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Download What are we made of? Specifics and the organic molecules
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What Are We Made of? Pg. 265-266 Atoms are the building blocks of matter; cells are the building blocks of life. Atoms make up molecules, and molecules make up cells! There are four types of atoms, specific elements that are most commonly present in living things. The elements are oxygen, carbon, hydrogen and nitrogen. (CHON) Carbon Atoms are Essential to Life and Proteins and Amino Acids Pg. 267-271 When molecules are built with rings or chains of carbon atoms, they are called carbon based, or organic molecules. Four basic organic molecules are found in all living things; carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. Carbohydrates are built from C, H, and O. Carbohydrates produce and store energy. Simple carbohydrates like glucose are considered simple carbohydrates. They can be joined into much larger molecules, complex carbohydrates, like starch or cellulose. Cellulose is a structure found in plat cells that add rigidity or structure. They are formed differently that starch; humans can digest starch, not cellulose. This is why we do not eat wood or paper for food! Lipids are fats and also built from C, H, and O.. Lipids provide long term energy storage AND lipids make up cell membranes. (Look at 2nd column pg. 268 full 2 paragraphs.) Proteins are made of amino acids. The molecules include all of CHON. Some amino acids must be obtained through diet-they are considered essential because they are obtained through diet. If you do not eat them your body will “eat itself” by breaking down muscle for amino acids! Proteins are the structural components of cells, and combine with lipids to make membranes. They are also messengers, but most importantly assist in cell reactions. Nucleic Acids (made of CHON+) carry out instructions for cells and store hereditary information in cells. There are two main types: DNA and RNA. A Closer Look at Cells pg. 272-273 Some organisms are a single cell. They are called single celled or unicellular. Examples are yeast, algae and bacteria. Other organisms are multi-cellular; they include plants, animals and fungi. All cells can be divided into two groups: prokaryotes and eukaryotes. Prokaryotes do not have a membrane enclosing genetic material. In eukaryotes genetic material is enclosed in a nucleus. Eukaryotes also have other organelles prokaryotes do not. Prokaryotes are usually single celled like bacteria. Eukaryotes can be either.