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The Chemistry of Life

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Miscellaneous (mixtures of small molecules, minerals, metals, gasses) ... Basic aka alkaline substances produce higher levels of hydroxide and pH above 7.0 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Chemistry of Life


1
The Chemistry of Life
2
Chemical composition of living systems
  • Water
  • Protein
  • Complex carbohydrate
  • Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
  • Lipids
  • Miscellaneous (mixtures of small molecules,
    minerals, metals, gasses)
  • To understand how it works you have to know what
    it is made of!
  • (reductionism)

3
Lipids, Proteins, CHOs, NAs
  • Cellular lipids are easier to separate and to
    analyze by standard chemical techniques.
    Heterogenous collection but molecules are smaller
    in size.
  • Proteins, CHOs, NAs are huge and complex by
    routine chemical standards
  • macromolecules

4
Cellular macromolecules are polymers
  • Reductionist approach to analysis
  • Mild breakdown of macromolecules (hydrolysis)
    reveals existence of subunits. (proteins-amino
    acids, CHOs-simple sugars, NAs nucleotides)
  • Macromolecules are polymers
  • Chains of smaller subunits (monomers) linked
    together

5
  • The properties of living systems depend upon the
    characteristics of the monomers and the way they
    are attached together
  • Cell
  • Organelle
  • Macromolecule (polymer)
  • Monomer
  • Small molecules, arrangements of atoms
  • Atom
  • Subatomic particle

6
Atoms
  • Submicroscopic units of matter
  • Smallest unit of all physical material
  • Substance composed of only one type of atom is
    called an element

7
Structure of Atoms
  • Proton
  • In nucleus
  • Positive charge
  • Neutron
  • In nucleus
  • No charge
  • Electron
  • Surround nucleus
  • Negative charge

8
Atomic Mass
  • Combined mass of protons neutrons
  • Electron mass is too small to matter

Atomic Mass 14
9
Elements
  • Made of a single kind of atom
  • Type determined by its number of protons

7 Protons Nitrogen
10
Atoms Isotopes
  • Isotopes-different forms of elements/atoms
  • Same number of protons, different number of
    neutrons
  • Differ in atomic mass
  • Atoms
  • protons electrons
  • Electrically neutral

11
Radioiodine
  • Iodine-element with atomic number 53
  • Most common (stable) isotope has 74 neutrons.
  • Radioisotope less common and stable-78 neutrons
  • 131I
  • Radiation therapy for thyroid cancer, imaging

12
Electrons
  • Shells correspond to energy levels
  • Energy increases away from the nucleus
  • Electron arrangement influences chemical bonding

13
Molecules
  • Two or more atoms attached together by a chemical
    bond
  • Same elements or different elements
  • Substance composed of molecules that contain more
    than one type of atom is called a compound

14
Compounds are held together by chemical bonds
  • Methods of combining and forming permanent
    chemical bonds
  • Sharing electrons (covalent bonding)
  • Loss gain of electrons (ionic or electrostatic
    bonding)
  • In biological systems-temporary combinations are
    highly important
  • Chemical bonds determine properties of molecules
    and of living systems

15
Factors that Influence Patterns of Chemical
Bonding
  • Tendency of electrons to occur in pairs in an
    orbital
  • Tendency of substances to balance charges
    (opposites attract)
  • 3. Tendency of outer electron shell to be full
    (Octet Rule)

16
Electrostatic Bonds
  • One atom donates electron to other atom to
    satisfy the octet rule for both

17
Disambiguation!!!
  • Electrostatic bonds are not important in BIOL
    105.
  • Charge interaction (/-) is important.
  • A redox reaction is a special type of electron
    transfer used for energy transfer and involving
    two electrons at a time

18
Covalent Bonds
  • Atoms share outer electrons

19
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20
  • Molecular oxygen is O2
  • (equal sharing)
  • Covalent bonding can occur between a variety of
    atoms.
  • Water is H2O (unequal sharing)

21
Covalent Bond Strength
  • Can be weaker or stronger-depending on atoms
    involved and number of electrons shared
  • Single bond, Double bond,Triple bond 1, 2 or 3
    shared pairs
  • Sharing may be unequal (polar)
  • Covalent bonding is flexible!

22
Covalent Bonding in Carbon
  • Can form four covalent bonds
  • Can bond to more than one type of atom (including
    itself)
  • Single, double, triple bonds
  • Single bonds of moderate strength
  • Basis for many biological molecules
  • organic chemistry

23
Some covalent bonds involving carbon
24
Energy and Covalent Bonds
  • Bonds may be used as places to store energy (not
    the only place)
  • Breaking these bonds releases energy which may be
    used (or wasted!)
  • Allows organisms to store use energy in
    chemical form
  • May be converted or transduced to other forms

25
Water
  • Most abundant molecule in your body
  • Vital to life
  • Properties of life determined by properties of
    water

Frog Eggs in Water Environment
26
Molecular Structure of a Water Molecule
  • Hydrogens electrons usually near Oxygen
  • Molecule has polarity (polar molecule)

27
Polarity of Water
  • Allows it to attract other molecules
  • Allows temporary sharing of hydrogen nuclei
    (protons), aka hydrogen bonding

28
Hydrogen bonds
  • Weak, non-covalent bonds
  • Short-range
  • Directional
  • Sharing a hydrogen nucleus (one proton)
  • Very useful for living systems

29
H bonds are versatile
  • May involve substances other than water

30
Four key biological impacts of H bonds
  • H bonds influence heat capacity
  • H bonds influence solubility
  • H bonds determine acid-base balance (i.e. pH)
  • H bonds influence properties of macromolecules to
    attach to other substances

31
H bonds influence heat capacity
  • It is hard to heat up water due to H bonding
  • Modulates temperature in living bodies
  • As water absorbs heat, hydrogen bonds break
  • Evaporation of water is a great way to lose heat

32
H bonds influence solubility
  • Water is a powerful solvent
  • Ions break away in presence of water
  • Polar substances generally dissolve well in
    water-nonpolar ones do not
  • This influences the way a cell is built and works

33
How Salt Dissolves in Water
Hydration shell aka sphere of hydration
34
Water and non-polar molecules
  • Nonpolar molecules
  • Do not form hydrogen bonds
  • Not dissolved in water (no hydration shell)
  • Cholesterol is very non polar

35
H bonds determine acid-base balance
  • Water can accept or give up a proton in a
    chemical reaction called the ionization
  • of water

H2O ? OH- H3O
36
Hydronium and hydroxide concentrations
  • There is enough hydronium and hydroxide in pure
    water to measure easily
  • The concentrations are equal at 1 x 10-7 M
  • Hydronium and hydroxide exactly balance
  • Pure water is neutral

37
The pH scale measures the concentration of acid
in a solution
  • Neutral pH (pure water is 7.0)
  • Acid substances produce higher levels of
    hydronium and pH below 7.0
  • Basic aka alkaline substances produce higher
    levels of hydroxide and pH above 7.0
  • The practical range of pH measurement is 0-14.
  • Determined by taking negative value of exponents
    of its hydronium ion concentration

38
pH and living systems
  • Cells optimized for pH around 7.0
  • Use buffer systems to maintain (carbonic
    acid/bicarbonate in blood)
  • Must contend with pH changes in the environment
  • Can take advantage of pH to control systems
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