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Chapter 8.1 Energy and Life
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Energy is the ability to do work.
Living things need energy at all times!
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Autotrophs and Heterotrophs
Energy comes from food. Autotrophs – plants and other types of organisms that are able to use light energy from the sun to produce food. Heterotrophs – other animals that cannot directly use the sun’s energy – they must eat other organisms.
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Chemical Energy and ATP
Energy can be store in chemical compounds – these are bonds between atoms. ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is the main source of energy in organisms. It is made of adenine, a 5-carbon sugar called ribose, and 3 phosphate groups. The 3 phosphates are where energy is stored and able to be released.
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Storing Energy ADP (adenosine diphosphate) is like ATP except it only has 2 phosphate groups. The difference between the 2 is key to how the energy is stored. When adding that third phosphate it takes a lot of energy to add that phosphate on, so once there is a bond between the 2 phosphates there is a lot of energy stored there.
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Releasing Energy Energy is released by breaking the chemical bond between the phosphates. ATP is the basic energy source of all cells. Think of it like a rechargeable battery – it is fully charged when it has 3 phosphates, it gives off energy when it loses a phosphate, a phosphate can then be added back on to restore stored energy.
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Using Biochemical Energy
One use of biochemical energy is in active transport. Many cells have a sodium-potassium pump. This pumps sodium ions out of the cell and potassium ions into the cell. ATP is necessary for that to happen – it is the energy that makes the motor for the pump run. ATP doesn’t store large amounts of energy, it gives small amount of energy.
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