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Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”
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Page 1: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Lab Review

“The Dirty Dozen”

Page 2: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Diffusion & Osmosis

Page 3: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Diffusion & Osmosis

• Description– Dialysis tubing filled with startch-glucose solution

in beaker filled with IKI solution– Potato Cores in Sucrose solutions– Determining solute concentration of different

solutions

Page 4: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Diffusion & Osmosis

• Concepts– Semi-permeable membrane– Diffusion– Osmosis– Solutions• Hypotonic• Hypertonic• Isotonic

– Water Potential

Page 5: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Diffusion & Osmosis

• Conclusions– Water moves from high concentration of water

(hypotonic or high water potential) to low concentration of water (hypertonic or low water potential)

– Solute concentrations, polarity and size of molecule affect movement through semipermeable membrane

Page 6: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Diffusion & OsmosisEssay 1992A lab assistant prepared solution of .8M, .6M, .4M, and .2M sucrose, but

forgot to label them. After realizing the error, the assistant randomly labeled the flasks containing these four unknown solutions as flask A, B, C, and D.

Design an experiment, based on the principles of diffusion and osmosis, that the assistant could use to determine which of the flasks contains each of the four unknown solutions

Include in your answer:a. a description of how you would set up and perform the experimentb. the results you would expect from your experiment; andc. an explanation of those results based on the principles involved.

Be sure to clearly state the principles addressed in your discussion.

Page 7: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Diffusion & OsmosisEssay 2005 B

Page 8: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questions

Page 9: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.
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Enzyme Catalysis• Description of Honors Biology Lab– Measured factors affecting enzyme activity– H2O2 H2O + O2

– Measured rate of O2 production

• Description of AP Biology Lab– Measured factors affecting enzyme activity– Catechol Quinone– Measured rate of light absorbance– Included Hydroquinone and resorsinol (isomers)

Catalase

Clear Polyphenoloxidase Brown

Page 13: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Enzyme Catalysis

• Concepts– Substrate– Enzyme– Denaturation of protein– Competitive inhibition– Allosteric activation (cooperativity) – Experimental design• Reaction rate w/enzyme vs. reaction rate wo/enzyme• Optimum pH or temperature

Page 14: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Enzyme Catalysis

• Conclusions– Enzyme reaction rate is affected by:• pH• Temperature• Substrate concentration• Enzyme concentration• Allosteric reactivity/cooperativity• Competitive inhibition

Page 15: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Enzyme CatalysisEssay question 2000The effects of pH and temperature were studied for an enzyme-catalyzed

reaction. The following results were obtained.

A. How do (1) temperature and (2) pH affect the activity of this enzyme? In your answer, include a discussion of the relationship between the structure and the function of this enzyme, as well as a discussion of how structure and function of enzymes are affected by temperature and pH.

B. Describe a controlled experiment that could have produced the data shown for either temperature or pH. Be sure to state the hypothesis that was tested here.

Enzy

me

Activ

ity

Enzy

me

Activ

ity

Temperature pH

Page 16: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questionsA. Allosteric InhibitionB. Feedback inhibitionC. Competitive inhibitionD. Noncompetitive inhibitionE. Cooperativity

1. Describes inhibition by an enzyme that is capable of either activation or inhibiting a metabolic pathway.

2. A reversible inhibitor that looks similar to the normal substrate and competes for the active site of the enzyme

3. The process by which the binding of the substrate to the enzyme triggers a favorable conformation change which causes similar change in all of the proteins subunits.

4. The process by which a metabolic pathway is shut off by the product it produces

5. Binds to the enzyme at a site other than the active site, causing the enzyme to change shape and be unable to bind substrate.

