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Chemistry of Life

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Chemistry of Life Chapter 2 How are living things (biotic) and non-living (abiotic) things different? How are they the same? All composed of Atoms Element = substance ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chemistry of Life


1
Chemistry of Life
  • Chapter 2

2
  • How are living things (biotic) and non-living
    (abiotic) things different?
  • How are they the same?
  • All composed of Atoms

3
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4
  • Element substance that cant be broken down
    into simpler chemical substances.
  • Represented by 1 or 2 letter code
  • (H, O, Na, Cl, He, Ne)
  • Made up of atoms
  • Atoms smallest particle of an element that has
    characteristics of that element.

5
Structure of an Atom
  • In the Nucleus mass of the atom
  • Protons (p) positive charge
  • Neutrons (n0) no charge (neutral)
  • In the Electron Cloud space of atom
  • Electrons (e-) negative charge in constant
    motion revolving around nucleus
  • 7 different energy levels each can only hold a
    set amount of electrons

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7
IONS
  • Atoms or group of atoms with a positive or
    negative charge
  • Formed by loss or gain of electrons

8
Combination of Substances
  • Mixture
  • Physical combination of 2 or more things.
  • Each substance keeps its original properties.
  • Compound
  • Chemical combination of 2 or more elements.
  • The substances lose their original properties and
    form something new.

9
Bonding
  • Combination of elements with electrons to become
    more stable
  • Atoms want to have full outer e- level
  • 2 e- in 1st level
  • 8 e- in 2nd through 7th levels

10
  • Covalent Bonding
  • Sharing of electrons between atoms
  • example Water (H2O)
  • Ionic Bonding
  • Transferring of electrons between atoms
  • Example Table Salt (NaCl)

11
Chemical Reactions
  • forming or breaking of bonds between atoms
  • causes substances to combine and recombine to
    form molecules or compounds.
  • Occur only when conditions are right
  • Metabolism chemical reactions that occur over
    and over inside our cells

12
Measuring Acids and Bases
  • chemical reactions depend on how acidic or basic
    the environment is
  • Indicators pH paper, litmus, and other
    substances that change color
  • pH a measure of how acidic or basic a solution
    is.
  • Scale from 0 to 14
  • 0 strongest acid (lots of Hydrogen ions)
  • 7 neutral
  • 14 strongest base (few hydrogen ions)

13
ACIDS and BASES
  • Acids
  • Sour taste (fruits)
  • forms hydrogen ions (H) in water
  • abundance of H ions
  • pH below 7, the lower the pH the stronger the
    acid (Strong Acid pH 1 Weak Acid pH 6.9)
  • ex HCl, H2SO4, HC2H3O2

14
  • Bases
  • Bitter taste, slippery, good cleaners
  • forms hydroxide ions (OH-) in water
  • abundance of OH- ions
  • Has a pH above 7, higher the pH the stronger the
    base (Strong base pH 14 Weak base pH 7.1)
  • Ex NaOH, NH3

15
Organic Molecules
  • Molecules involved in life
  • HONC 1234 rule to describe most common organic
    elements and their bonding patterns.
  • H hydrogen - 1 bond
  • O oxygen 2 bonds
  • N Nitrogen 3 bonds
  • C carbon 4 bonds

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Role of Carbon in Organisms
  • Properties of Carbon
  • Natures tinker toy
  • 4 electrons in outer shell
  • Forms 4 covalent bonds to become stable (single,
    double, or triple bonds)
  • Forms chains, branched chains, and rings

18
  • Image of carbon skeletons

19
Isomers
  • Molecules with same chemical formula, but
    different structural arrangements.
  • Each has different properties
  • Ex Glucose and Fructose (C6H12O6)

20
Building Blocks
  • 50 common building blocks to carry out lifes
    functions
  • Monomer small molecule building block of life
  • Ex glucose
  • Polymer molecule formed when monomers are
    linked together
  • Ex cellulose is a polymer of glucose

21
  • Condensation and
  • Hydrolysis Reactions

22
Condensation Reaction
  • Chemical reaction that occurs when monomers are
    linked together to form polymers.
  • Creates 1 water (H2O) molecule per link
  • Also called synthesis or dehydration

23
Hydrolysis Reaction
  • Chemical reaction that occurs when polymers are
    broken down into monomers
  • Addition of 1 water (H2O) for each broken link
  • Occurs during digestion, decomposition

24
  • Condensation and
  • Hydrolysis Reactions

25
Types of Organic Molecules
  • Carbohydrates
  • Lipids
  • Proteins
  • Nucleic Acids
  • These 4 groups of organic molecules, their
    monomers, polymers, and functions, are basic and
    essential to biology!

