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Published byEleanor McCarthy Modified over 9 years ago
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Physical, chemical and cellular basis of life.
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Contain carbon Molecules of living things Make up all living things Examples: Humans, Trees, Bees, Fungi, Bacteria
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Building Blocks monomer Macromolecule polymer Monosaccharide or Simple SugarCarbohydrates Fatty acidsFats and Lipids Amino AcidsProteins NucleotidesNucleic Acids
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Most abundant organic compound Contains oxygen, hydrogen & carbon 1:2:1 ratio Some functions Energy source Both quick and storage Support & structure Plants- cellulose Insects-chitin- exoskeleton
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Monosaccharides Simple sugars 5 or 6 carbons Examples- glucose & fructose Disaccharides Two sugars joined together Fructose + glucose= sucrose (table sugar) Polysaccharides Many simple sugars joined together Starch- energy storage plants Glycogen- energy storage animals Cellulose- structural support plants
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Proteins – long chains of amino acids Joined by peptide bonds Forms a polypeptide (Examples are enzymes, insulin and hemoglobin)
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Subunits are fatty acids and glycerol Fats, Oils, and Waxes Phospholipids, Triglycerides, Cholesterol Cell membranes, sex hormones
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Subunits are nucleotides DNA and RNA are the two examples Carries genetic information
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Carbohydrate energy Proteins structure, growth, repair Lipids long term energy storage, cushioning, insulation Nucleic Acids instructions on how to make proteins
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Benedict’s solution tests for monosaccharides. blue and turns red when heated if simple sugars are present
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Iodine tests for starch. Turns from amber to black in the presence of starch
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Lipids turn brown paper translucent.
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Tests for proteins Turns purple in the presence of proteins
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Specific fit with substrate so each enzyme has special job. Fit like a lock and key Necessary for all biochemical reactions. Substrate meets at enzymes active site. Enzyme can be re-used Catalyst = fancy name for enzyme.
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Temperature changes can destroy enzymes It changes their shape so they can not work pH level can also destroy enzymes Enzymes have an optimal temperature and pH level where they work the best
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ATP Adenosine Tri-phosphate Made from ribose, adenine, and three phosphate molecules Energy storage molecule. Energy is stored when phosphate bond is formed, and released when the bond is broken (makes ADP) Important cycle in respiration and photosynthesis
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When high energy phosphate bond is broken then energy released and ADP made.
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Important: All living organisms carry out respiration
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Without Oxygen (“an”= without, “aerobic” = oxygen) 2 Types 1) alcoholic fermentation produces alcohol (yeast) 2) lactic acid fermentation produces lactic acid (muscle cells and bacteria)
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With oxygen More efficient Occurs 24/7 C 6 H 12 O 6 + O 2 CO 2 + H 2 O + ATP What might effect the rate of respiration?
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Anaerobic Respiration Without oxygen Where? Cytoplasm Little ATP Yeast, bacteria 24/7 Aerobic Respiration With oxygen Where? Mitochondria LOTS of ATP Multicellular organisms 24/7
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Who? Plants, algae, blue- green bacteria Where? Only occurs during the day in CHLOROPLAST How? plants take energy from sun and make glucose
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