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Chemistry of Life Ch. 2 and 3 If you tear paper in half, and keep tearing the halves into halves, will you always have paper left? What is the smallest unit eventually left? Atoms and Molecules • Atom- smallest part of an element that has properties of that element. – All have same basic makeup – H2- 2 Hydrogen atoms Atom • Moleculecombination of 2 or more atoms. • Ie. O2, H2O, CO2 Building Block of Matter • Element- substance that cannot be broken down into any other substance by chemical or physical means. (simplest type of a pure substance.) • A substance consisting entirely of atoms having identical chemical properties. • *All of the matter around you is composed of one element or a combination of two or more elements. Elements in the Body • What elements do you think are the most abundant? • O,H, C and N • What do you think a trace element is? • Trace elements in the body are Selenium, Mercury, Arsenic and Lead. • All of the elements in the human body could be bought for $118.63. Atom structure Electrons electron neutron proton • An atom consists of a nucleus surround by one or more electrons. • The nucleus is made up of protons and neutrons. • The electrons travel around the outside. Nucleus with p+ and neutrons Chemical Symbols to Know Oxygen- O Aluminum- Al Calcium- Ca Hydrogen- H Iron- Fe Neon-Ne Carbon- C Sodium-Na Phosphorus-P Helium-He Gold-Au Potassium-K Nitrogen- N Silver-Ag Iodine-I Chlorine-Cl Sulfur-S Silicon-Si Try these: How many atoms do these molecules have? • 2H20 = how many H? How many O? • 3PO4 = how many P atoms? O atoms? • 2C6H12O6 = C atoms? H atoms? O atoms? Writing Chemical Equations • Chemical Formulasshows the ratio of elements in the compound. – CO2 • Symbols- each element has a one or two letter symbol. C, Ca. – The first letter is ALWAYS capitalized and the second lower case. • Subscript- small number written to the right of a symbol that shows the number of atoms of an element in a molecule. H2O + 1/2 O2 H2O2 Photosynthesis vs. Cellular Respiration • Photosynthesis Captures energy Chloroplasts in plants • 6CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 • Cellular Respiration Releases energy Mitochondria • C6H12O6 + 6O2 6CO2 + 6H2O What do you notice about these two equations? 1.3, 1.4, 1.9, 1.43 Rates of Chemical Reactions: 3 ways to increase the rate of a reaction Concentration- amount of material you have in a certain volume. Surface area- more material exposed, the faster the reaction Temperature- adding heat to speed up movement of particles. Other ways to control the rate of reactions. • Catalyst- material that increases the rate of a reaction by lowering the activation energy. – Enzymes- biological catalyst – Enzyme-substrate reaction • Inhibitor- material used to decrease the rate of a reaction by raising the activation energy. Isotopes • Some isotopes are radioactive. They are used for determining ages of fossils. • They are also used in medicine. – to treat cancer or as tracers. – PET scans • Ie. 12C- non radioactive (6p+, 6 neutrons) 14 C- Radioactive (6 p+, 8 neutrons) (protons and electrons stay the same, the neutrons are different. If you add the p+ and neutrons you get 12 or 14.) Energy Levels • 5 levels : K: n=1, L: n=2, M: n=3, N: n=4, O: n=5 • 2n2 tells the number of electrons you can have in each level (orbitals) • Valence e-, located in outer shell. • Ideally, shell wants to be full. Most you can have in an outer shell is 8. • Electrons can move or jump to other levels. Orbitals and Electron Capacity of the First Four Principle Energy Levels Principle energy level (n) Type of sublevel Number of orbitals per type Number of orbitals per level(n2) Maximum number of electrons (2n2) 2 2 s p 1 3 4 8 3 s p d 1 3 5 9 18 4 s p d f 1 3 5 7 16 32 Electron Configurations • I will help you write the electron configuration for Lithium and Nitrogen. • 1st: find number of electrons • 2nd: write out 1s, 2s, 2px, 2py, 2pz, 3s, etc. • 3rd: Show where you put electrons, one at a time in each orbital. • 4th: Write the configuration. • You try Magnesium • Li: 1s22s1 • N: 1s22s22p3 • Mg: 1s22s22p63s2 Chemical Bonds • Atoms with unfilled orbitals in their outermost shell tend to be reactive with other atoms. Chemical Bonds • Force that holds atoms together. – Covalent, ionic, Van der Waals, H bonds • Chemical reactions occur when bonds are formed or broken. Bonding Link Weaker Bonds • Van der Waals- slight attraction between oppositely charges regions of molecules. • They can hold large molecules together. • Gecko’s feet • Hydrogen bonds- an atom of a molecules interacts weakly with a H atom already taking part in a polar covalent bond. Holds together N bases on DNA. Compounds • Compound- substance made of 2 or more elements chemically combined in a specific ratio or proportion. • CO2 Carbon 1: Oxygen 2 Ratio 1:2 • Organic Compoundany compound that contains Carbon. How are molecules different from compounds? Covalent Bonds • Non-polar: atoms share electrons equally • Polar: share atoms unequally making a slight difference in charge between the two poles of the bond. Polar Molecules • Sometimes covalent bonds do • Water molecule. NH3 not share electrons equally. How do you know it’s polar? • Some atoms in the molecule have a slightly negative charge and others have a slightly (-) positive charge. O • Polar: hydrophilic H H • Nonpolar: hydrophobic (+) • Water Link . (+) Water’s Temperature-Stabilizing Effects • Water tends to stabilize temperature because it can absorb considerable heat before its temp changes. • Evaporation- H bond break • Freezing- H bonds resist breaking Features of Water • Cohesion – Hydrogen Bonding causes water molecules to stick together, producing surface tension. Adhesion- sticks to something else. • Water Expands when it Freezes – Ice Floats because it is less dense than the water. Solutions • Mixture- material composed of two or more elements or compounds that are physically mixed together but not chemically combined. • Salt and pepper, sugar and sand, etc. • Solution- well mixed mixture. Where all components are evenly distributed. Give an example. Solvent vs. Solute • Solvent- part of the solution present in the largest amount. It dissolves other substances. • Ie. water • Solute- smallest amount present that is dissolved by the solvent. • Ie. sugar Suspensions Mixtures of water and non-dissolved materials. Can you give any examples? Common suspensions include sand in water, fine soot or dust in air, and droplets of oil in air. 1.5 Most cells have a narrow range of temperature and acidity that they can survive. If there are extreme changes in the environment, they may alter the structure of the protein and the cells function. • Can you explain this? • Can you give any examples of this? • What do you know about pH? pH • Measure of H+ concentration in a solution. The greater the H+ the lower the pH scale. • Acids- releases H+ • Bases- release OH- ACIDS • An acid is a substance that tastes sour, reacts with metals and carbonates, and turns blue litmus paper red. • You can eat some foods that are acidic, but other acids are not safe. • When acids react with metals they are corrosive. • When they react with compounds made of carbonate, a gas forms. • Litmus paper is an indicator of pH to test whether a substance is basic or acidic. BASES • Base- substance that tastes bitter, feels slippery, and turns red litmus paper blue. • “Opposites of acids”. • Bitter tastes- soaps, detergents, shampoos, tonic water. • Slippery- soap. Some bases can irritate your skin. • Bases- Blue • Don’t react with metals or carbonates. If it is not an acid, then it is probably a base. pH Scale • • • • 0-14 1- most acidic (H+) 14 most basic (OH-) 7 in neutral What are some things that you know are acidic? What are some things that you are are basic? Scales of 10. Ie. A pH of 4 would have 10 more H+ than a pH of 5. Where do you think they fall of the pH scale? Animated pH scale Salts • Salt is any compound that dissolves easily in water and releases ions other than H+ and OH-. • Ionic compound formed when an acid reacts with a base. • HCl + NaOH NaCl + H2O • Salts dissociate into useful ions in the body (Na+ and Ca++). Buffers • Weak acids and weak bases that react with strong acids or bases to prevent sharp, sudden changes in pH. Hemoglobin (carries oxygen) • Control pH to maintain homeostasis. maintains a stable pH in red blood cells (RBC). Bicarbonate is a body buffer. Buffer control (equations go both ways) HA + H2O A+ H3O+ Weak acid + water conjugate base + hydronium HA + NaOH Na+A- A- + HCl HA + + H2O Cl- Homeostasis in your body • Blood pH must be between 7.3-7.5 • If blood pH increases to 7.8, – tetany may occur where skeletal muscles cannot be released from contraction. – Alkalosis can be lethal (blood pH rises and is not reversable). • If it falls to 7, the person could go into a coma – Respiratory acidosis- too much CO2 forms too much carbonic acid and pH drops. Molecules of Life Ch. 3 1.4 The work that takes place in the cell is carried out by the different types of molecules it assembles: proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, and nucleic acids. 1.6 Cells are made up primarily of a small number of chemical elements • • • • • • Carbon C Hydrogen H Nitrogen N Oxygen O Phosphorus P Sulfur S • Carbon can join to other carbon atoms in chains and rings to form large complex molecules. Carbon’s bonding behavior • Can form 4 covalent bonds. • Functional groups are atoms or groups of atoms covalently bonded to a C backbone, giving distinctive properties to the molecule. Functional Groups • Hydroxyl • Methyl • Carbonyl Carboxyl Amino Phosphate -OH -CH3 - CO (Ketone- inside) or CHO (aldehyde- end) -COOH (non-ionized) or COO- (ionized) -NH2 (non-ionized) or –NH3+ (ionized) - PO4 or - P Where found Hydroxyl Alcohols (sugars, amino acids); water soluable Repeatedly in simple sugars Methyl Fatty acid chains: insoluable Carbonyl Sugars, a.a.; water soluable (aldehyde- end of C backbone, Ketone- interior of C backbone) Carboxyl A. a., fatty acids; water soluable, acid Amino a.a., nucleotide bases; water soluable, base Phosphate Nucleotids (ATP), DNA, RNA, proteins, phospholipids; water soluable, acidic Methane • In methane seeps, methane bubbles upward from ocean floor. – Archaea use methane as energy source and release CO2 and H2 . – Bacteria around them use the H2 and made H2S using sulfate in water. Process • High water pressure and low temperatures “freeze” the bubbling methane into an icy methane hydrate. • They are vast and could break apart to release methane gas if temp. rises. I tis unstable and explosive. • Million of years ago a huge release of methane might have occurred increasing CO2 levels, lowering the O2 levels. • Indirectly, methane could have been responsible for mass extinctions of plants and animals. (Permian) – 95% of marine species, 70% plants and animals on land. Monomers vs. Polymers • Monomers- 1 unit • Polymers- many units • The process of joining monomers to make polymers is polymerization. • Ex: Sugars make up starch, Amino acids make up proteins, fatty acid chains make up lipids. Chemicals in Organisms • Carbohydrates are a group of chemicals that include sugars, starches and cellulose. They store energy and provide shape to organism Sugars CH2O • Monosaccharides- single sugars – Glucose, fructose, galactose, ribose, deoxyribose • Disaccharides- double sugars – Sucrose (table sugar- glucose + fructose), lactose (milk sugarglucose + galactose) • Polysaccharides- many sugars – Glycogen (E storage in animals), starch (E storage in plants), cellulose (structure of plant cell walls.) This is in linear form. Lipids- can’t dissolve in water • A group of chemicals that include fats, oils, waxes, phospholipids, and steroids.(Sterols) • Fats and oils provide long-term energy storage. Triglycerides (3) • Waxes repel water. Fatty acid chains attached to alcohols. • Phospholipids form membranes of cells and control what enters and leaves. • Steroids serve structural and control functions in your body. Ie. Cholesterol (also in cell membranes), sex hormones Fatty acid chain (lipid) Do you see the hydocarbon chain? 