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Living Environment Review. Breaking down and building up Hydrolysis digestion: process of breaking large organic molecules such as proteins and starches.

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Presentation on theme: "Living Environment Review. Breaking down and building up Hydrolysis digestion: process of breaking large organic molecules such as proteins and starches."— Presentation transcript:

1 Living Environment Review

2 Breaking down and building up Hydrolysis digestion: process of breaking large organic molecules such as proteins and starches into smaller molecules. Large molecules must be hydrolyzed before they enter a cell Synthesis: building large organic molecules from small ones Cells often use food molecules to build larger molecules they need

3 Dehydration Synthesis

4 What are the 4 classes of organic molecules? 1.CarbohydratesCarbohydrates 2.LipidsLipids 3.ProteinsProteins 4.Nucleic AcidsNucleic Acids

5 Carbohydrates Monosaccharide = simple sugar – Examples include glucose, fructose, and ribose. Disaccharide = double sugar – Examples include sucrose, lactose, and maltose. Polysaccharide = complex sugar – Examples include storage polysaccharides such as starch and glycogen, and structural polysaccharides such as cellulose and chitin. Go Back

6 Lipids Fats and oils Many different types Are insoluble in water Used for – Energy storage – Cell membranes – Steroid hormones – other Go Back

7 Proteins Large molecules—Long folded chains Made up of many different combinations of 20 different types of amino acids Differences in # & arrangement of amino acids causes proteins to bend into different shapes. The shape of the protein determines the proteins function Go Back Function of proteins 1.Defense ex antibodies 2.Structure ex muscle 3.Enzymes ex amylase 4.Transport ex hemoglobin 5.etc

8 Nucleic Acids Long chains of molecules called nucleotides 2 types – DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) Stores hereditary information – RNA (ribonucleic acid) Go Back

9 Viruses are exceptions to the cell theory, but they have some characteristics of living things. What is one of these characteristics? 1.They are made up of many specialized cells. 2.They contain genetic material. 3.They reproduce by mitosis. 4.They contain chlorophyll. Correct Answer Number: 2 Explanation: Although virus' contain genetic material, they can not reproduce without being inside of a host cell. Many scientists question if they can be considered living or not, as this is the only life function they are capable of performing.

10 Which formula represents an organic compound? 1.Mg(OH)2 2.NaCl 3.C12H22O11 4.NH3 Correct Answer Number: 3 Explanation: Organic compounds have Carbon (C) and Hydrogen (H) and are part of, or produced by, or excreted by living organisms.

11 Which is an organic compound found in most cells? 1.glucose 2.water 3.sodium chloride 4.oxygen gas Correct Answer Number: 1 Explanation: Organic means that the molecule contains carbon bonded to hydrogen. Only glucose, whose molecular formula is C6H12O6, has this. Although most cells also have an abundant amount of water (H2O) it is inorganic, as is sodium chloride (NaCl) and oxygen gas (O2).

12 Which are the four most abundant elements in living cells? 1.carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur 2.carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen 3.carbon, oxygen, sulfur, phosphorus 4.carbon, sulfur, hydrogen, magnesium Correct Answer Number: 2 Explanation: Although all of these elements are found in living cells, the most abundant are carbon, hydrogen and oxygen (for carbohydrates and lipids) and nitrogen (for proteins and nucleic acids).

13 Which pair of compounds can be classified as inorganic? 1.nucleic acids and minerals 2.proteins and water 3.water and salts 4.nucleic acids and proteins Correct Answer Number: 3 Explanation: Organic compounds contain carbon and hydrogen bonds. Both nucleic acids and proteins contain these. Water (H2O) and salts (ex: NaCl) do not.

14 Nucleotides Units that make up DNA molecule Made of three parts 1.5 carbon sugar (deoxyribose) 2.Phosphate group 3.Nitrogen bases

15 4 kinds of nitrogen bases 1.Adenine (A) 2.Guanine (G) 3.Cytosine (C) 4.Thymine (T)

16 Chargaff’s Rule A=T and G=C

17 X-Ray Evidence Rosalind Franklin British Scientist Used a technique called X-Ray diffraction Provided important clues about the structure of DNA

18 Watson & Crick

19 Prokaryotic Cells Prokaryotic cells have a single circular DNA molecule that contains nearly all of its genetic information Located in the cytoplasm

20 Eukaryotic Cells Much more complex 1000 times the amount of DNA as prokaryotes DNA is located in the nucleus in the form of chromosomes

21 DNA coils around histones to form nucleosomes, which coil to form chromatin fibers. The chromatin fibers super coil to form chromosomes that are visible in the metaphase stage of mitosis.

22 Semiconservative Replication Parental strands of DNA separate, serve as templates, and produce DNA molecules that have one strand of parental DNA and one strand of new DNA.

23 Types of RNA 1.Messanger RNA (mRNA) Serve as messangers from DNA to the rest of the cell 2. Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) Type of RNA that makes up parts of ribosomes 3. Transfer RNA (tRNA) Transfers each amino acid to the ribosome as it is specified by the mRNA

24 Transcription RNA molecules are produced by copying part of the DNA sequence into RNA Transcription requires an enzyme known as RNA polymerase During transcription, RNA polymerase binds to DNA and separates the DNA strands. RNA polymerase then uses one strand of DNA as a template from which nucleotides are assembled into a strand of RNA.


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