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Published byCharlotte Armstrong Modified over 8 years ago
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Introduction to Cells CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS IN CELLS
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What Are Elements and Compounds? You are made of many substances. These substances supply the raw materials that make up your blood, bones, muscles, and more. They also take part in the processes carried out by your cells.
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Elements An element is any substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substances. The smallest unit of an element is a particle called an atom. Any single element is made up of only one kind of atom.
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Compounds Compounds form when two or more elements combine chemically. Most elements in living things occur in the form of compounds. The smallest unit of many compounds is a molecule.
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What Compounds Do Cells Need? Many of the compounds in living things contain the element carbon. Most compounds that contain carbon are called organic compounds. Compounds that don’t contain carbon are called inorganic compounds.
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Some important groups of organic compounds that living things need are carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. Water is a necessary inorganic compound. Many of these compounds are found in the foods you eat.
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Carbohydrates Sugars and starches are examples of carbohydrates. Carbohydrates are energy-rich organic compounds made of the elements carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. The food-making process in plants produces sugars.
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Fruits and some vegetables have a high sugar content. Sugar molecules can combine, forming larger molecules called starches, or complex carbohydrates. Plant cells store excess energy in molecules of starch.
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Many foods, such as potatoes, pasta, rice, and bread, come from plants and contain starch. When you eat these foods, your body breaks down the starch into glucose, a sugar your cells can use to get energy.
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Carbohydrates are important components of some cell parts. For example, the cellulose found in the cell walls of plants is a type of carbohydrate. Carbohydrates are also found on cell membranes.
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Lipids Lipids are compounds that are made mostly of carbon and hydrogen and some oxygen. Cell membranes consist mainly of lipids.
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Fats, oils, and waxes are all lipids. Gram for gram, fats and oils contain more energy than carbohydrates. Cells store energy from fats and oils for later use. Foods high in fats include whole milk, ice cream, and fried foods.
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Proteins Proteins are large organic molecules made of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and, in some cases, sulfur. Foods that are high in protein include meat, dairy products, fish, nuts, and beans. Much of a cell’s structure and function depends on proteins.
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Proteins also make up parts of the organelles within a cell. A group of proteins known as enzymes speed up chemical reactions in living things. Without enzymes, the many chemical reactions that are necessary for life would take too long.
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Nucleic Acids Nucleic acids are very long organic molecules. These molecules consist of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and phosphorus. Nucleic acids contain the instructions that cells need to carry out all the functions of life. Foods high in nucleic acids include read meat, shellfish, mushrooms, and peas.
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One kind of nucleic acid is deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA. DNA is the genetic material that carries information about an organism and is passed from parent to offspring. This information directs a cell’s functions.
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Most DNA is found in a cell’s nucleus. The shape of a DNA molecule is described as a double helix. The double helix forms from many small molecules connected together. The pattern and sequence in which these molecules connect make a kind of chemical code the cell can “read.”
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Water and Living Things Water plays many important roles in cells. Most chemical reactions in cells depend on substances that must be dissolved in water to react. And water itself takes part in many chemical reactions in cells.
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Water also helps cells keep their shape. A cell without water would be like a balloon without air!
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Water changes temperature slowly, so it helps keep the temperature of cells from changing rapidly – a change that can be harmful. Water also plays a key role in carrying substances into and out of cells. Without water, life as we know it would not exist on Earth.
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What’s That Taste? Lab Homework is pages 28 & 29
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