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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
Ho Chi Minh City University of Industry - HUI
Institute of Biotechnology and Food Technology
Assessment:
Credit point: 2
Assessed as: Graded
Note: There is compulsory school attendance.
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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
UNIT 1: CELLS AND TISSUES
GROUP 1
THE CELL
Almost everything in the world is made up of smaller things. Houses are built out of individual bricks and
pieces of wood. Cars are built out of pieces of metal, plastic, and rubber. Think about your cell. What parts
make up your cell?
The Cell Theory
One very important similarity among all living things is that they are made of cells, the smallest units of life.
In 1838, two biologists, Schleiden and Schwann, studied many cells and made some conclusions. From their
observations they developed what is known as the Cell Theory. Since then, this theory has been central to our
understanding of biology. This theory states that:
1. All life forms are made from one or more cells. Some organisms, like bacteria or paramecium, are only
one cell big. These are called unicellular organisms (uni-=one). Other organisms are multicellular: that means
they are made up of more than one cell (multi-=more than one). For example, the human body consists of
billions of cells!
2. Cells only arise from pre-existing cells. A cell can make copies of everything it has inside it, then divide
itself in two, making two new cells. This process is called mitosis, or cell division. In this way, organisms can
keep growing or replace damaged or old cells. For example, the formation of new cells is what allows your
body to grow, or what replaces your damaged skin when you fall and skin your knee, making you good as
new!
3. The cell is the smallest form of life. There is nothing smaller that is alive, and life requires what is inside
a cell. For example, the molecules that make up the parts of the cell, such as sugars, fats and proteins are not
alive. The separate regions of the cell are not alive on their own. Life can only be reduced down to the cellular
level-thus cells are the smallest unit of life!
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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
The Cell and Its Organelles
Even the cell is made up of smaller parts. These parts are called organelles (little organs). They divide up all
the work that the cell has to do. In the human body, we have different organs to do different jobs that help us
live: for example, our lunges help us breathe while our brain helps us think. It’s the same in a cell: the different
organelles have different jobs, and together they help the cell live.
In a unicellular organism, one cell does all the jobs the being needs to survive, and the cell divides up these
jobs among its organelles. In multicellular organisms, many cells come together to make a living being. Just
like in unicellular organisms, the cells of a multicellular organism have organelles which divide up the cell’s
work
1. Nucleus. The nucleus is the control center of the cell. It houses all
the genetic information, DNA in the form of chromatin, that tells the
cell what to do. DNA is like the recipe for the cell: all the instructions
are there, and the organelles of the cell help to read it and build the
final products: proteins! When the cell reads its DNA recipe in its
nucleus, it converts these instructions to another form called
messenger RNA (mRNA), which is like translating from one language to another in a process called
transcription.
2. Endoplasmic reticulum (ER). The ER is like a little maze of tubes that are hollow inside. Add a few cake
sprinkles right next to the ER. These are ribosomes. After mRNA is made in the nucleus, it is sent to the
ribosomes on the ER. The ribosomes are responsible for reading the mRNA message and making the proper
protein according to its instructions. This process is called
translation. As a protein is made, or “translated,” the ribosomes
pushes it into the maze of the ER. A second type of ER, called the
smooth ER is where fats are formed. It is called smooth ER
because it has no ribosomes on it.
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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
3. The Golgi body. The proteins made by the ribosomes that are
inside the ER are sent to the Golgi for finishing touches and
distribution. Here, the protein may be packaged or changed: it’s
like putting the paint on a car being made in a factory before it is sent out to the car dealer!
4. Mitochondria are often referred to as the powerhouses of the cell, for it is within them that energy is
released from organic molecules by the process of Cellular respiration. This energy is needed to keep
the individual cells and the plant functioning as a
whole. Carbon skeletons and fatty acid chains are also
rearranged within mitochondria, allowing for the
building of a wide variety of organic molecules.
Mitochondria are numerous and tiny, typically
measuring from 1 to 3 or more micrometers in length and
having a width of roughly one half micrometer; they are
barely visible with light microscopes. They appear to be in
constant motion in living cells and tend to accumulate in
groups where energy is needed.
5. To the lysosome, which is full of molecules that can break down cellular waste. Lysosomes are the garbage
dumps of the cell—they break down waste and dispose of it properly. Lysosomes are relatively large vesicles
formed by the Golgi. They contain hydrolytic enzymes that could destroy the cell.
6. How does the cell stay together? They are housed in a double-layered coating called the plasma
membrane that gives the cell its shape. This membrane helps control what goes in and out of the cell, and
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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
helps protect the cell from damaging things in the environment. The cell membrane functions as a semi-
permeable barrier, allowing a very few molecules across it while fencing the majority of organically produced
chemicals inside the cell. Electron microscopic examinations of cell membranes have led to the development
of the lipid bilayer model (also referred to as the fluid-mosaic model). The most common molecule in the
model is the phospholipid, which has a polar (hydrophilic) head and two nonpolar (hydrophobic) tails. These
phospholipids are aligned tail to tail so the nonpolar areas form a hydrophobic region between the hydrophilic
heads on the inner and outer surfaces of the membrane.
