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Chapter 2
  Lecture
PowerPoint



    Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Paris Junior College


         2401
Anatomy and Physiology I
      Chapter 2
         Susan Gossett
      sgossett@parisjc.edu
     Department of Biology
                             2
Hole’s Human Anatomy
         and Physiology
                             Twelfth Edition

                 Shier w Butler w Lewis

                      Chapter
                          2
                 Chemical Basis of Life




Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.   3
2.1: Introduction

       Why study chemistry in an
     Anatomy and Physiology class?

- Body functions depend on cellular functions
- Cellular functions result from chemical changes
- Biochemistry helps to explain physiological processes



                                                          4
2.2: Structure of Matter

Matter – anything that takes up space and has mass (weight).
It is composed of elements.

Elements – composed of chemically identical atoms:
  • Bulk elements – required by the body in large amounts
  • Trace elements - required by the body in small amounts
  • Ultratrace elements – required by the body in very
  minute amounts

Atoms – smallest particle of an element
                                                             5
Table 2.1 Some Particles of Matter




                                 6
Elements and Atoms
• All matter is composed of elements
• Elements are the parts of compounds
• Elements are:
   • Bulk elements
   • Trace elements
   • Ultratrace elements
• The smallest parts of atoms are elements

                                             7
Atomic Structure
                                   Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.


Atoms - composed of                                                                                                               Neutron
subatomic particles:                                                                                                              (n0)
                                                                           -
   • Proton – carries a single
   positive charge                                                                                                                Proton
   • Neutron – carries no                                                                                                         (p+)
   electrical charge
                                                                     +         0                                                  Electron
   • Electron – carries a single                                        +
                                                                     0                                               -            (e–)
   negative charge                                                 0
                                                                       0
                                                                     +
Nucleus
   • Central part of atom
   • Composed of protons and
   neutrons                                                                                                                       Nucleus
   • Electrons move around the
                                                                           -
   nucleus                                                                                                                         8
                                                             Lithium (Li)
Atomic Number,
                          Mass Number and
                           Atomic Weight


Atomic Number
   • Number of protons in the nucleus of one atom
   • Each element has a unique atomic number
   • Equals the number of electrons in the atom
Mass Number
   • The number of protons plus the number of neutrons in one atom
   • Electrons do not contribute to the weight of the atom

Atomic Weight
   • Average of mass numbers of the isotopes of an element



                                                                     9
Isotopes
Isotopes
  • Atoms with the same atomic numbers but with
  different mass numbers
  • Different number of neutrons
  • Oxygen often forms isotopes (O16, O17, and O18)




                                                      10
Molecules and Compounds

Molecule – particle formed when two or more atoms
chemically combine

Compound – particle formed when two or more atoms of
different elements chemically combine


Molecular formulas – depict the elements present and
the number of each atom present in the molecule
               H2     C6H12O6      H2O
                                                       11
Bonding of Atoms
• Bonds form when atoms combine with other atoms

• Electrons of an atom occupy regions of space called
electron shells which circle the nucleus

• For atoms with atomic numbers of 18 or less, the following
rules apply:
    • The first shell can hold up to 2 electrons
    • The second shell can hold up to 8 electrons
    • The third shell can hold up to 8 electrons

                                                               12
2.1 From Science to Technology

 Radioactive Isotopes Reveal Physiology




                                          13
2.2 From Science to Technology

         Ionizing Radiation:
 From the Cold War to Yucca Mountain




                                       14
Bonding of Atoms
  • Lower shells are filled first
             Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.


  • If the outermost shell is full, the atom is stable
     -                                            -                                                         -


                                                 +                                                       + 0
     +                                     0           0                                                      +        -
                                                                                                        0 0
                                                 +                                                           0
                                                                                                          +

                                                  -                                                         -

Hydrogen (H)                       Helium (He)                                                    Lithium (Li)
                                                                                                                  15
Bonding of Atoms: Ions
Ion
• An atom that gains or loses electrons to become stable
• An electrically charged atom

Cation
• A positively charged ion                     11p+
                                               12n0
                                                               17p+
                                                               18n0
• Formed when an atom loses electrons

Anion
                                        Sodium atom (Na)   Chlorine atom (Cl)
• A negatively charged ion
• Formed when an atom gains
electrons

                                                                      16
Ionic Bonds
    Ionic Bonds
     • An attraction between a cation and an anion

      • Formed when electrons are transferred from one atom to
      another atom                                                                                           Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

          Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.