Page 17: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questions

7. The above graph most accurately depicts the energy changes that take place in which of the following types of reaction?A. hypothermicB. hyperthermicC. endergonicD. exergonicE. free range

Page 18: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Mitosis & Meiosis

• Description– Cell stages of mitosis• Exam slide of onion root tip• Count number of cells in each stage to determine

relative time spent in each stage

– Crossing over in meiosis• Farther gene is from centromere the greater number of

crossovers• Observed crossing over in fungus, Sordaria

– Arrangement of ascospores

Page 19: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Mitosis & Meiosis

Page 20: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Mitosis & Meiosis

Page 21: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Growing on the plates

nTwo Hyphae fuse (plasmogamy)

Sordaria (Ascomycete fungus)

One genetic variability is the color of the ascospores. Wild (dark brown) TanHow the ascospores are arranged in the ascus represents if crossing over has occurred.

Karyogamy

Spores

Meiosis – where crossing over may occur

No crossing over:4:4

Crossing over:2:4:2 or2:2:2:2

Page 22: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

You will look at slides of the plates and calculate the percentage of crossover. This can be used to determine map units.

Page 23: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Mitosis & Meiosis

• Conclusions– Mitosis• Cell division

– Growth, repair– Making clones

– Meiosis• Reduction division

– Making gametes– Increasing variation

• Crossing over in Prophase 1

Page 24: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Mitosis & MeiosisEssay 1982 Discuss the process of cell division in animals. Include a description of

mitosis and cytokinesis, and of the other phases of the cell cycle. Do not include meiosis.

Essay 204Meiosis reduces chromosome number and rearranges genetic information.a. explain how the reduction and rearrangement are accomplished in meiosisb. several human disorders occur as a result of defects in the meiotic process. Identify ONE such chromosomal abnormality; what effects does it have on the phenotype of people with the disorder? Describe how this abnormality could result from a defect in meiosis.

Page 25: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Photosynthesis

• Description– Determine rate of photosynthesis under different

conditions• Light vs. dark• Boiled vs. unboiled chloroplasts• Chloroplasts vs. no chloroplasts

– Use DPIP in place of NADP+• DPIPox = blue (NADP+)

• DPIPred= clear (NADPH)

– Measure light transmittance– Paper chromatography to separate plant pigments

Page 26: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Photosynthesis• Concepts– Light reaction– Experimental design• Control vs. Experimental

– Chlorophyll and others• Chlorophyll a• Chlorophyll b• Xanthophylls• Carotenoids

Page 27: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Photosynthesis• Conclusions– Pigments• Pigments move at different rates based on solubility

and mass in the solvent

– Photosynthesis• Light and unboiled

chloroplasts produced highest rate of photosynthesis• Which is the

control?

Page 28: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

PhotosynthesisEssay 2004 (part 1) A controlled experiment was conducted to analyze the effects of darkness and boiling

on the photosynthetic rate of incubated chloroplast suspensions. The dye reduction technique was used. Each chloroplast suspension was mixed with DPDP, an electron acceptor that changes from blue to clear when it is reduced. Each sample was placed individually in a spectrophotometer and the percent transmittance was recorded. The three samples used were prepared as follows.

Sample 1 – chloroplast suspension + DPIPSample 2 – chloroplast suspension surrounded by foil wrap to provide a dark

environment + DPIPSample 3 – chloroplast suspension that has been boiled + DPIP

Data are given in the table on the next slidea. construct and label a graph showing the results for the three samplesb. Identify and explain the control or controls for this experimentc. the differences in the curves of the graphed data indicate that there were differences in the number of electrons produced in the three samples during the experiment. Discuss how electrons are generated in photosynthesis and why the three samples gave different transmittance results.