1.10 Macromolecules, such as lipids, also contain high energy bonds. • Why would lipids need high energy bonds? This is unsaturated fat, oils. What do you think unsaturated would look like? Proteins • Large, complex molecules composed of many smaller molecules called amino acids. • There are 20 amino acids. Enzymes are proteins that help control chemical reactions. H H-N-C-C=O H R OH Carboxyl group Amino group Amino and carboxyl groups form peptide bonds between them to form a protein. Peptide bond, H20 is lost Metabolic Reactions • Condensation- 2 molecules form (water is released) – Peptide bond Hydrolysis- water requiring cleavage reaction Both need enzyme reaction at functional group. Protein functions Function Example Movement Actin and myosin- contraction of muscle fibers Collagen for bones, tendons, ligaments and cartilage. Structure Regulation Transport Enzymes- control chemical reactions Hemoglobin- RBC carries Oxygen Nutrition Casein- found in milk. Stores amino acids for use by newborn animals. Defense Antibodies- immune system Structures of proteins • 1o- chain linked together in definite sequence • 2o- helical coil (alpha) or sheetlike array (beta) where chain is formed by interaction of H bonds, joining side groups of a.a. • 3o- result of interactions of R group forming 3-D shape. Globular proteins. • 4o- complexing of 2 or more polypeptide chains. Identify protein structures. Enzymes-proteins that speed up chemical rxn’s Functional Group Transfer One molecule gives up functional group, other accepts Electron transfer One or more e- are stripped from one molecule and given to another Rearrangement Juggling of internal bonds coverts one type of organic compound into another Condensation 2 molecule combine to form a larger one covalently Cleavage Molecule splits into two smaller ones Structure determines function • Sometimes substituting one amino acid in place of another can cause a disease. Ie. Sickle Cell Anemia • Heme group. 4 polypeptides tightly packed is a globin. Each globin ( 2 forms- alpha and beta) is folded into a pocket that holds a heme group that is a large organic molecule with an iron atom at its center. It is a oxygen transporter. AKA: Hemoglobin. If valine is substituted for glutamate the protein turns from polar to non-polar. Hemoglobin now called HbS. Stick together in rod shaped clumps- sickle cell. • Sometimes a mutation can occur, changing amino acid sequence, changing the structure and thus function of the protein. • Denaturing proteins with heat can change function as well. (Why you don’t heat breast milk in the microwave?) Sickle Cell Anemia • What would be some problems with having sickle cells? • Clumping of cells- circulatory problems • Spleen enlargement- immune system problems. Nucleic Acids • Large, complex molecules that contain hereditary or genetic information. • DNAdeoxyribonucleic acid • RNA- ribonucleic acid DNA or RNA? Nucleotides (monomers of nucleic acids) • Some are involved in metabolism. – cAMP – ATP • Nucleotide coenzymes transport H atoms and e-. AMP – NAD+ and FAD (Cellular respiration) ATP • ATP (adenosine • ADP (adenosine triphosphate) is where diphosphate) energy is stored when it is – How many phosphates are there? released form nutrients. – What do you think will • What does it look like? – N base: adenine – 5’ C sugar: Ribose – 3 Phosphate (PO4) groups happen when you add another phosphate? Forming and Breaking Down ATP • Energy is stored in bonds. • When you break bonds you release energy and when you make bonds you store energy. • ADP + Pi + Energy ATP – Are we storing or releasing energy? • ATP ADP + Pi + Energy – Storing or releasing energy? Pi + Energy ADP ATP Pi + Energy DNA vs. RNA DNA Double Stranded Base Pairs (A-T, G-C) Deoxyribose sugar RNA Single Stranded Base Pairs (A-U, G-C) Uracil is used instead of Tymine Ribose Sugar 1.9 Living and non-living things are composed of compounds. These compounds contain bonds that hold them together. ATP, the energy source in cells, is stored in the bonds. • ATP- Adenosine TriPhosphate • When the bonds break energy is released. • When bonds form, energy is stored. Can you explain this analogy? Energy in the Cell • Energy is the ability to do work. • Cells get energy from food and break down nutrients to get stored energy in the bonds between atoms. Growth and Repair • To grow and develop, the cells of organisms must make many new carbohydrates, proteins, and lipids. • In order for your body to repair itself, chemical reactions are needed to produce new cells to replace the damaged ones. Reproduction • During reproduction, many chemical reactions take place. • Ultimately, DNA and it’s chemical make up are essential for information to be passed on. Test your skills • Go to the following link, click on your text book. Go to chapter 2 and look at SciLinks and take the Self-Test. Good luck . • Ch. 2 Review