                                                                                                                                                     Na+
                                                                                                                                                                  Cl–

+        11p+
         12n0
                                                                              17p+
                                                                              18n0
                                                                                                         –


    Sodium ion (Na+)                                      Chloride ion (Cl–)

                           Sodium chloride
                                                                                                                                                                                                            17
Covalent Bonds
    • Formed when atoms share electrons
                Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

      H                             H                                                                          H2
      -                             -
                                                                                                               -

      +                              +                                                                   +          +

                                                                                                               -


Hydrogen atom   +       Hydrogen atom                                                               Hydrogen molecule

    • Hydrogen atoms form single bonds                                                                H―H
    • Oxygen atoms form two bonds                                                                     O=O
    • Nitrogen atoms form three bonds                                                                 N≡N
    • Carbon atoms form four bonds                                                                    O=C=O             18
Bonding of Atoms:
                Structural Formula
    • Structural formulas show how atoms bond and are arranged in
    various molecules
                Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.


                                                                       H             H
H        H          O           O                                             O                                O   C     O

    H2                   O2                                                H2O                                     CO2



                                                                                                                    19
Bonding of Atoms:
               Polar Molecules
Polar Molecules
  • Molecule with a slightly negative end and a slightly positive end
  • Results when electrons are not shared equally in covalent bonds
  • Water is an important polar molecule
                       Slightly negative ends




                                                                 20
        (a)
                       Slightly positive ends
Hydrogen Bonds
Hydrogen Bonds
  • A weak attraction between the positive end of one polar
  molecule and the negative end of another polar molecule
  • Formed between water molecules
  • Important for protein and nucleic acid structure
                                     H       H
                                         O




                                         H
                                                 Hydrogen bonds
                                         O
                                             H
                             H
                     O
                                                        H
                         H                         O

                                 H                  H

                                 O
                                                                  21
                                     H
                   (b)
Chemical Reactions
Chemical reactions occur when chemical bonds form or
break among atoms, ions, or molecules

Reactants are the starting materials of the reaction - the
atoms, ions, or molecules

Products are substances formed at the end of the chemical
reaction

                  NaCl  Na+ + Cl-
                 Reactant     Products
                                                             22
Types of Chemical Reactions
Synthesis Reaction – more complex chemical structure
is formed
                     A + B  AB
Decomposition Reaction – chemical bonds are broken to form
a simpler chemical structure
                     AB  A + B

Exchange Reaction – chemical bonds are broken and new
bonds are formed
                     AB + CD  AD + CB
Reversible Reaction – the products can change back to the
reactants
                       A + B n AB                         23
Acids, Bases, and Salts
Electrolytes – substances that release ions in water
                 NaCl  Na+ + Cl-
Acids – electrolytes that dissociate to release hydrogen ions
in water
                 HCl  H+ + Cl-
Bases – substances that release ions that can combine with
hydrogen ions
                 NaOH  Na+ + OH-
Salts – electrolytes formed by the reaction between an
acid and a base
                HCl + NaOH  H2O + NaCl                   24
Acid and Base Concentration
pH scale - indicates the concentration of hydrogen ions in
solution
Neutral – pH 7;                                             Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.


indicates equal          Relative    Acidic
                                      +
                                                                                              6.6   7.4
                                                                                                          8.4
                                                                                                          Sodium
                         Amounts H                                                            cow’s Human biocarbonate
concentrations of H+     of H+ (red)
                         and OH–                    3.0
                                                            4.2
                                                            tomato
                                                                   5.3
                                                                   cabbage                    milk  blood
                                                                                                                                                              11.5
                                            2.0     apple                                                                                          10.5
and OH-                  (blue)
                                            gastric juice
                                            juice
                                                            juice
                                                                                                                      8.0
                                                                                                                                                   milk of
                                                                                                                                                   magnesia
                                                                                                                                                              Household
                                                                                                                                                              ammonia
                                                                                                            7.0       Egg
                                                                                           6.0