7. Ribosomes are the sites of protein
synthesis. They are not membrane-bound
and thus occur in both prokaryotes and
eukaryotes. Eukaryotic ribosomes are
slightly larger than prokaryotic ones.
Structurally the ribosome consists of a small
and larger subunit. Biochemically the
ribosome consists of ribosomal RNA
(rRNA) and some 50 structural proteins.
Often ribosomes cluster on the endoplasmic
reticulum, in which case they resemble a
series of factories adjoining a railroad line
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UNIT 2: DNA STRUCTURE
GROUP 2:
INTRODUCTION
Our genes are made of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). This remarkable molecule contains all the information
necessary to make a cell, and DNA is able to pass on this information when a cell divides. This chapter
describes the structure and properties of DNA molecules, the way in which our DNA is packaged into
chromosomes, and how the information stored within DNA is retrieved via the genetic code.
THE STRUCTURE OF DNA
Deoxyribonucleic acid is an extremely long polymer made from units called deoxyribonucleotides, which are
often simply called nucleotides. Figure 4.1 shows one deoxyribonucleotide, deoxyadenosine triphosphate.
Note that deoxyribose, unlike ribose, has no OH group on its 2’carbon. Four bases are found in DNA; they
are the two purines adenine (A) and guanine (G) and the two pyrimidines cytosine (C) and thymine (T) (Fig.
4.2). The combined base and sugar is known as a nucleoside to distinguish it from the phosphorylated form,
which is called a nucleotide. Four different nucleotides join to make DNA. They are 2’-deoxyadenosine-5’-
triphosphate (dATP), 2’-deoxyguanosine-5’-triphosphate (dGTP), 2’-deoxycytidine-5’-triphosphate (dCTP),
and 2’-deoxythymidine-5’-triphosphate (dTTP).
DNA molecules are very large. The single chromosome of the bacterium Escherichia coli is made up of two
strands of DNA that are hydrogen-bonded together to form a single circular molecule comprising 9 million
nucleotides. Humans have 46 DNA molecules in each cell, each forming one chromosome. We inherit 23
chromosomes from each parent. Each set of 23 chromosomes encodes a complete copy of our genome and
is made up of 6 × 10
9
nucleotides (or 3 × 10
9
base pairs—see below). We do not yet know the exact number
of genes that encode messenger RNA and therefore proteins in the human genome. The current estimate is in
the range of 30,000. Table 4.1 compares the number of predicted messenger RNA genes in the genomes of
different organisms. In each organism, there are also approximately 100 genes that code for ribosomal RNAs
and transfer RNAs.
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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
.
Figure 4.3 illustrates the structure of the DNA chain. As nucleotides are added to the chain by the enzyme
DNA polymerase, they lose two phosphate groups. The last (the α phosphate) remains and forms a
phosphodiester link between successive deoxyribose residues. The bond forms between the hydroxyl group
on the 3’carbon of the deoxyribose of one nucleotide and the α-phosphate group attached to the 5’ carbon of
the next nucleotide. Adjacent nucleotides are hence joined by a 3’–5’phosphodiester link. The linkage gives
rise to the sugar–phosphate backbone of a DNA molecule. A DNA chain has polarity because its two ends are
different. In the first nucleotide in the chain, the 5’ carbon of the deoxyribose is phosphorylated but otherwise
free. This is called the 5’ end of the DNA chain. At the other end is a deoxyribose with a free hydroxyl group
on its 3’carbon. This is called the 3’end.
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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
The DNA Molecule Is a Double Helix
In 1953 Rosalind Franklin used X-ray diffraction to show that DNA was a helical polymer. James Watson
and Francis Crick demonstrated, by building three dimensional models, that the molecule is a double helix
(Fig. 4.4). Two hydrophilic sugar–phosphate backbones lie on the outside of the molecule, and the purines and
pyrimidines lie on the inside of the molecule. There is just enough space for one purine and one pyrimidine in
the center of the double helix. The Watson–Crick model showed that the purine guanine (G) would fit nicely
with the pyrimidine cytosine (C), forming three hydrogen bonds. The purine adenine (A) would fit nicely with
the pyrimidine thymine (T), forming two hydrogen bonds. Thus A always pairs with T, and G always pairs
with C. The three hydrogen bonds formed between G and C produce a relatively strong base pair. Because
only two hydrogen bonds are formed between A and T, this weaker base pair is more easily broken. The
difference in strengths between a G–C and an A–T base pair is important in the initiation and termination of
RNA synthesis. The two chains of DNA are said to be antiparallel because they lie in the opposite orientation
with respect to one another, with the 3’-hydroxyl terminus of one strand opposite the 5’-phosphate terminus of
the second strand. The sugar–phosphate backbones do not completely conceal the bases inside. There are two
grooves along the surface of the DNA molecule. One is wide and deep—the major groove—and the other is
narrow and shallow—the minor groove (Fig. 4.4). Proteins can use the grooves to gain access to the bases.
