Title: The Chemistry of Life
1- Chapter 6
- The Chemistry of Life
2- What do we already know about chemistry?
- How are chemistry and biology related?
- How does the study of chemistry relate to chapter
1?
3- Section 1 - Atoms, Elements and Compounds
- both LIVING and NONLIVING THINGS
- are composed of CHEMICALS
- (chemical elements)
-
- LIVING THINGS are built from chemicals.
4- The functions of living things are
- a result of chemical reactions
- occurring within them.
- such as....
- digestion,
- respiration,
- movement,
- thinking,
- protein synthesis,
- circulation,
- excretion,.
5- Chemistry is the study of matter and the
changes/transformations it undergoes - Biochemistry is the study of
- the chemistry of living things
6Matter is anything that has mass and takes up
space
- What are some examples of matter?
- These are not matter.sound waves, radio waves,
light waves, magnetism, gravity, - Why? Because they do not take up space
- and they have no mass
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8-
- ALL MATTER CAN BE CLASSIFIED AS A
- PURE SUBSTANCE proportions cannot vary
- elements H, C, O, and compounds H2O,
C6H12O6, - OR A
- MIXTURE proportions can vary
- - blood, salt water, urine, soil, air,.
- - can contain pure substances
9- MATTER
-
-
is composed of
ATOMS - having 3 subatomic particles
- protons, neutrons, electrons
10- protons - positive, nucleus
- determine the identity of the
atom - neutrons - neutral, nucleus
- electrons - negative,
- outside nucleus in energy
levels
11(protons and neutrons)
12What is an ion?
- A charged atom (- or )
- it has either gained or lost an electron
13- atoms of 1 kind make up a
- (chemical) ELEMENT
- more than 110 different kinds
- about 90 are naturally occurring
- about 15 are man-made
- about 30 are found in living things
- C,H,O,N,P,S make up the bulk of living things
14- (chemical) ELEMENTS are arranged into a periodic
table - each element has a periodic chart entry..
- - (chemical) element symbol
- - atomic number number of protons
- - atomic mass number of protons and neutrons
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16- ISOTOPES. atoms of an element having different
numbers of neutrons - Carbon 12 has. Carbon 13 has Carbon
14 has - 6 protons
- 6 electrons
- 6 neutrons
17- Radioactive Isotope (or Radioisotope)
- an isotope that is radioactive
- an atom having an unstable nucleus which will
decay (lose energy) by emitting ionizing
particles (ionizing radiation) -
- Half-Life
- the time required for half the nuclei in a
- sample of a specific isotopic to undergo
decay
18- elements chemically combine
- to form CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS
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20- Would the following be organic or inorganic?
- MnO2
- NaOH
- C6H12O6
- NaCl
- CO2
- (NH4)3PO4
- C17H35COOH
21- Chemical Compounds are held together by.
- CHEMICAL BONDS
- Covalent Bond Ionic Bond
- sharing
transfer - of electrons of
electrons
22Covalent Bond sharing of electrons
23Ionic Bond transfer of electrons
24Chemical Formula
- is written to represent a chemical compound
- is like a recipie
- Example the chemical formula for
- glucose is C6H12O6
- a chemical formula SHOWS. THE
ELEMENTS - AND HOW MANY ATOMS OF
EACH -
-
25Section 2 Chemical Reactions
- Chemical Reaction(s) . change in which atoms (or
groups of atoms) are reorganized into one or more
different substances - involve the breaking of bonds
- and the
- formation of new bonds
26Chemical Equations
- is written to represent what occurs during a
chemical reaction - shows the reactants and products
- must be balanced
- Reactants elements or compounds that enter into
a reaction - Products elements or compounds that are
produced by a reaction - 2 NaOH 2 HCl 2 NaCl 2 H2O
27Chemical Equations
- LAW OF CONSERVATION OF MATTER . matter
cannot be created or destroyed - chemical equations must have the same number of
atoms (of each element) on each side of the
equation
2 NaOH 2 HCl 2 NaCl 2 H2O
28Activation Energy
- the minimum amount of energy
- needed to start a chemical reaction
- most reactions require some activation
energy to get them started - Endergonic Reactions absorb (require) energy in
order to proceed - - - cannot occur spontaneously
- Exergonic Reactions - release energy in the form
of heat, light, or sound - can occur
spontaneously
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30Chemical Reactions and Enzymes
- Catalysts are chemical substances that
- lower the activation energy needed to
- start a chemical reaction
- ..therefore the reaction occurs faster
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33enzymes..