Acidic – pH less than
                                                                                                            Distilled white                                               Basic
                                                                                           corn
                                                                                                            water                                                         OH–
                              pH 0      1        2      3       4       5                    6          7              8        9     10       11     12    13      14
7; indicates a greater           Acidic           H+ concentration increases                          Neutral              OH– concentration increases   Basic (alkaline)


concentration of H+
Basic or alkaline – pH greater than 7;
indicates a greater concentration of OH-

                                                                                                                                                                25
Neutralization and Buffers
• Neutralization occurs when an acid and
  base react to form a salt and water in a
  displacement reaction.
  – HCl + NaOH  NaCl + H2O
  – Termed neutralization because water is
    formed neutralizing the solution.
• Buffers act as acids when pH is high and
  bases when pH is low.
  – Carbonic acid-bicarbonate system.
2.3: Chemical Constituents
                of Cells
              Organic v. Inorganic Molecules

Organic molecules
    • Contain C and H
    • Usually larger than inorganic molecules
    • Dissolve in water and organic liquids
    • Carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids
Inorganic molecules
    • Generally do not contain C and H
    • Usually smaller than organic molecules
    • Usually dissociate in water, forming ions
    • Water, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and inorganic salts
                                                           27
Inorganic Substances
Water
  • Most abundant compound in living material
  • Two-thirds of the weight of an adult human
  • Major component of all body fluids
  • Medium for most metabolic reactions
  • Important role in transporting chemicals in the body
  • Absorbs and transports heat

Oxygen (O2)
  • Used by organelles to release energy from nutrients in
  order to drive cell’s metabolic activities
  • Necessary for survival
                                                             28
Inorganic Substances

Carbon dioxide (CO2)
   • Waste product released during metabolic reactions
   • Must be removed from the body


Inorganic salts
   • Abundant in body fluids
   • Sources of necessary ions (Na+, Cl-, K+, Ca2+, etc.)
   • Play important roles in metabolism


                                                            29
Organic Substances
           Carbohydrates
• Provide energy to cells
• Supply materials to build cell structures
• Water-soluble
• Contain C, H, and O
• Ratio of H to O close to 2:1 (C6H12O6)
• Monosaccharides – glucose, fructose
• Disaccharides – sucrose, lactose
• Polysaccharides – glycogen, cellulose


                                              30
Organic Substances
                                                                       Carbohydrates
      Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.




      H                          O
                   C
                                                                                                     Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

     H             C                  O                  H
                                                                                                                           H
H    O             C                  H                                                                   H                C               O                H
                                                                                                                                                                                                    Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.



     H             C                  O                  H                                                                C                               O                                                                                                   O
                                                                                                      H                                                                        H
     H              C                  O                 H                                                                 H
                                                                                                              C
                                                                                                                           O                H             H C
                                                                                                      O                                                                        O              H
     H             C                  O                  H                                                                 C                              C
                   H                                                                                                       H                               O              H
(a) Some glucose molecules                                                                       (b) More commonly, glucose                                                                               (c) This shape symbolizes
    (C6H12O6) have a straight                                                                        molecules form a ring structure.                                                                         the ring structure of a
    chain of carbon atoms.                                                                                                                                                                                    glucose molecule.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      31
Organic Substances
                                                                     Carbohydrates
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.                                                                                       Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.




                                               O                                                                                                                                                   O                                                                              O
                                                                                                                                                                                                                             O


        (a) Monosaccharide                                                                                                                                                   (b) Disaccharide


                                                                                    Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.




                                                                                                                                            O



                                   O

                                                                                                                                                     O




         (c) Polysaccharide

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                      32
Organic Substances
                   Lipids
• Soluble in organic solvents; insoluble in water
• Fats (triglycerides)
   • Used primarily for energy; most common lipid in the body
   • Contain C, H, and O but less O than carbohydrates (C57H110O6)
   • Building blocks are 1 glycerol and 3 fatty acids per molecule
   • Saturated and unsaturated
                      Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.