Page 29: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Photosynthesis)Time (min) Light, Unboided

% TransmittanceSample 1

Dark, Unboiled% Transmittance

Sample 2

Light, Boiled%Transmittance

Sample 3

0 28.8 29.2 28.8

5 48.7 30.1 29.2

10 57.8 31.2 29.4

15 62.5 32.4 28.7

20 66.7 31.8 28.5

Page 30: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Cellular Respiration

Page 31: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Cellular Respiration

• Description– Using a CO2 probe to measure the rate of respiration in

crickets at different temperatures• Concepts– Respiration– Endothermic vs. Exothermic– Experimental design

• Conclusions– As temp. decreases, respiration decreases– As germination (of peas) increases, respiration increases

Page 32: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Cellular Respiration

• Germination pea experiment– Set up– Purpose of KOH

Page 33: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Cellular RespirationEssay 1990The results below are measuremnts of culumlative oxygen consumption by germination

and dry seeds. Gas volume measurements were corrected for changes in temperature and pressure

a. Plot the results for the germinating seeds at 22⁰C and 10⁰C.b. Calculate the rate of oxygen consumption for the germinating seeds at 22⁰C, using the

time interval between 10 and 20 minutes.c. Account for the differences in oxygen consumption observed between:

a. Germinating seeds at 22⁰C and at 10⁰Cb. Geminating seeds and dry seeds.

d. Describe the essential features of an experimental apparatus that could be used to measure oxygen consumption by a small organism. Explain why each of these features is necessary.

Cumulative Oxygen Consumed (mL)Time (min) 0 10 20 30 40

Germinating seeds 22⁰C 0.0 8.8 16.0 23.7 32.0

Dry seeds (non germinating) 22⁰C 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.0 0.1

Germinating Seeds 10⁰C 0.0 2.9 6.2 9.4 12.5

Dry seeds (non germinating) 10⁰C 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.1 0.2

Page 34: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Molecular Biology

Page 35: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Molecular Biology

• Description– Transformation• Insert foreign gene in bacteria by

using engineered plasmid• Also insert ampicillin resistant gene on same plasmid as

selectable marker

– Gel Electrophoresis• Cut DNA with restriction enzyme• Fragments separate on gel based

on size

Page 36: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Molecular Biology• Concepts– Transformation– Plasmid– Selectable marker

• Ampicillin resistance

– Restriction Enzyme– Gel Electrophoresis

• DNA is negatively charged• Smaller fragments

travel faster• Correlate distance

traveled with size of fragment

Page 37: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Molecular Biology• Conclusions– Can insert foreign DNA using a vector– Ampicillin becomes selecting agent• No transformation = no growth on amp+ plate

Page 38: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Molecular Biology

Page 39: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Molecular Biology

Page 40: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questions

Page 41: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questions

Page 42: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questions

Page 43: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questions

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Try these questions

Page 45: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questions

Page 46: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Try these questions

Page 47: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Genetics Fly Lab

• Description– Given a fly of unknown genotype use crosses to

determine the mode of inheritance of a trait.

Page 48: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Genetics Fly Lab

• Concepts– Phenotype vs. genotype– Dominant vs. recessive– P, F1, F2 generations– Sex-linked– Monohybrid cross– Dihybrid cross– Test cross– Chi-square

Page 49: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Genetics Fly Lab

• Conclusions: Can you solve these?

Case 1

Case 2

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Genetics Fly Lab

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Genetics Fly Lab

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Population Genetics

Size of population & gene pool Random vs. Non-random mating

Page 53: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Population Genetics

• Description– Simulations were used to study effects of different

parameters on frequency of alleles in a population• Selection• Heterozygous advantage• Genetic drift

Page 54: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Population Genetics• Concepts

– Hardy Weinberg equilibrium• P + q = 1• P2 + 2pq + q2 = 1• Required conditions

– Large population– Random mating– No mutations– No natural selection– No migration

– Gene pool– Heterozygous advantage– Genetic drift

• Founder effect• Bottleneck

Page 55: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Population Genetics

• Conclusions– Recessive alleles remain hidden in the pool of

heterozygotes• Even lethal recessive alleles are not completely

removed from population

– Know how to solve H-W problems!• Allele frequencies…solve for p and q• Genotypic frequencies…use p2, 2pq, or q2

Page 56: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Populations Genetics

Essay 1989Do the following with reference to the Hardy-Weinberg model.a. Indicate the conditions under which allele frequencies

remain constant from one generation to the nextb. Calculate, showing all work, the frequencies of the alleles

and frequencies of the genotypes in a population of 100,000 rabbits of which 25,000 are white and 75,000 are agouti. In rabbits the white color is due to a recessive allele, w, and agouti is due to a dominant allele, W.

c. If the homozygous dominant condition were to become lethal, what would happen to the allelic and genotypic frequencies in the rabbit population after two generations?

