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Environmental Literacy Project Michigan State University Decomposers Unit Lesson 3 Activity 2 Fungi Digestion and Biosynthesis How can a fungus digest food without a digestive system? Digesting OUTSIDE the Body • Fungi can break down polymers (large organic molecules) OUTSIDE their bodies • The cells in the hyphae send out digestive enzymes that break the polymer into monomers (small organic molecules) • The small monomers then can enter the cells of the hyphae and travel through the mycelium Decomposers use food in two ways Materials for growth: Biosynthesis Food Digestion Energy: Cellular respiration 4 The Movement Question Where are atoms moving from? Where are atoms moving to? Which atoms and molecules move during digestion and biosynthesis? amino acids protein How do amino acids and protein move during digestion? amino acids protein What happens inside the fungus cell during biosynthesis? Chemical change Organic molecules LARGE = Polymer SMALL = Monomers STARCH GLUCOSE (SUGAR) 9 Comparing molecules in dead stuff fungi eat STARCH LIPIDS (FAT) PROTEIN GLUCOSE (SUGAR) CELLULOSE (FIBER) 10 Monomers (small organic molecules) Red paperclip = amino acid Blue paperclip = glucose Green paperclip = fatty acid Purple paperclip = glycerol 11 Build food (dead stuff) molecules Build a STARCH molecule by linking together 6 glucose monomers. 12 Build food (dead stuff) molecules Build a FAT molecule by linking 3 fatty acid monomers to 1 glycerol molecule. 13 Build food (dead stuff) molecules Build PROTEIN molecules by linking 5 amino acid monomers. 14 Build food (dead stuff) molecules One type of carbohydrate is cellulose, also called fiber. Build a FIBER molecule by linking together 6 glucose monomers. 15 Food (dead stuff) polymers (large organic molecules) LIPIDS (FAT) =link 3 fatty acid monomers to 1 glycerol PROTEIN = 5 amino acid monomers STARCH = 6 glucose monomers CELLULOSE (FIBER) = 6 glucose monomers 16 Place large food molecules (dead stuff) here in trunk Food molecules are dead things like stumps 17 Get ready to digest the food molecules here Food is digested by fungal enzymes outside the fungi’s body 18 Breakdown Food Molecules (Digestion) Let’s focus on what happens to PROTEIN in food for fungi (dead stuff). (Put the other food molecules to the side of the poster for now.) Digest PROTEIN molecules by breaking the protein into individual amino acids. Chemical change 19 Breakdown Food Molecules (Digestion) Digest STARCH molecules by breaking the starch into individual glucose monomers. Chemical change 20 Breakdown Food Molecules (Digestion) Digest FAT molecules by breaking the fat into individual fatty acid and glycerol monomers. Chemical change 21 Breakdown Food Molecules (Digestion) Digest FIBER molecules by breaking the cellulose into individual glucose monomers. Chemical change 22 Small molecules are taken up and transported by fungal hyphae Move the small molecules through the fungal hyphae 23 Digested Monomers: where do they go? glucose glycerol fatty acid amino acid 24 Build large molecules here Biosynthesis is the process of small organic molecules becoming large organic molecules in all body parts 25 What’s in a fungi (mushroom)? PROTEIN Mushrooms FIBER 26 Build a mushroom (Biosynthesis) Build PROTEIN molecules by linking 5 amino acid monomers. Chemical change 27 Build mushroom (Biosynthesis) Build FIBER molecules by linking 5 glucose monomers. Chemical change 28 What happens to food monomers that are not used in biosynthesis? 29 …put carbon dioxide from the cellular respiration now outside the mushroom 30 Identify chemical energy at an atomic molecular scale: Which molecules have chemical energy? Food molecules: Digested monomers in mushroom’s body: Example: FAT Example: AMINO ACID Mushroom polymer molecules: Example: PROTEIN Fungi food, dead stuff (tree trunk): Example: CARBOHYDRATES 31 Identify where chemical energy is located (macroscopic scale): 32 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in digestion? Chemical change Protein polymer (+ water) Reactants Amino acid monomers Products 33 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in digestion? Chemical change Protein polymer (+ water) Reactants Carbon atoms stay in organic molecules with high-energy bonds Amino acid monomers Products 34 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in biosynthesis? Chemical change Amino acid monomers Protein polymer (+ water) Reactants Products 35 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in biosynthesis? Chemical change Amino acid monomers Reactants Carbon atoms stay in organic molecules with high-energy bonds Protein polymer (+ water) Products 36 Digestion and biosynthesis of fats and carbohydrates (Optional) 37 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in digestion? Chemical change Fat (+ water) Reactants Fatty acids + glycerol Products 38 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in digestion? Chemical change Fat (+ water) Reactants Carbon atoms stay in organic molecules with high-energy bonds Fatty acids + glycerol Products 39 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in biosynthesis? Chemical change Fatty acids + glycerol Fat (+ water) Reactants Products 40 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in biosynthesis? Chemical change Fatty acids + glycerol Reactants Carbon atoms stay in organic molecules with high-energy bonds Fat (+ water) Products 41 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in digestion? Chemical change Starch polymer (+ water) Reactants Glucose monomers Products 42 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in digestion? Chemical change Starch polymer (+ water) Reactants Carbon atoms stay in organic molecules with high-energy bonds Glucose monomers Products 43 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in digestion? Chemical change Cellulose polymer (+ water) Reactants Glucose monomers Products 44 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in digestion? Chemical change Cellulose polymer (+ water) Reactants Carbon atoms stay in organic molecules with high-energy bonds Glucose monomers Products 45 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in biosynthesis? Chemical change Glucose monomers Starch polymer (+ water) Reactants Products 46 What happens to carbon atoms and chemical energy in biosynthesis? Chemical change Glucose monomers Reactants Carbon atoms stay in organic molecules with high-energy bonds Starch polymer (+ water) Products 47 How do fungi digest dead plants? Where are atoms moving from? What molecules are carbon atoms in before the change? What other molecules are involved? What forms of energy are in the reactants? Where are atoms moving to? Chemical change What molecules are carbon atoms in after the change? What other molecules are produced? What forms of energy are in the products? Remember: Atoms last forever and Energy lasts forever 48 How do fungi grow? Where are atoms moving from? What molecules are carbon atoms in before the change? What other molecules are involved? What forms of energy are in the reactants? Where are atoms moving to? Chemical change What molecules are carbon atoms in after the change? What other molecules are produced? What forms of energy are in the products? Remember: Atoms last forever and Energy lasts forever 49