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Summary of Basics of Life - Erasmus University College

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A full summary of the lectures for Basics of Life. This includes all the material but with the difficult concepts better explained. This is focused on EUC students but you can also use it for biology in general.

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October 6, 2025
Number of pages
93
Written in
2025/2026
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Lecture 1: The organization of life – From atoms to the biosphere

Learning goals of this lecture
To understand:
- how 'life' is defined
- the organization of:
• the building blocks of life: atoms and molecules
• the molecules of life (overview)
• the functional units of life: cells
• multicellular life: tissues and organs
• populations, communities & ecosystems
• biomes & the biosphere



Part 1 – The definition of life
The 7 main characteristics of life (all groups: plants, animals, bacteries,..)




Atoms team up and
become molecules.
Molecules form cells
and cells can form
tissues and organs.
Organs/tissues form
systems and out of
those a human is
created. Humans are a
part of ecosystems
(biotic and abiotic life)

,Part 2 – The building blocks of molecules: atoms

Atom
= a basic unit of matter that consists of a dense central nucleus surrounded by a cloud of
electrons

Matter = everything we see + feel around us



The structure of an atom (Helium in this case)




Helium
- 2 protons (+)
- 2 neutrons (0)
- 2 electrons (-) -> amu is basically zero/weighs nothing
➔ Neutral atom because 2 + and 2 - → no charge at all

- Atoms differ in the number of protons, neutrons and
electrons
- Neutral atoms have the same number of protons (+) as
electrons (-)
➔ So if it has 2 protons it has 2 electrons; 10 protons 10
electrons etc.
- Depending on the number of electrons of an atom, it can
have multiple orbitals
- Each orbital can carry a different maximum number of electrons
-

,Orbitals have different electron capacities
- Orbital 1 can hold 2 electrons
- Orbital 2 can hold 8 electrons
- Orbital 3 can hold 8 electrons




Classification of elements
- The chemical elements are classified/distinguished based on the number of
protons they carry
- This is the atomic number (Z)
➔ In a neutral atom, the atomic number equals the number of electrons

- The number of protons (Z) plus neutrons (N) equals the mass number (A) of
an atom
➔ A=Z+N




The periodic table (Mendeleev, 1834-1907)
The table contains all elements, with increasing atomic number (Z) (and, thus, the number
of electrons) from left to right, top to bottom

, Valency and the periodic table
- The chemical behaviour of an atom depends mostly on the number of electrons
in its outermost shell, called the valence shell
➔ the electrons in this shell are the valence electrons

- An atom with a full valence shell is unreactive: it will not interact readily with
other atoms => noble gasses
- All other atoms interact in such a way that they complete (= either fill or empty)
their valence shells with electrons




Chemical bonding: sharing or transferring valence electrons
- Atoms with incomplete valence shells can interact with other atoms in such a way that
each partner atom completes its valence shell: these atoms either share or transfer
valence electrons




Atoms bond to make molecules or ionic compounds.

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