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Biology Vocabulary Pay close attention to new vocabulary as it is used in this activity. This will be important as we continue through the course... Organic compound-any compound that contains carbon, except CO2 and CO Inorganic compound-any compound that does not contain carbon (i.e. NaCl-table salt) Living organisms are made up of organic compounds that include the elements C, H, N, O, P, S How do atoms behave? The chemical behavior of an atom is determined by the distribution of electrons in electron shells • The periodic table of the elements shows the electron distribution for each element Valence electrons are those in the outermost shell, or valence shell The chemical behavior of an atom is mostly determined by the valence electrons Forming Chemical Bonds • Atoms with incomplete valence shells can share or transfer valence electrons with certain other atoms These interactions usually result in atoms staying close together, held by attractions called chemical bonds A covalent bond is the sharing of a pair of valence electrons by two atoms In a covalent bond, the shared electrons count as part of each atom’s valence shell Types of Bonds A molecule consists of two or more atoms held together by covalent bonds A single covalent bond, or single bond, is the sharing of one pair of valence electrons A double covalent bond, or double bond, is the sharing of two pairs of valence electrons So what does this have to do with Earth’s early atmosphere you might ask…… Miller-Urey Experiment Stanley Miller & Harold Urey University of Chicago 1952 Simulated the early conditions thought to be on Earth… what were they again??? Early Earth Atmosphere Hydrogen gas-H2 Early Earth’s atmosphere Water Vapor-H2O Early Earth’s atmosphere Carbon dioxide-CO2 Early Earth’s atmosphere Sulfur dioxide-SO2 Early Earth’s atmosphere Methane-CH4 Early Earth’s atmosphere Ammonia-NH3 How is the origin of life being shown in this picture? The Experiment • The experiment used water (H2O), methane (CH4), ammonia (NH3), and hydrogen (H2). • The chemicals were all sealed inside a sterile array of glass tubes and flasks connected in a loop, with one flask half-full of liquid water and another flask containing a pair of electrodes. • The liquid water was heated to induce evaporation. • Sparks were fired between the electrodes to simulate lightning through the atmosphere and water vapor. The Experiment Continued… The “atmosphere” was cooled again so that the water could condense and trickle back into the first flask in a continuous cycle. At the end of one week of continuous operation, Miller and Urey observed that as much as 10–15% of the carbon within the system was now in the form of organic compounds. Results of the Experiment Two percent of the carbon had formed amino acids that are used to make proteins in living cells, with glycine as the most abundant. Sugars, lipids, and some of the building blocks for nucleic acids were also formed. Since this experiment, other scientists have repeated and extended the research. As a result, all 20 amino acids, sugars, lipids, nucleotides, and ATP have been produced. Polymerization Alanine -remember the “radical” can be any atom or molecule Analysis Questions from Lab 1 – What 2 groups are identical in all amino acids? • *Amine Group & Carboxlyic Acid Group 2 – What is a “radical” and why are they important? • remaining bonding site on central C (open area) • determines amino acid to be formed 3 – What 2 products are produced during the formation of a peptide bond? *Protein & Water 4 – Arrange the following terms in order of smallest to greatest in size: amino acid, carboxylic acid group, peptide, atom, polypeptide • atom, carboxylic acid group, amino acid, peptide, polypeptide 5 – If fifty amino acids are linked in a row, how many peptide bonds are created AND between which two parts of the amino acids does each of these bonds form? • 49 peptide bonds; carboxyl & amine group Why does all of this matter? Two things must have been present before life could form… 1 - Simple organic molecules such as amino acids & nucleotides (ATGCU) 2 - Complex organic molecules such as proteins & nucleic acids (DNA,RNA) Current Scientific Theory about the Origin of the First Life Forms 4 Step Process: 1 - Chemical evolution 2 - Polymerization 3 - Microsphere formation 4 - Protocell & Prokaryotic cell formation 1-Chemical Evolution Inorganic Molecules Water - H2O Methane - CH4 Ammonia - NH3 Hydrogen gas - H2 Organic Molecules Amino acids (only 20) glycine, alanine, serine… Nucleotides (only 5) adenine, thymine, cytosine, guanine, uracil 2 - POLYMERIZATION Process of joining 2 small organic molecules (monomers) into larger more complex organic molecules (polymers) 3 - MICROSPHERES Scientists believe that long chains of complex organic molecules eventually formed a circle around a water droplet. This is called a microsphere & is believed to have been the precursor to the cell membrane. 4 - PROTOCELLS & PROKARYOTES Once microspheres formed, it is believed that small chains of nucleic acids (DNA or RNA) became trapped in the sphere creating what scientists call a protocell. Scientists believe that this eventually developed into a prokaryote (simplest cell type - no nucleus & no organelles) Characteristics of Single celled Prokaryotic - no nucleus or organelles Chemotrophic - fed off chemicals (sulfur, ammonia, methane, etc.) Anaerobic - lived without free oxygen st 1 Life? Reading Strategies As you read, for each paragraph (in your NB): Summarize the paragraph. Explain a thought or reaction to something you read. Note something in the reading that is confusing or unfamiliar. List a word you do not know. Make a statement about the reading. Pose a question about the reading. 6 Stamps- One for each “section”. Title them in your NB!