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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
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ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY
The Two DNA Chains Are Complementary
A consequence of the base pairs formed between the two strands of DNA is that if the base sequence of one
strand is known, then that of its partner can be inferred. A G in one strand will always be paired with a C in the
other. Similarly an A will always pair with a T. The two strands are therefore said to be complementary.
Different Forms of DNA
The original Watson–Crick model of DNA is now called the B-form. In this form, the two strands of
DNA form a right-handed helix. If viewed from either end, it turns in a clockwise direction. B-DNA is the
predominant form in which DNA is found. Our genome, however, also contains several variations of the B-
form double helix. One of these, Z-DNA, so-called because its backbone has a zig-zag shape, forms a left-
handed helix and occurs when the DNA sequence is made of alternating purines and pyrimidines. Thus the
structure adopted by DNA is a function of its base sequence.
GROUP 3: DNA AS THE GENETIC MATERIAL
Deoxyribonucleic acid carries the genetic information encoded in the sequence of the four bases—adenine,
guanine, cytosine, and thymine. The information in DNA is transferred to its daughter molecules through
replication (the duplication of DNA molecules) and subsequent cell division. DNA directs the synthesis of
proteins through the intermediary molecule RNA. The DNA code is transferred to RNA by a process known as
transcription. The RNA code is then translated into a sequence of amino acids during protein synthesis. This is
the central dogma of molecular biology: DNA makes RNA makes protein.
Retroviruses such as human immunodeficiency virus, the cause of AIDS, are an exception to this rule. As their
name suggests, they reverse the normal order of data transfer. Inside the virus coat is a molecule of RNA plus
an enzyme that can make DNA from an RNA template by the process known as reverse transcription.
PACKAGING OF DNA MOLECULES INTO CHROMOSOMES
Eukaryotic Chromosomes and Chromatin Structure
A human cell contains 46 chromosomes (23 pairs), each of which is a single DNA molecule bundled up with
various proteins. On average, each human chromosome contains about 1.3 × 10
8
base pairs (bp) of DNA. If
the DNA in a human chromosome were stretched as far as it would go without breaking it would be about 5
cm long, so the 46 chromosomes in all represent about 2 m of DNA. The nucleus in which this DNA must be
contained has a diameter of only about 10μm, so large amounts of DNA must be packaged into a small space.
This represents a formidable problem that is dealt with by binding the DNA to proteins to form chromatin.
As shown in Figure 4.5, the DNA double helix is packaged at both small and larger scales. In the first stage,
shown on the right of the figure, the DNA double helix with a diameter of 2 nm is bound to proteins known
as histones. Histones are positively charged because they contain high amounts of the amino acids arginine
and lysine and bind tightly to the negatively charged phosphates on DNA. A 146 bp length of DNA is wound
around a protein complex composed of two molecules each of four different histones—H2A, H2B, H3, and
H4—to form a nucleosome. Because each nucleosome is separated from its neighbor by about 50 bp of linker
DNA, this unfolded chromatin state looks like beads on a string when viewed in an electron microscope.
Nucleosomes undergo further packaging. A fifth type of histone, H1, binds to the linker DNA and pulls the
nucleosomes together helping to further coil the DNA into chromatin fibers 30 nm in diameter, which are
referred to as 30-nm solenoids. The fibers then form loops with the help of a class of proteins known as
nonhistones, and this further condenses the DNA (panels on left-hand side of Fig. 4.5) into a higher order set of
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[...]... bacteria, or in the DNA or RNA of viruses An organism's genetic material Host cell (n): tế bào chủ - In biology, a host is an organism that harbors (cho ẩn náu) a virus or parasite Parasite (n): vât ký sinh Submicroscopic (adj): siêu hiển vi protein coat (n) : lớp bọc protein gene therapy (n) : liệu pháp gene - Gene therapy is a rapidly growing field of medicine in which genes are introduced into the... Vocabulary: Page 24 ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY Express (v) –expression (n): biểu hiện, gene expression (n): biểu hiện gene Transcript (v) – transcription (n): phiên mã Sequence (v,n) – sequencing (n) : xác đònh trình tự - DNA sequencing technique Protein - coding gene (noun phrase) Gene (n) – genetic (adj) Exercise 6: DNA CLONING a introduce into (transfer into) b proteins c produced d.DNA cloning e the human... associated with Evoluationary (adj) – evolutionarily (adv): Alter (v) – alterative (adj) - alteration (n): sự thay đổi Mutate (v) – mutant (adj) - mutation (n): sự đột biến Proliferate (v) – proliferation (n): sinh sôi, nảy nở For instance = for example Insight Genotype -> phynotype (n) : kiểu hình GRAMMAR Page 28 ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY Page 29 ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY Page 30 ENGLISH FOR BIOLOGY Page 31 ENGLISH FOR