- are biological catalysts
- are VERY specific (like a lock key)
- the activity of enzymes can be affected by ..
- pH and temperature
- enzymes
- are essential for life because many chemical
reactions would occur too slowly to maintain life
processes - names usually end in ase
34Examples of enzyme names and their specificity
- Enzyme Lactase digests lactose (milk sugar)
- Enzyme Sucrase digests sucrose (table sugar)
- Enzyme Lipase digests lipids (fats)
- Enzyme Amylase begins digestion of amylose,
- a component of starch
35Enzyme Action.
- Substrate the substance (reactant) an enzyme
reacts with - Active Site site on the enzyme to which the
substrates (reactants) bind - Enzyme-Substrate Complex formed when an enzyme
and substrates (reactants) bind together
36Section 3 Water and Solutions
37- WATER (H2O)
- chemical compound?
- organic or inorganic?
- contains the elements?
38- 2/3 of the human body is water
- blood is 92 water
- the brain is 75 water
- muscles are 75 water
- a person can live about a month without food, but
only about a week without water
39WATER
- HAS UNIQUE PROPERTIES
- and is
- EXTREMELY IMPORTANT
- to living things
40- unique properties of water include
- polarity
- hydrogen bonding
- cohesion
- adhesion
- surface tension
- capillarity
- high heat capacity
- good solvent
41- POLARITY
- water is a polar covalent compound
- covalent because H and O share electrons
- polar because O atom is larger with a greater
gravitational pull on the shared electrons
42- Therefore(because oxygen is larger)the shared
electrons spend more time orbiting O. - this gives O a slight negative charge.
- and H a slight positive charge
- Because of this water has an uneven
distribution of charges (poles called polar)
43 - POLARITY
- O shown in green
- has negative charge
- H shown in blue
- has positive charge
44- HYDROGEN BONDING
- forms between a.
- H atom of one molecule
- and
- an atom of another molecule
- a hydrogen (H) bond is a WEAK BOND (because it
DOES NOT involve the electrons) - H bonds allow water to cling to itself and to
other substances with which it can form H bonds
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46- COHESION an attractive force between particles
of the same kind - water likes water
- because it can form H bonds with itself
47Van der Waals forces(intermolecular forces)
- exist between MOLECULES of the same substance
- they are different from the forces that make up
the molecule - H bonding is a type
- of Van der Waals force
48- ADHESION an attractive force between particles
of different kinds -
- water likes (adheres to) other substances with
which - it can form H bonds
49Cohesion Adhesion
- Water is cohesive with itself
- Water is adhesive with the straw
50- SURFACE TENSION results from the
- cohesion of water molecules
- - this allows the surface of water to act
like an elastic membrane
51- CAPILLARITY ability to move through narrow
tubes and fine pores (often against gravity)
52- TEMPERATURE MODERATION
- water has a high heat capacity
- (or high specific heat)
- in other words, water is slow to
heat and to cool it tends to maintain its
temperature
53- Water regulates the Earth's temperature.
- Water regulates the
temperature of
the human body ( 98.6 degrees). - Water also carries nutrients and oxygen to cells,
cushions joints, protects organs and tissues, and
removes wastes.
54- GOOD SOLVENT
- known as the universal solvent
- many substances are soluble (dissolve) in water
- many POLAR COMPOUNDS and IONIC COMPOUNDS are
SOLUBLE (dissolve or dissociate) in water - NONPOLAR COMPOUNDS are INSOLUBLE in water and are
repelled by water
55- Water is not always pure
- it is often found as part of a mixture
- MIXTURE composed of 2 or more elements or
compounds that are physically mixed together - - proportions can vary
-
56- Homogeneous Mixture
- the components that make up the mixture are
uniformly distributed - Heterogeneous Mixture
- the components that make up the mixture are not
uniform or have regions with different properties
57Mixtures can be
- Homogeneous uniform composition
- Heterogeneous components remain distinct
- 3 classes of mixtures
- solutions
- colloids
- suspensions
58-
- SOLUTION (a homogeneous mixture)
-
- solute (substance that is dissolved)
- solvent (substance in which another is
dissolved) -
- ex sweet tea, koolaid, saltwater
-
-
59Acids, Bases and pH
- water (H2O) can react to form ions
- chemists have devised a measurement system called
the pH scale to indicate the concentration of
H ions (pH) in a solution
water hydrogen
hydroxide ion ion
60Acids/Acidic Substances
- Release more H ions when dissociated
- Turn indicators red
- Taste sour
- Can cause burns
- Corrosive to eat away or erode
- pH less than 7
61Bases/Alkaline Substances
- Release more OH- ions when dissociated
- Turn indicators blue
- Taste bitter
- Can cause burns
- Corrosive to eat away or erode
- pH more than 7
62- pH scale is a measure of the potential H in a
solution - pH scale ranges from 0 to 14
- at a pH of 7 the concentration of H and OH- ions
is equal - pure water has a pH of 7
- acidic substances (0 to 6.9) have more H ions
than OH- - basic or alkaline substances (7.1 to 14) have
more OH- ions
ACIDS
BASES
63- Each step on the pH scale represents a factor of
10 - A substance with pH of 4 has 10 times as many
H ions as a substance with a pH of 5 - What type of reaction occurs when acids bases
are mixec? What are the products?
64Buffers
- The pH within living things (and in cells) must
be kept fairly constant HOMEOSTASIS - most cells within the human body need a pH
between 6.5 and 7.5 if higher or lower, it will
affect chemical reactions within the cells - pH can be controlled with BUFFERS weak acids
or bases that help to neutralize substances
65- Section 4 The Building Blocks of Life
- no other element comes close to carbons
versatility - there is a whole field of chemistry devoted
to the study of carbon
compounds. - ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
- THE STUDY OF ORGANIC COMPOUNDS
- (contain C and H)
66- many of the organic compounds
- in living cells/living things.
- are
- POLY MERS made of many parts
- also known as
- MACRO MOLECULES large molecules
67- Polymers and Macromolecules.are made by joining
smaller molecules called MONOMERS together - monomer monomer monomer polymer or
macromolecule
68There are 4 major groups of MACROMOLECULES that
are important to living things.
- CARBOHYDRATES
- LIPIDS
- NUCLEIC ACIDS
- PROTEINS
Because these macromolecules contain C H
they are also organic compounds
69CARBOHYDRATES
70CARBOHYDRATES.
- common examples.
- contain C, H, O usually in ratio of 121
- main function is to provide energy
- (the fuel for living things)
- some can also serve as.
- structural materials
- a form of energy storage
71- monomer (basic unit) of a carbohydrate.
- is the MONOSACCHARIDE (simple sugar)
- 3 common monosaccharides.
- glucose - produced by plants main fuel for LT
- galactose found in milk
- fructose found in fruit
LACTOSE which is also a sugar found in
milk is a DISACCHARIDE (made of 2
monosaccharides)
72- monosaccharides are joined together.
- to make a POLYSACCHARIDE (complex sugar)
-
- mono mono mono
polysaccharide - saccharide saccharide saccharide
- 3 common polysaccharides.
- glycogen animal starch stores excess carbs
- starch (or plant starch) stores excess carbs
ex. potato - cellulose plant fiber in cell wall
73LIPIDS
74LIPIDS
- common examples .
- insoluble (do not dissolve) in water
- contain C, H, O
- 3 common categories fats, oils, waxes
- main function is to store energy
- other functions include. waterproofing, chemical
messengers, structural materials
75- monomer (basic unit) of a lipid is the FATTY ACID
76- 2 common categories of fats.
- SATURATED FATS
- animal products - usually solid at room temp.
- difficult for the body to break down
- UNSATURATED FATS
- plant products - usually liquid at room temp.
- easier for the body to break down
77NUCLEIC ACIDS
78NUCLEIC ACIDS
- contain C, H, O, N, P
- made of monomers (basic units) called nucleotides
- a nucleotide has 3 parts
- sugar
- nitrogen base
- phosphate group
- main function is to store and transmit genetic
information in the form of a CODE - examples include
- DNA and RNA
79PROTEINS
80PROTEINS
- common examples include.
- contain C, H, O, N
- made of monomers (basic units) called amino acids
- approximately 20 different kinds of amino acids
- amino acids can be put into any order, but their
order is dictated by the information contained in
DNA - amino acids are bonded together by peptide bonds
- a chain of 100 amino acids is called a
polypeptide
81PROTEINS
- are the most versatile of the 4 macromolecules
and perform MANY VARIED FUNCTIONS . - REGULATE CELL PROCESSES insulin, growth hormone
- BUILDING/STRUCTURAL MATERIALS for cells and
tissues hair, muscles, skin, nails, - TRANSPORT OF SUBSTANCES hemoglobin
- IMMUNITY- antibodies
- MARKERS TO ALLOW CELLS TO RECOGNIZE self from
non-self and identify cell types - CONTROL RATES OF CHEMICAL REACTIONS