Saturday, 3 November 2012

Introduction to Biology

3 October'2012
Topic:-Complete Introduction to Biology

  1. Origin of life
  1. Favorable environment:
  1. Life evolved in an environment that was one heck of a lot more favorable to the evolution of life than is today's Earth's environment.
  1. Particularly:
  1. there was no molecular oxygen
  1. there was a lack of super-sophisticated competing organisms (bacteria for example)
  1. there presumably were sufficient resources (having both terrestrial and extraterrestrial sources
  1. Consequently, it didn't take all that much to prosper.
  1. Self-templating molecules:
  1. The key step was the chance occurrence (but perhaps inevitable under the right circumstances) of molecules that were able to template their own replication (e.g., prototype RNAs and DNAs).
  1. In addition, there was probably some reasonably abundant mineral catalyst to move the operation (replication) forward.
  1. "Sea" of resources:
  1. To these molecules the environment represented a "sea" of resources free for exploitation.
  1. Naturally, those "self-replicating" molecules that were a little better at replicating and exploiting resources got the upper hand, especially as resources became limiting.
  1. Membrane enclosure/protocell:
  1. The next big steps were the development of methods of more active exploitation of the environment (e.g., enzymes or their equivalent) and finally a means of inhibiting competing replicators from co-opting exploitation mechanisms, i.e., the concept of the individual was invented.
  1. The latter was probably achieved by placing a semipermeable physical barrier between a replicator and the outside world. Voilà! a protocell is born.
  1. Keep in mind:
  1. The important things to keep in mind with all this origin of life stuff are:
  1. there was lots of time
  1. resources were present and, due to a lack of molecular oxygen, more stable than they would be today
  1. organisms have to be super-sophisticated only if competing against super-sophisticated organisms (or, in the land of the blind, the one eyed organism is queen)
  1. Early life
  1. Most fossil evidence for early life has been lost as a consequence of geological processes.
  1. The earliest undisputed fossils are of bacteria and date to 3.5 billion years before the present. Other evidence of early life, more controversial, argues for a date of the earliest life existing at least 3.8 billion years ago.
  1. Stephen Jay Gould:
  1. "Life on earth evolved quickly and is as old as it could be. . . For reasons related to the chemistry of life's origins and the physics of self-organization, the first living things arose at the lower limit of life's conceivable preservable complexity. Call this lower limit the 'left wall' for an architecture of complexity. Since so little space exists between the left wall and life's initial bacterial mode in the fossil record, only one direction for future increment exists---toward greater complexity at the right (which is not to say that once complexity is achieved, evolution to less complexity cannot or does not occur). Thus, every once in a while, a more complex creature evolves and extends the range of life's diversity in the only available direction. In technical terms, the distribution of complexity becomes more stronly right skewed through these occasional additions. But the additions are rare and episodic. They do not even constitute an evolutionary series but form a motley sequence of distantly related taxa, usually depicted as eukaryotic cell, jellyfish, trilobite, nautiloid, euryperid (a large relative of horseshoe crabs), fish, an amphibian such as Eryops, a dinosaur, a mammal and a human being. This sequence cannot be construed as the major thrust or trend of life's history. Think rather of an occasional creature tumbling into the empty right region of complexity space. Throughout this entire time, the bacterial mode has grown in height and remained constant in position. Bacteria represent the great success story of life's pathway. They occupy a wider domain of environments and span a broader range of biochemistries than any other group. They are adaptable, indestructible and astoundingly diverse. We cannot even imagine how anthropogenic intervention might threaten their extinction, although we worry about our impact on nearly every other form of life. The number of Escherichia coli cells in the gut of each human exceeds the number of humans that has ever lived on this planet. . . This is the 'age of bacteria'---as it was in the beginning, is now and ever shall be." (Gould, 1994)
  1. Age of bacteria
  1. The earliest organisms which one may unambiguously describe as life were simple cellular creatures we in all likelihood would classify as bacteria were they alive today. Bacteria are morphologically simple, for the most part tiny cells whose forte is the invention of biochemical pathways and consequent utilization of novel nutrient substances.
  1. Key biochemical innovators:
  1. All of the primary metabolic pathways were invented by bacteria. For example:
  1. glycolysis
  1. cellular respiration
  1. photosynthesis
  1. In fact, all cellular respiration (i.e., oxygen utilization) and photosynthesis (gathering of energy from the sun) is still done only by bacteria, much in the guise of the endosymbiotic (or eucaryotic cells) mitochondria and chloroplasts.
  1. In ecological terms, bacteria serve as the sole primary producers on our planet.
  1. Extreme environments:
  1. Various bacteria can live in the absence of oxygen, in the presence of high temperatures (100 degree C water, for example), and in extremely concentrated salt solutions.
  1. Many other types of bacteria, of course, can get along just fine in non-extreme environments, and are abundant just about everywhere.
  1. Wherever there is life on our planet, there are bacteria.
  1. The significance of bacteria is serving as no less than the original as well as current biochemically dominant organisms.
  1. In addition, bacteria serve as the probable ancestors to all extant organisms, bacteria or not bacteria.
  1. Harberors of genetic diversity:
  1. Finally, a significant fraction, perhaps a majority of the genetic diversity among living organisms is found among bacteria.
  1. "To most people, biodiversity means plants, animals, or maybe insects. These are the organisms that taxonomists' tallies put at the top of the numbers game, with more than 248,000 described species of plants, 750,000 species of insects, and 280,000 species of other animals. But these counts are less a reflection of the true biological richness of life on Earth than of our ability to count what we can see, such as differences in the shapes of leaves and fins, and the colors of feathers." (p. 1750, Service, 1997)
  1. Multicellular eucaryotes
  1. Plants and animals are colonies of cells:
  1. The one area in which bacteria are bettered is in the exploitation of a colonial existence. This is achieved, for example, by the multicellular eucaryotes: Plants and animals.
  1. Though even here, what allows these non-bacteria (eucaryotes) to so successfully exploit their multicellular niches is an almost complete reliance on endosymbiotic bacteria as sources of much of their chemical energy.
  1. Origin of animals:
  1. Animals likely made their appearance on earth (only) somewhere between 700 to 1200 million (1.2 billion) years ago, as compared with appearance of bacteria more than 3.5 billion (3500 million) years ago (the uncertainty comes from the poor fossil preservation of animals prior to their development of hard body parts).
  1. They were originally not terribly sophisticated things, though that changed with time, competition, and perhaps also significant changes in the abiotic environment.
  1. Water vertebrates:
  1. One lineage of animals evolved backbones and we call these vertebrates.
  1. Highly adapted water vertebrates (fish) were followed (in time) by water-land interface adapted vertebrates (amphibians) who represented an evolutionary response to the evolution of terrestrial green algae (plants).
  1. Land vertebrates:
  1. Plants that were better adapted to drier terrestrial conditions were followed into these climates by vertebrates which were better adapted to drier terrestrial conditions (the reptiles).
  1. Reptiles were highly successful and evolved a number of lineages, some of which we continue to describe as reptiles but others which we give new names to (e.g., the for the most part terrestrial vertebrates include mammals, birds, and the extinct dinosaurs).
  1. Another highly successful terrestrial animal lineage (non-vertebrate) is the insects. There are a number of other, and still many more lineages if other non-vertebrate and aquatic lineages are considered.
  1. Primates:
  1. Among mammals, there developed large brained, diurnal, grasping, arboreal animals with binocular vision (primates).
  1. One primate lineage specialized further, evolving large bodies and even larger (relative to body size) brains (apes).
  1. Obligate tool users:

