Metabolic Processes
- Living things are complex and yet, the cell is the basic unit of life
- New cells result of mitosis cell division
- DNA controls all cell functions
- In living organisms there is a balance between anabolic and catabolic processes
-Anabolic à taking smaller molecules and making them into larger ones
E.g. photosynthesis and protein synthesis
-Catabolic à taking larger molecules and breaking them down into smaller ones
E.g. cellular respiration
-Anabolism + catabolism = metabolism
- Metabolic processes need to be taking place for an organism to survive
E.g. of metabolic processes
Photosynthesis, cellular respiration, digestions, dehydration, protein synthesis and leaves changing colours in fall
- Living things have chemicals reacting together è chemistry drive all life
Chemistry to remember
- Sugar and acids dissolve well in water due to their polar bonds
- Carbon is a versatile atom since it can form 4 bonds that are usually very stable
- Humans lack the enzyme to break down the β - glucose found in cellulose in grass
- Blanching food denatures the enzyme that would react to air and cause an 'off taste'
- Matter - has mass and takes up space
Atoms are the smallest unit of matter
o Electrons, protons and neutrons
o Protons + neutrons = atomic mass
- Isotopes
- Atoms with same # of protons but a different number of neutrons
- Radioisotopes
- Isotopes that decay over time into smaller atoms, sub-atomic particles and energy
- Have a half-life è time it takes for half the mass to decay away
- Uses à radiometric dating, radioactive tracers, nuclear medicine
- Radiation à cause mutations, cellular damage and possible death
- Intramolecular Bonds è bonds within a molecule
- Ionic (metal-nonmetal)
- Covalent
- Electronegativity
- Measure of an atoms ability to attract a shared electron pair when participating in a covalent bond
- Atom that has higher En à attract pair better à slightly negative δ-
- En differences
0 - 1.7 à non polar/polar à 1.7 - 4.2 à ionic
- Polarity
- Depends on En differences and symmetry
- Intermolecular Bonds è bonds between molecules
Weak and based on size of atom/# of electons
Affects all molecules
o Dipole-Dipole
Occurs in polar molecules
o H-bonds
Strongest bond occurring between H and NOF
- Water has strong polar bonds
- H-bonds are very important for they cause...
Cohesion à water sticks together causing high surface tension
Adhesion à water sticks to other things causing capillary action
- High heat capacity
- High vapour pressure
o Solid water is less dense then liquid
o Very good solvent
o Small non-polar molecules (e.g. O2 & CO2) need protein carrier molecules to dissolve
o Nonpolar = hydrophobic; Polar = hydrophilic
o Water ionizes very little into H3O and OH
- Acids and Bases
- Strong acids ionize completely where as weak ones only ionize a bit
- The acid donates the proton (H+) and the base accepts the proton
Conjugate acid-base pairs
These also act as buffers for the pH in our body