BioSec: Text: Unit 1: Setting the Stage

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Light and Life

The book starts out talking about Monet, the French impressionist painter, and the reason why his later paintings lacked light blue, and appeared to be toned towards red-yellow. This was due to a physical ailment of cataracts. The opaqueness of a cataract affected lens causes it to absorb certain wavelengths of light.

The way in which you see the world is affected by biological processes. The way in which you view a computer is similar – an operating system on a machine is effectively a map to the internal workings of the machine. It gives you a perspective view of how to interact and process information stored within a computer.


The Physical Nature of Light

Light functions: Light is a source of energy that sustains life. Light provides organisms with information about the physical world.

Photosynthesis – biological process to create energy rich molecules (algae)

Light is defined as the portion of the electromagnetic spectrum that humans can detect with their eyes. It is hard to characterize because it although it can be described as a wave it also behaves like a stream of energy particles. When light interacts with matter three things can happen – it can be reflected off of the object, transmitted through the object or absorbed by the object. Absorption occurs when the energy of a photon is transferred to the electron of the pigment molecule. Pigments are molecules that can absorb photons of light – each differ in the wavelengths that they can absorb. The feature critical to light absorption is a region where carbon atoms are covalently bonded with alternating single and double bonds (conjugated system) which results in the delocalization of electrons. A single photon results in the excitation of one and only one, electron in the pigment molecule and secondly the energy of the photon must match the energy difference between the ground state and one of the excited states in order for the photon to be absorbed.

Why is cholorophyll green in color? The color of a pigment is determined by the wavelengths of light it cannot absorb.

Photosynthesis sustains almost all life – uses the energy in sunlight to build sugar molecules from carbon dioxide and water – releasing oxygen as a by-product.


Light as a Source of Energy

The excited electron state is a source of potential energy that can be used to do work. This energy is used to synthesize energy rich compounds (NADPH and ATP) which are used to convert CO2 into carbohydrates. Other biological molecules such as lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids from simple building blocks found in the environment.

Light as a Source of Information

Organisms use light to sense their environment. Not every person – and not every species sees the world in the same way. Rhodopsin - the most common photoreceptor found in nature – mystery as to why – perhaps it developed very early in the evolution of life consists of a protein called opsin that binds a single pigment molecule called retinal absorption of a photon causes the retinal pigment to change shape – causing chain reaction - alteration of protein, intracellular ion concentrations and electrical signals which are then sent to the brain even things without eyes can sense light direction and intensity eye – can be defined as the organ animals use to sense light – what distinguishes the eye from an eyespot of an invertibrate is the vision process – requires not only an eye but also a brain or simple nervous system that interprets signals sent from the eye

image forming eyes come in two varieties: compound eyes and single lens eyes -

compound eyes can be found in insects and crustaceans – hundreds to thousands of ommatidia units fitted closely together – each one samples only a small part of the visual field. Enables even slight motion detection.

Lens eyes (camera) – light enters through the transparent cornea – a lens concentrates the light and a layer of photoreceptors at the back of the eye, the retina – records the image.

Darwin proposed that the eye as it exists in humans and other animals did not appear suddenly but evolved by variation (mutation) and natural selection over time from a simple, primitive eye.

Any application during it's development life cycle evolves to hopefully become better at the task it was designed to perform. Not only programs, but operating systems, and hardware are selected and chosen by respective audiences somewhat based upon the usability, and performance of the system.

Computer scientists not only program, but attempt to imitate life in many ways as well. Robots were initially designed to perform specific tasks, but have evolved over time to complete more interesting behaviours. Sensors are designed to provide input in a variety of different ways to affect the behaviour of a robot. Cameras and photocells detect light. Touch screens, keyboards and mice provide the ability to provide stimuli.

“An optically refined eye is no good unless the brain of the organism improves at the same time, allowing for more advanced neural processing of the information being sent by the optic nerve.”

This makes me think of the case for an older camera driver for a newer model of video camera which is 1080 p enabled technically, but due to the old driver it can only process a lower resolution.

What can computer scientists learn from certain biological processes – don't throw out the old to replace with the new (as generally this type of thing doesn't work). Change can happen a lot but it doesn't completely waste what has already been created.


Light can Damage Biological Molecules

Light is a form of energy that has the potential to damage biological molecules both directly and indirectly. All organisms have developed mechanisms to help prevent or repair damage once it occurs. Carotenoids are accessory pigments that protect the photosynthetic apparatus from high light levels by absorbing extra light and converting the energy to heat.

