Title: Chapter 2: How Cells Function
1Chapter 2 How Cells Function
2.1 Chemical reactions take place inside
cells 2.2 Cells capture and release energy 2.3
Materials move across the cells membranes
Will learn -About the types of elements found in
all cells -the functions of the large molecules
in the cell -Why water is important to the
activities of the cell
- Have already learned
- -All living things are made of cells
- -Cells need energy to sustain life
- -Plant and animal cells have similarities and
differences
2Warm-up Questions
- True for animal cells, plant cells, or both?
- They need energy to sustain life
- They have organelles
- They have cell walls
3All cells are made of the same elements
- The matter that makes up the cell itself is too
small for a light microscope - All matter broken down into elements, each with
own characteristics - Example
- Oxygen, on Earth, found as colorless odorless gas
- 25 elements (of 100 on Earth ) are essential for
life - 6 elements account for about 99 of the mass of
our bodies! - Oxygen 65, Carbon 18.5, Hydrogen 9.5,
Calcium 1.5, Phosphorus 1.0, all other 19
1.2
4Elements
RANK- simple to complex cell, atom, molecule
- Smallest unit of an element atom
- In our body
- mostly in the form of compounds atoms of two or
more elements chemically bonded - O O O2 C O O CO2
- Most cellular activities atoms and molecules
interacting via chemical reactions (bonds broken
and formed to make new molecules) - Need and release energy! Chemical energy!
5Large molecules for cell function
- 1) Carbohydrates
- 2) Lipids
- 3) Proteins
- 4) Nucleic Acids
- ALL have carbon atoms
- Work together in a cell
6Carbohydrates
- Provide the cell with energy
- Also structure
- Breaking the bonds within the cell releases
energy - Simple carbohydrates carbon, oxygen, hydrogen
- Complex carbohydrates simple linked into
chains starch, cellulose, glycogen - Plants energy not used makes starches and
cellulose (cell wall) - Animals eat plants and get energy
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7Lipids
- Fats, oils, and waxes
- Similar to carbohydrates, also made of carbon,
oxygen, and hydrogen - Cells use lipids for energy and making structures
- Atoms arranged differently than carbohydrates
- Do not dissolve in water!
- Cannot mix with water
- (important for cell membranes)
8Proteins
- Made of amino acids
- Carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and sometimes
phosphorus and sulfur - Linked into long chains, folded into 3-D shapes
- Structure and function determined by type,
number, and order of the amino acids - We get amino acids from food
- meats, eggs, cheese, beans, or created by body
- Different types enzymes (control chemical
reactions in cells), others support growth and
repair, muscle movement, fight infections,
deliver oxygen, form part of the cell membranes
9Nucleic Acids
- Hold instructions for the maintenance, growth ,
and reproduction of a cell - DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid
- RNA Ribonucleic acid
- Both made of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen,
and phosphorus. - Subunits called nucleotides
- DNA information used by the cell for making all
the protein the cell needs - Nucleotide pattern in DNA is copied to RNA, which
delivers information into the cytoplasmwhere it
controls chemical reactions and form structures.
10Two thirds of all cells is water
- All chemical reactions inside the cell take place
in water - Water makes up
- 46 of bodys mass inside cells
- 23 outside cells in body fluids
- Polar slight positive charge near hydrogen
atoms, slight negative near oxygen - Attract opposite charges, repel like
- Many substances dissolve in water
11Water Cells
- Most lipids do NOT dissolve in water
- Cell membrane is made of a double layer of lipids
- Head is polar, tail is not polar
- Cell membrane is a boundary, keeping the inside
of a cell separate from the outside - Water-hating tails repel water