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Describe in your own words what material “make up” living things.
Warm Up Describe in your own words what material “make up” living things.
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Chemical Compounds and Living Things
Biochemistry Chemical Compounds and Living Things
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Elements of Life 96% of your body consist of the following elements:
Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen Nitrogen 3% - P, S, Ca, K, Na, Mg, Fe, Cl 1%- trace elements
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Organic vs. Inorganic Organic Inorganic Contains carbon
Living or once lived Examples- wood, grass, humans, dinosaurs, diamonds, petroleum Inorganic Does not contain carbon Nonliving Examples- oxygen, metals, rocks, water
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Polymerization Monomer- a monomer is the building block molecule of a polymer. It is one unit of a compound. For example- amino acids are the monomers for proteins, each train car are linked together to form a whole train
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Polymer A large molecule made up of many identical monomers.
Condensation reaction: joining monomers by releasing water. Hydrolysis: adding water to break a polymer down.
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Macromolecules/ Compounds of Life
Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids
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Carbohydrates Carbohydrates- produce the bodies quick energy
Monomer: Sugars Ex. sucrose, fructose and glucose Starches- long chain of simple sugars. Ex.-bread, rice, corn, pasta, cereal Cellulose- long, twisted chain of sugars. Not digestible by humans Chitin- long chain of twisted hard cellulose found in the exoskeleton of invertebrates
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Lipids Monomer: 3 fatty acids attached to 1 glycerol chain
Saturated fat Usually solid at room temperature Most animal fats Unsaturated fat Usually liquid at room temperature Most plant fats Function: Stored energy Monomer: 3 fatty acids attached to 1 glycerol chain Hydrophobic- don’t dissolve in water Examples: Lard, butter, veggie oil, hormones, steroids
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Proteins Made of amino acids
Proteins have many functions in the body including: Support structures (cell membrane) Transport Substances (hemoglobin carries oxygen) Defense (antibodies) Speed Reactions (ENZYMES!) Muscles, Skin, and hair are proteins!
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Nucleic Acids Store and transmit genetic information
Monomers: Nucleotides Two types of Nucleic Acids: DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) Controls cell activity Passed from generation to generation Found in the nucleus (Euk), Cytoplasm Prok. RNA (ribonucleic acid) Functions in actual synthesis of proteins Both will be discussed further in genetics unit
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