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September 11, 2013. What are some things that living things depend on that are not living?. Announcements. Today’s Objective. Identify macromolecules essential to life Identify the properties of what that make it so important to life. Macromolecules.
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September 11, 2013 • What are some things that living things depend on that are not living?
Today’s Objective • Identify macromolecules essential to life • Identify the properties of what that make it so important to life
Macromolecules • Large molecules made up of smaller subunits called monomers • There are four major bio-molecules • Carbohydrates • Proteins • Lipids • Nucleic acids
Carbohydrates • Supplies energy to cells • Monomers = sugar (glucose) • Polymers = starch
Plant Starch • Cellulose • Tough fibers that give plants structure • Wood/paper
Chitin: form of cellulose • Hard exoskeleton of insects and crustaceans
Animal Starch • Glycogen • Stored sugar • released from your liver when the glucose in your blood runs low • Supplies your muscles with energy for contraction/movement
Less Hydrogen double bond causes bending Unsaturated fat and fatty acid Saturated fat and fatty acid Lipids • Store energy • Insulate/protect Filled with Hydrogen
WATER Hydrophilic head WATER Hydrophobic tail Figure 5.14 Phospholipids • Make up the cell membrane • Allows molecules in and out of cell
Nucleic Acids • DNA and RNA • Store vital information in each cell for making proteins • Made of nucleotides
Proteins • Wide variety: combo of amino acids (20) • Carry out chemical reactions • Transport molecules • Fight diseases
What monomers are bonded together to form proteins? • Nucleotides • Amino acids • Fatty acids • Glucose
This macromolecule is the main source of energy for living things. • Lipids • Protein • Carbohydrate • Nucleic Acid
This macromolecule controls the rate of reactions and regulate cell processes
2-2 Properties of Water • Polarity– unequal sharing of electrons between. creates a slight charge • Hydrogen end = positive • Oxygen end = negative
Cohesion • Attraction between molecules of the same substance • Water molecules produce Surface Tension • May support light objects
Adhesion • Attraction between molecules of different substances • Capillary Action • Causes water to rise in a narrow tube against gravity
Water conducting cells 100 µm Figure 3.3 Capillary Example • Helps pull water up through the microscopic vessels of plants
Mixtures Involving Water • Solutions: all components are evenly distributed • Solute—substance dissolved • Solvent—substance which dissolves solutes
Suspensions • Mixtures of water and nondissolved material • Small pieces that do not settle out
Acids, Bases, and pH • Acids: compounds that contain higher concentrations of H+ ions than pure water • pH values below 7 • Bases: compounds that contain low concentrations of H+ and high amounts of OH- ions • pH values above 7