Page 57: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Transpiration

Page 58: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Transpiration• Description– Test the effects of environmental factors on rate of

transpiration• Temperature• Humidity• Air flow (wind)• Light intensity

OR plants wrapped in plastic wrap, put in the above varying conditions and taking mass over time. Rate at which plant loses mass is equivalent to rate of water loss due to transpiration.

Page 59: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Transpiration

• Concepts– Transpiation– Stomates– Guard cells– Xylem• Adhesion• Cohesion

– H bonding

Page 60: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Transpiration

• Conclusions– Transpiration

– Increase in wind– Increase in light

– Transpiration– Increase in humidity

Page 61: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Transpiration

Page 62: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Circulatory Physiology

Page 63: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Circulatory Physiology

• Description– Study factors that affect heart rate• Body position• Level of activity

– Determine whether an organism in an endotherm or an ectotherm by measuring change in pulse rate as temperature changes• Daphnia• Goldfish

Page 64: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Circulatory Physiology

• Concepts– Themoregulation– Endotherm– Ectotherm– Q10

• Measures increase in metabolic activity resulting from increase in body temperature

• Daphnia can adjust their temperature to the environment, as temperature in environment increases, their body temperature also increases which increases their heart rate

Page 65: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Circulatory Physiology

• Conclusions– Activity increases heart rate• In a fit individual pulse and blood pressure are lower

and will return more quickly to resting condition after exercise than in a less fit individual

– Pulse rate changes in an ectotherm as external temperature changes

Page 66: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Circulatory Physiology

Page 67: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Animal Behavior

Fruit Fly Behavior

Sow bugs

Page 68: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Animal Behavior

• Description– Set up an experiment to study behavior in an

organism• Betta fish agonistic behavior• Drosophila mating behavior• Pillbug/Sowbug kinesis

Page 69: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Animal Behavior

• Concepts– Innate vs. learned behavior– Experimental design

• Control vs. experimental• Hypothesis• Number of trials/subjects

– Choice chamber• Temperature• Humidity• Salinity• Other factors

Page 70: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Animal Behavior

• Hypothesis development– Poor:• I think pillbugs will move toward the wet side of a

choice chamber.

– Better:• If pillbugs prefer a moist environment, then when they

are randomly place on both sides of a wet/dry choice chamber and allowed to move about freely for 10 minutes, then most will be found on the wet side.

Page 71: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Animal Behavior

• Experimental design

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Animal Behavior

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Animal Behavior

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Dissolved Oxygen

• Dissolved O2 availability

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Dissolved Oxygen

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Dissolved Oxygen

• Description– Measure primary productivity by measuring O2 production

– Factors that affect amount of dissolved O2

• Temperature– As water temp. increases it’s ability to hold O2 decreases

• Photosynthetic activity– In bright light, aquatic plants produce more O2

• Decomposition activity– As organic matter decays, microbial respiration consumes O2

• Mixing and Turbulence– Wave action, waterfalls and rapids aerate water and O2 increases

• Salinity– As water becomes more salty, its ability to hold O2 decreases

Page 77: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Dissolved Oxygen• Concepts– Dissolved Oxygen– Primary productivity• Measured in 3 ways

– Amount of CO2 used– Rate of sugar (biomass) formation– Rate of O2 production

– Net Productivity vs. Gross productivity– Respiration

Page 78: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Dissolved OxygenConclusions

Page 79: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Dissolved Oxygen

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Dissolved OxygenEssay 2008

Page 81: Lab Review “The Dirty Dozen”. Diffusion & Osmosis.

Any Questions?