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BIOCHEMISTRY • • • • • • • • vocabulary 42. carbohydrate protein lipid energy activation energy enzymes substrate active site • polarity • cohesion • adhesion • Not in 2010 • hydrolysis • 54. condensation reaction I ATOMIC STRUCTURE • Properties of elements are determined by the number of protons in the nucleus. • The number of protons in a nucleus is called the atomic number • What is the name of this element? Diagram Oxygen and Hydrogen atomic numbers 8 and 1 1P Diagram Oxygen and Hydrogen atomic numbers 8 and 1 8P 8N 1P Diagram Oxygen and Hydrogen atomic numbers 8 and 1 8P 8N 1P 1P Octet Rule = atoms tend to gain, lose or share electrons so as to have 8 electrons C would like to Gain 4 electrons N would like to Gain 3 electrons O would like to Gain 2 electrons Diagram the Polarity of the Water molecule Oxygen hydrogen hydrogen Electrons tend to spend more time near the oxygen because the positive nucleus attracts the negative electrons II PROPERTIES OF WATER • 1. polarity • results in : –temperature stabilizing effect (high heat capacity) –surface tension –cohesive properties Properties of water cont’ • 2. excellent solvent • 3. Expands when • Solute- material frozen dissolved in a • opposite of all solvent other known • Adhesion- sticks to materials other materials • Cohesion- sticks to materials like itself III FERMENTATION AND DISTILLATION • Diagram a still w/ corn, yeast, and water – hydrogen bonds in water raises the boiling point • Emphasis on boiling points • yeast is a fungus • drinking addiction Diagram this process Draw results of fermentation demo (in your notes) IV IMPORTANCE OF WATER • 1. Source of H and O for chemical reactions • 2. a medium for transporting foods, minerals and other substances in a living system • 3. medium in which soluble materials are absorbed from the environment • (“medium” means: method, material or way) • 4. support (by water pressure) in plant cells and invertebrates (worms) • 5. high percentage of the body weight • *blood composition is almost identical to sea water* • EVIDENCE OF LIFE ORIGINATING IN THE SEA V ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS • • • • • • • • O 100.1 C 27.72 H 15.4 Ca 2.31 P 1.54 N 1.48 K .54 S .35 composition of the human body Pounds of each element in a 150 pound person • • • • • • • Na .23 Cl .23 Mg .077 Fe .006 I .006 Mn .0045 Trace –Si, F, Cu, Zn Where do these elements come from? water soil, atmosphere VI CARBON COMPOUNDS IN CELLS • ORGANIC CHEMISTRY- the study of carbon compounds and their reactions. Carbon is unique because it can form long chains and rings • Diagram carbon atomic structure and write short hand for chemical bonds Carbon Atom A.N. 6 6P6N Four outer level or “valence electrons” C Carbon Atom A.N. 6 6P6N Four outer level or “valence electrons” C Carbon Atom A.N. 6 Short hand version 6P6N Bar = one shared pair of electrons C C CARBOHYDRATES Cells need fuel to function: especially CHO and fats V. FOODS • ALL PLANTS -sugars are in fruits, vegetables, lactose in milk • starch in potatoes Food categories that provide CHO: Fruits Vegetables Grains Milk Meat alternates NOT meat or oil Plants create CHO via photosynthesis LIPIDS (categories) • Triglycerides • Phospholipids • Sterols • More commonly to you – Oils, fats, waxes, steroids I FUNCTION (in order of importance to humans) • STORED ENERGY • STRUCTURAL MATERIAL 1. Protection of vital organs 2. Insulation 3. Membranes • CARRIES ESSENTIAL NUTRIENTS Examples of triglycerides Fats Oils IV. EXAMPLES • NEUTRAL FATS (triglycerides) - butter, lard, oil • WAXES- cutin on leaf surfaces, ears, honey comb • STEROLS- cholesterol, hormones, steroids, vitamin D precursor – LDL low density bad – HDL high density good V. FOODS • • • • meats seeds nuts milk I. FUNCTIONS • • • • • • ENZYMES "speeds up reactions“ (more later) STRUCTURE (muscle) TRANSPORT HORMONES IMMUNITY ENERGY (last energy source used by humans) II COMPOSITION • Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Sulfur • Monomer amino acid BUILDING BLOCKS OF PROTEINS • 20 amino acids in the world of life III STRUCTURE • amino group + acid group Draw this in your notes • amino group + acid group • a peptide bond links amino acids • dipeptide- two amino acids bonded • polypeptide- 3 or more amino acids • Remember how the simple sugars “monosaccharides” were joined to form a “polysaccharide” H and OH are removed to form water Draw this in your notes IV EXAMPLES • • • • • amino acids alanine tyrosine arginine (notice the endings) fibrous proteins- single chains keratin collagen globular proteins- several chains linked together enzymes, hemoglobin, antibodies, insulin lipoprotein lipid and protein bonded glycoprotein sugar and protein bonded V FOOD • milk, eggs, seeds, legumes, fish, meat enzymes • - ALL REACTIONS REQUIRE AN ADDITION OF ENERGY TO GET STARTED, "ACTIVATION ENERGY" • -BIOLOGICAL COMPOUNDS THAT "SPEED UP" THE RATE OF A CHEMICAL REACTION BY LOWERING THE AMOUNT OF ACTIVATION ENERGY NEEDED 1. Enzymes as biological catalyst • Major properties – All are globular proteins – They increase the rate of a reaction without themselves being used up – Their presence does not alter the nature or properties of the end product(s) of the reaction – A very small amount of catalyst can work on a large amount of substrate Lactose = • Principle CHO found in milk » carbohydrate • Lactose intolerance = insufficient production of enzyme lactase ENZYME ACTIVITY THE LOCK AND KEY HYPOTHESIS OF ENZYME ACTIVITY Kiwi fruit and gelatin demo (draw in your notes) Link to comp lab pages • ‘Lock and key’ hypothesis – Enzyme has a particular shape into which the substrate(s) fit exactly – Key = substrate – Lock = enzyme Enzymes are… • • • • SPECIFIC FOR A SUBSTRATE UNCHANGED DURING THE REACTION PROTEINS REUSEABLE FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE ENZYME ACTIVITY • • • TEMPERATURE pH AMOUNT OF PRODUCT OR SUBSTRATE PRESENT • PRESENCE OF OTHER ENZYMES Link to BEANO lab pages COMMERCIAL USES OF ENZYMES • • • • • DETERGENTS LACTASE DRAIN CLEANERS SEPTIC TANK CLEANERS CONTACT LENS CLEANERS