DNA than plasmids
  • Once the virus enters the host cell, it also reproduces the foreign gene it carries
  • The copied gene is “cloned”

 

Restriction enzymes:

  • Restriction enzymes were discovered in bacteria
  • Bacteria use them as a defense mechanism to cut up the DNA of viruses or other bacteria
  • Hundreds of different restriction enzymes have been isolated
  • Each restriction enzyme or RE cuts DNA at a specific base sequence
  • For example, EcoRI always cuts DNA at GAATTC as indicated below

  • The sequence GAATTC appears three times in the DNA strand below. As a result, the strand is cut into four pieces

  • Other restriction enzymes cut at different sites, some examples are listed below

 

Enzyme Cutting Site
Bam HI GGATCC
Hae III GGCC
Pst I CTGCAG
Hind I GANTC

 

 

Sticky Ends & Recombinant DNA:

  • Fragments of DNA that has been cut with restriction enzymes have unpaired nucleotides at the ends called sticky ends

  • Sticky ends have complimentary bases, so they could rejoin
  • If the vector and the gene to be cloned are both cut with the same restriction enzyme, they will both have complimentary sticky ends
  • After cutting, the 2 DNA samples are mixed
  • Fragments with complementary sticky ends join together forming recombinant DNA (contains gene from vector & the gene to be cloned)
  • Enzyme DNA ligase seals the fragments together
  • Bacteria such as Escherichia coli are capable of taking up DNA from their environment
  • This process is called transformation
  • CaCl2 and a procedure called heat shock are used to make E. coli cells more permeable so that they take up the modified plasmids more readily

Genomic Libraries:

  • A genome is all of the genes in a particular organism
  • Bacteria or virus vectors can be used to store fragments of the DNA from another species
  • The DNA is cut up into fragments, and the different fragments are inserted into bacteria or viruses
  • The collection of bacteria or viruses is called a genomic library

Polymerase Chain Reaction (PCR):

  • Used to make many copies of small pieces of DNA
  • Procedure requires primers, DNA polymerase, and nucleotides
  • Primers are short chains of about 20 nucleotides that are complimentary to a region in the DNA to be amplified
  • DNA polymerase cannot continue the process unless it has already been started by primers
  • Nucleotides are needed because DNA is composed of nucleotide “building blocks”

  • The DNA is heated to approximately 95o C to separate the two strands of the double helix

  • After the strands are separated, the DNA is cooled to about 50o C, and the primers attach
  • The temperature is raised to approximately 70o C so the polymerase will attach to & copy the strand

  • The DNA replication process repeats itself as the solution is then heated and cooled at regular intervals

 

DNA Fingerprinting (RFLP Analysis):

  • In RFLP analysis, the DNA of an organism is cut up into fragments using restriction enzymes producing a large number of short fragments of DNA
  • Because no two individuals have identical DNA, no two individuals will have the same length fragments
  • Gel electrophoresis is a technique used to separate the DNA fragments according to their size
  • The fragments are placed in wells on a sheet of gelatin, and an electric current is applied to the sheet
  • DNA is negatively charged and will move in an electric field toward the positive pole

  • The smallest fragments will move the fastest because they are able to move through the pores in the gelatin faster
  • Bands will be produced on the gelatin where the fragments accumulate
  • Shortest fragments will accumulate near one end of the gelatin (furthest from the wells), and the longer, slower-moving ones will remain near the other end
  • DNA bands must be stained to make them visible

 

Gene Products & Uses of Genetic Engineering:

  • E. coli is used to produce proteins such as insulin by genetic engineering because it is easily grown
  • To recover the product, E. coli must be lysed or the gene must be linked to a gene that produces a naturally secreted protein
  • Yeasts can be genetically engineered and are likely to secrete the gene product continuously
  • Mammalian cells can be engineered to produce proteins such as hormones for medical use
  • Plant cells take up a plasmid from Agrobacterium
  • Plant cells can be engineered and used to produce plants with new properties such as Roundup Ready soybeans
  • Pseudomonas bacteria has been engineered to produce Bacillus thuringiensis or BT
  • BT bacteria make a toxin against insects, thus producing a natural insecticide   (example – B.T. cotton)
  • Animal viruses can be engineered to carry a gene for a pathogen’s surface protein so the virus can be used as a vaccine 
  • Genetic engineering techniques are being used to map the human genome through the Human Genome Project
  • Could provide tools for diagnosis and possible repair of genetic disease
  • Recombinant DNA techniques can be used for genetic fingerprinting
  • Gene therapy can be used to cure genetic diseases by replacing the defective or missing gene
  • Bovine growth hormone (BGH) increases milk production in cows by about 10%

Safety and Ethical Issues:

  • Harmful organisms may be accidentally produced
  • Organisms that are intended to be released in the environment may be engineered with genes that will eventually kill them
  • There is little legislation on the use of genetic screening and information produced by screening
  • The technology is increasing the ability to diagnose genetic diseases pre-natally, adding new complexity to the abortion controversy
  • Ethical questions have been raised over whether we should modify the genes of humans
  • Genetic screening and gene therapy are expensive and may be unavailable to the poor
  • Biological weapons could be created using biotechnology