Question: Plants unable to synthesize carotenoids turn white when exposed to light because the chlorophyll becomes oxidized and the light harvesting capabilities destroyed – (what about mushrooms – is this the same for fungus (plant or animal)?)

Melanin is a pigment that absorbs UV radiation. Melanin in cells prevents light from damaging the DNA in skin cells that is linked with cancer by preventing the destruction of B vitamin folate. Melanin cannot completely filter out all light rays because vitamin d is necessary for proper bone development.

Melanin is the “firewall” of light entering our bodies. A firewall being a device or set of devices designed to permit or deny network transmissions based on a set of rules used to protect networks from unauthorized access while permitting legitimate traffic. /ref{http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firewall_%28computing%29}


Role of Light in Ecology and Behaviour

circadian rythyms nightly backups nightly software updates / system upgrades controlled by an internal clock – there are a lot of computational processes controlled by internal clock devices normal operational behaviour – versus abnormal operational behaviour – logins that occur in the middle of the night to specific accounts

DNA replication only occurs at night. <- highly sensitive processing occurs nightly in order to avoid serious damaging errors.

Hormone – melatonin – secreted from the brain in order to control sleep wake cycles as it's synthesis is active at night.

Camouflage – works when an animal is indistinguishable to another in its current environment.

Separating the message from the noise. Microdots. Cryptography. (Ideas that come to mind within this context.)

Story of the industrial revolution moths – reminded me of the mac laptops in the classroom – one university professor noted that a certain year, there were many different types of laptops and one or two macs, and the following year it was all macs. (can't find the reference right now) now due to the emergence of better security (ahem - supposidely) on Windows 7, will the variety go back to the way that it was?

Using Color as signals – warnings / error messages – The effective ones are different colors or make different sounds when they occur. So many high tech security companies focus their marketing also around these stark contrast colors – Symantec Yellow / Black – Black / White / Red – McAfee – Avast Orange / Black – Norton Orange / Yellow / Black

Life in the Dark

Even blind animals need to set their biological clocks to a circadian rythym. (Blind mole rat / Mexican cavefish)

Organisms Making their own Light: Bioluminescence

This is a process by which the pigment transfers energy from an electron to a photon to assume a grounded state. This reaction in nature is highly efficient in order to ensure less heat production within an organism.

Most bioluminescence is found under the sea, and less on land animals – most often found at great depths, but also in algae / bacterial blooms near the surface. One great mystery surrounding this phenomenon is bioluminescent mushrooms.

Origins of Life

What is Life?

The types of atoms and molecules found in living things is the same as those found in non living forms of matter. Living cells also obey the same fundamental laws of chemistry and physics as does the non living particles. Biochemical reactions that take place although complex are only modifications of reactions that take place by non living materials.

All forms of life share a set of attributes:

display order (cell fundamental unit – arranged in a highly ordered pattern) harness and utilize energy (acquire energy and use it to maintain state) reproduce (make more copies) respond to stimuli (adjust structure, function or behaviour according to environment) exhibit homeostasis (functions to maintain constant internal conditions) growth and development (increase their size) evolve (change over the course of generations to adapt to their environment)

Viruses are not alive because the lack the mechanisms required to produce proteins, and instead rely on highjacking the processes of a living cell to accomplish their replication.

3 Tenets of Cell Theory 1. Organisms are composed of one or more cells.

Single celled organisms are capable of carrying out all living activities. Multi-cellular organisms compartmentalize – that is, the activities are divided among groups of specialized cells.

2. The cell is the smallest unit that has the properties of life. 3. Cells arise only from growth and division of pre-existing cells.

The Chemical Origins of Life

The key building blocks of life – nucleic acids and proteins – are not individually synthesized molecules called monomers – they are macromolecules built up from large numbers of subunit monomers coming together to produce polymers. The synthesis of proteins and nucleic acids require protein-based catalysts (enzymes).

Clay – consists of very thin layers of minerals separated by thin layers of water. Present in evaporating tidal pools. The layered structure absorbs ions and organic molecules and promotes interactions (example: condensation).

Protobionts – first cells – abiotically produced organic molecules surrounded by a membrane.

The Origins of Information and Metabolism

Early Life

Eukaryotic Cells

Selection, Biodiversity, and Biosphere

Biodiversity

Selection

Evolution

The Biosphere

Biotic Factors

Cumulative Impact on Biotic and Abiotic Factors