  1. One ape lineage specialized as bipedal walkers (the hominids).
  1. In this lineage there evolved obligate tool use, language, and even larger brains (Homo).
  1. Humans are special?
  1. Culture is special:
  1. We, as humans, like to consider human animals to represent some sort of ultimate expression of something (e.g., evolution). In fact, in terms of the history of earth, we're not terribly special, except in terms of our expertise in the harnessing culture (for the good, the bad, and the evil).
  1. Of course, many other animals have culture (the non-genetic passage of information from generation to generation), but humans have, by far and away, exploited the cultural transmission (and modification) of knowledge more and better than any other organism, extant or extinct.
  1. Humans write the text books:
  1. However, since we are humans, and humans write the text books, you will find that humans are typically considered in otherwise unwarranted detail.
  1. This makes historical sense, certainly makes interesting reading, but is not sufficient reason to make oversize declarations of human importance.
  1. Universal tree
  1. Gauging evolutionary distance:
  1. Evolution has been very busy doing things other than bringing forth humanity, for better or for worse.
  1. Recently, we have come to describe the products of evolution in a very abstract manner, considering only certain measures of evolutionarydistance which we consider to be correlates to evolutionary time (the time since lineage divergence). That is, evolution can today be considered (though not completely described) solely in terms of change in organism genotype (the order of bases in an organisms DNA) rather than, as it once was, solely in terms of organism phenotype (what an organism actually looks like).
  1. Mass genotypic comparisons can be summed up visually in something called a cladogram.
  1. Universal tree:
  1. Below is one such cladogram called the universal tree which represents the evolutionary relatedness of all cellular life such that distance of lines separating lineages (tips of branches) is a measure of evolutionary distance (i.e., time since divergence).
  1. The primary conclusions which one might make from observation of the universal tree are the following:
  1. In terms of genetic diversity, mankind makes only a minimal contribution.
  1. The majority of genetic diversity is found among unicellular organisms.
  1. Among eucaryotes, the majority of genetic diversity is found among protozoa.
  1. Among multicelled eucaryotes, genetic diversity is found among three lineages, plants, animals, and fungi.
  1. Among unicellular organisms, procaryotes (bacteria) dominate.
  1. All cellular life is thought to have evolved from a single universal ancestor.
  1. Illustration, universal tree

2 comments:

  1. Thank you very much I enjoyed reading your blog and fully understood every word to know about Biology.Because I am going to to O'Levels so was planning to know enough Induction and it by your blog. Request: Create some major questions about Biology that one should know( and for favor please do give their Answers )

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