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3.3 Chemical Compounds in Cells. 7.1.a. Students know cells function similarly in all living organisms. Elements and Compounds. Air is a mixture of elements Key Concept: “An element is any substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substances.”
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3.3 Chemical Compounds in Cells 7.1.a. Students know cells function similarly in all living organisms.
Elements and Compounds • Air is a mixture of elements • Key Concept: “An element is any substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substances.” • Elements found in living things- carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur • An element is made up of atoms, the smallest unit of an element
Elements and Compounds • Key concept: “When two or more elements combine chemically, they form a compound.” • Most elements form compounds (in living things) • The smallest unit of a compound is a molecule • Carbon dioxide is a chemical compound
Elements and Compounds • Water is a compound • Water makes up more than 2/3 of your body • Key concept: “Most chemical reactions within cells could not take place without water.” • Water dissolves chemicals, helps cells to keep their size and shape, and keeps the temperature from changing quickly • Key concept: ”Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids are important groups of organic compounds in living things.”
Elements and Compounds • Inorganic Compounds- does not have the element carbon (example: water, table salt) • Organic Compounds- have carbon (example: carbon dioxide) • Key concept: “Most chemical reactions within cells could not that take place without water.”
Carbohydrates • Carbohydrate- an energy-rich organic compound made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen • Sugars are produced during the food making process in plants • Plant cells store extra energy in starch (carbohydrates) • Examples: potatoes, pasta, rice • Key concept: “In addition to providing energy for the cell, carbohydrates are important components of some cell parts.” • The cellulose found in the cell wall is a type of carbohydrate • When you eat carbohydrates your body breaks it down into starch and sugar
Lipids • Lipids- energy–rich organic compounds made of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen • More energy than carbohydrates • Cells store energy in lipids • Types of lipids: fats, oils, and waxes • Key concept: “In addition to their functions as an energy source, lipids also make up most of the cell membrane.”
Proteins • Proteins- large organic molecules made of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sometimes sulfur • Protein molecules are made of amino acids. • Amino acids combine to make thousands of different proteins • A lot of the structure of cells is made of proteins • Make parts of cell membrane and many of the organelles in the cell
Proteins • Key concept: “The proteins known as enzymes perform important functions in the chemical reactions that take place in cells.” • Enzyme- type of protein that speeds up a chemical reaction in a living thing • Enzymes are needed for many chemical reactions that are needed for life, those chemical reactions either would take longer or wouldn’t happen at all if enzymes weren’t there
Nucleic Acids • Nucleic acids- very long organic molecules made of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, phosphorus • Key concept: “Nucleic acids contain the instructions that cells need to carry out all the functions of life.” • 2 kinds of nucleic acids: DNA and RNA • DNA- (deoxyribonucleic acid) genetic material that carries information that passes from parent to child • RNA- (ribonucleic acid) a nucleic acid that is important in the production of proteins • RNA is found in the cytoplasm and the nucleus
Section 3: Chemical Compounds in Cells What are elements and compounds? How is water important to the function of cells? What are the functions of carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids?