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Unit 3: The Chemistry of Life Ch. 2 (pg. 30), Ch. 9 (pg. 185-186), Ch. 28 (pg. 586-587) The study of matter & the changes it undergoes
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What is an Element? a substance made of only one type of atom Ex. = carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorous, sulfur
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The 6 Most Abundant Elements in Biological Matter
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the smallest part of an element What are Atoms?
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What Makes Up an Atom? Subatomic particle Locationchargesymbol ProtonNucleus (center of atom)positive p+p+ NeutronNucleus (center of atom)neutral (no charge) n0n0 ElectronOrbit around nucleus (located in energy levels) negative e-e-
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16 Using the Periodic Table of the Elements # of protons protons + neutrons also # of electrons bigger of the 2 #s to figure out # of neutrons… atomic mass – atomic number = neutrons
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Electrons & Energy Levels Electrons in energy levels (“shells”) around nucleus 1 st shell up to 2 electrons other shells up to 8 electrons Hydrogen Oxygen How many more electrons can the 3 rd shell hold?
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What Affects the Bonding of Atoms? the # of outer (valence) level electrons If outer level is: not full, atom is unstable will bond with electrons from other atom(s) to fill outer level full, atom is stable won’t bond
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Atoms held together by shared electrons What causes a Covalent Bond?
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What causes an Ionic Bond? Atoms held together when they lose or gain electrons Atoms & Bonding Interactive
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Combinations of two or more atoms bonded together Ex. = O 2, H 2 0, C 6 H 12 O 6, NaCl, HCl What are Molecules/Compounds?
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Simple Structure H 2 0, 0 2, NH 3, CO 2 Inorganic even though it contains carbon an exception to the rule Biological Chemistry: Inorganic Molecules
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Biological Chemistry: Organic Molecules Contain: carbon! many atoms
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Biological Chemistry: Monomers & Polymers Monomer = small molecule Polymer = large molecule made of repeated monomers
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4 major types of organic biological molecules carbohydrates lipids (fats) proteins nucleic acids amino acidpolypeptide (protein) nucleotidenucleic acid (DNA & RNA) monosaccharidepolysaccharide fatty acids & glycerolLipid
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Examples of Carbohydrates sugar starch cellulose
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Functions of Carbohydrates Energy source, energy storage, support (plant cell walls) cellulose
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Organic Biological Macromolecules Organic Biological Macromolecule Elements Contained Monomer (building blocks) PolymerFunction Carbohydrates (sugars, starches, cellulose) C, H, Omonosaccharide (simple sugars such as glucose) polysaccharide (such as starch & cellulose) Energy source, energy storage, plant cell walls Lipids (fats, oils, & waxes) Protein Nucleic Acids (DNA & RNA)
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Examples of Lipids fat oil
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Functions of Lipids Long-term energy storage, cell membrane, hormones, insulation, nerve transmission
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Organic Biological Macromolecule Elements Contained Monomer (building blocks) PolymerFunction Carbohydrates (sugars, starches, cellulose) C, H, Omonosaccharide (simple sugars such as glucose) polysaccharide (such as starch & cellulose) Energy source, energy storage, plant cell walls Lipids (fats, oils, & waxes) C, H, OFatty acids & Glycerol (2 types of simple molecules… NOT monomers.) Not applicableLong-term energy storage, cell membrane, hormones, insulation, nerve transmission Protein Nucleic Acids (DNA & RNA) Organic Biological Macromolecules
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Examples of Proteins Meat,/ fish/ eggs/ nuts/ beans hormone muscle
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Functions of Proteins Structure, enzymes, transport materials in & out of cells, hormones, muscle hormone muscle
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Organic Biological Macromolecule Elements Contained Monomer (building blocks) PolymerFunction Carbohydrates (sugars, starches, cellulose) C, H, Omonosaccharide (simple sugars such as glucose) polysaccharide (such as starch & cellulose) Energy source, energy storage, plant cell walls Lipids (fats, oils, & waxes) C, H, OFatty acids & Glycerol (2 types of simple molecules… NOT monomers.) Not applicableLong-term energy storage, cell membrane, hormones, insulation, nerve transmission ProteinC, H, O, N, S Amino acids (20 different A.A.) PolypeptidesStructure, enzymes, transport materials in & out of cells, hormones, muscle Nucleic Acids (DNA & RNA) Organic Biological Macromolecules
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Nucleic Acid (entire structure) Examples of Nucleic Acids
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Funcitons of Nucleic Acids DNA Genetic “blueprint” RNA Helps to build (synthesize) proteins
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Organic Biological Macromolecule Elements Contained Monomer (building blocks) PolymerFunction Carbohydrates (sugars, starches, cellulose) C, H, Omonosaccharide (simple sugars such as glucose) polysaccharide (such as starch & cellulose) Energy source, energy storage, plant cell walls Lipids (fats, oils, & waxes) C, H, OFatty acids & Glycerol (2 types of simple molecules… NOT monomers.) Not applicableLong-term energy storage, cell membrane, hormones, insulation, nerve transmission ProteinC, H, O, N, S Amino acids (20 different A.A.) PolypeptidesStructure, enzymes, transport materials in & out of cells, hormones, muscle Nucleic Acids (DNA & RNA) C, H, O, N, P Nucleotides (sugar-phosphate backbone & nitrogenous bases) Polynucleotide (Nucleic Acids) Carries genetic code (“blueprint for organism”) & directs protein synthesis Organic Biological Macromolecules
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