26
CARBOHYDRATES (starches and sugars)
  • Function store energy for short term sometimes
    used for structural support
  • Structure
  • Composed of C, H, and O
  • Ratio of 2 H for every 1 O
  • Monosaccharide single sugar
  • Glucose (blood sugar), fructose (fruit sugar)

27
  • Disaccharide two sugars
  • Sucrose (table sugar glucose fructose)
  • Polysaccharide many sugars
  • Starch storage in plants (potatoes)
  • Glycogen storage in animal muscle and liver
    cells
  • Cellulose fiber in plants (wood, paper)

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29
LIPIDS (fats, oils, waxes, steroids)
  • Functions
  • Long term energy storage
  • Insulation, cushioning of organs
  • Waterproofing (waxes)
  • Chemical messengers in body (steroids)

30
  • Properties
  • Composed of C, H, and O
  • Much less oxygen than carbon or hydrogen
  • Beef fat C57H110O6
  • Nonpolar no net electrical charge
  • Insoluble in water

31
  • Triglycerides type of fat
  • Composed of 3 fatty acids (monomers) and 1
    glycerol (sugar)
  • Saturated fat solid at room temp, lacks double
    bonds between carbons.
  • Unsaturated fat liquid at room temp (oils), at
    least 1 double bond between carbon atoms
    somewhere in fatty acid chain

32
Triglyceride
33
  • Steroids
  • 4 connected carbon ring structures
  • Used as chemical messengers in body
  • Ex sex hormones (testosterone and estrogen)
  • Phospholipids
  • Composed of 2 fatty acids, glycerol, and a
    phosphate group
  • Major component of cell membrane

34
  • A Steroid

35
  • Phospholipid

36
PROTIENS
37
  • Functions
  • Structure hair, finger nails, skin
  • Antibodies
  • Hormones
  • Movement muscles
  • Enzymes proteins that speed up chemical
    reactions in the body
  • 10,000 types of enzymes, each has a different
    function

38
  • Structure
  • Composed of C, H, O, N, and sometimes S
  • Made of monomers called amino acids (20 different
    types)

39
  • Amino acids consist of central carbon with the
    following attached
  • Hydrogen
  • Amine group, NH2
  • Carboxyl group COOH
  • R-group What makes the A.A. different from the
    rest. (R can be one of 20 different groups, from
    a simple H to a ringed structure)
  • Peptide Bond covalent bond formed when amino
    acids link together to form proteins.

40
  • Polypeptide formation

41
NUCLEIC ACIDS(DNA and RNA)
  • Structure
  • Composed of C, H, O, N, and P
  • Monomers nucleotides
  • Sugar ribose or deoxyribose
  • Phosphate group
  • Nitrogen Base A, T, G, C, and U

42
  • Function
  • Information Storage
  • Heredity DNA is used to pass genetic info to
    next generation
  • Direct cell activities RNA directs synthesis of
    proteins

43
  • Nucleotide

44
Double helix
45
Revisiting Enzymes
  • 28 days to digest food without enzymes, only 2-4
    hours with enzymes!
  • Catalyst - substance that speeds up chemical
    reactions w/o being consumed by the reaction
    (recycled)
  • substrate - molecule(s) going through chemical
    reaction
  • product -new molecule(s) formed after chemical
    reaction

46
  • active site - place on enzyme where substrate
    fits, like a hand in a glove.
  • substrate specific - each enzyme will only react
    with the substrate that fits the active site
  • denaturation - a change in the active site so it
    no longer reacts with the substrate, may be
    caused by extremes in temperature, pH, or toxins

47
Protein denaturation
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