              H          O      H      H      H      H      H      H      H      H      H       H      H      H      H   H   H

          H   C   O      C      C      C      C      C      C      C      C      C      C       C      C      C      C   C   C   H

                                H      H      H      H      H      H      H       H      H      H      H      H      H   H   H


                         O      H      H      H      H      H      H      H      H      H       H      H      H      H   H   H   H   H

          H   C   O      C      C      C      C      C      C      C      C      C      C       C      C      C      C   C   C   C   C   H

                                H      H      H      H      H      H      H       H      H      H      H      H      H   H   H   H   H


                         O      H      H      H      H      H      H

          H   C   O      C      C      C      C      C      C

              H                 H      H      H      H      H


                                                                                                                                             33
          Glycerol                                                   Fatty acid
          portion                                                     portions
Neutral Fats
• Triglycerides are formed from a fatty acid and glycerol (a
  sugar).
• They are the most plentiful source of stored energy to our
  bodies.
   – Two types:
       • Saturated- contain only single bonds
       • Unsaturated- contains one(mono) or more(poly) double bonds
• Short, unsaturated fats are liquids (oils) and come from
  plants.
• Long, saturated fats are solid (butter and meat fat) and
  come from animals.
Organic Substances
                                                                                  Lipids
      • Phospholipids
                         • Building blocks are 1 glycerol, 2 fatty acids, and 1 phosphate per
                         molecule
                         • Hydrophilic and hydrophobic
                         • Major component of cell membranes
                                                                                               Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.




Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
                                                                                                                                      H                                                                   Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.




                     H                                                                                                   H            C           O            Fatty acid

       H            C            O             Fatty acid                                                                H            C           O            Fatty acid                                                                                         Water-insoluble
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                  (hydrophobic)
       H             C           O             Fatty acid                                                                                                                                                                                                         “tail”
                                                                                                                                                               O                       H      H       H
       H            C            O             Fatty acid                                                                                                                                                                                                          Water-soluble
                                                                                                                         H            C           O            P           O           C      C   N
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                   (hydrophilic)
                    H                                                                                                                                                                                 H                                                            “head”
                                                                                                                                      H                       O–                       H      H
Glycerol portion
                                                                                                                                            Phosphate portion
  (a) A fat molecule                                                                                                     (b) A phospholipid molecule                                                                (c) Schematic representation
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                         35
                                                                                                                         (the unshaded portion may vary)                                                            of a phospholipid molecule
Organic Substances
                                                      Lipids
    • Steroids
                    • Four connected rings of carbon
                    • Widely distributed in the body, various functions
                    • Component of cell membrane
                    • Used to synthesize hormones
                    • Cholesterol
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.                    Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.




                                                                                                                                                               CH3                                                  CH3
                                                                                                                                    H2 CH3 H
                                                                                                                                    C      C                  CH            CH2           CH2           CH2    CH
                                                                                                                    H2 C               C                      CH2
                                                                                                                                                                                                                    CH3
                                                                                                                   CH3
                                                                                                           H2
                                                                                                           C            HC                  CH                CH2
                                                                                                     H2C           C                CH

                                                                                                HO     C           C                CH2
                                                                                                       H   C               C
                                                                                                           H2              H

                                                                                                                                                                                                                          36
    (a) General structure of a steroid
                                                                                               (b) Cholesterol
Organic Substances
                   Proteins
• Structural material               • Protein building blocks are
• Energy source                     amino acids
• Hormones                          • Amino acids held
• Receptors                         together with peptide bonds
• Enzymes                                                H

• Antibodies                                     H   C
                                                         C
                                                             C   H
                                    H
                                                 H   C       C   H
                                    S                    C
               R                H   C   H            H   C   H
       H   N   C   C   OH   H   N   C   C   OH   H   N   C   C   OH
           H   H   O            H   H   O            H   H   O




                                                                      37
Organic Substances
                                      Proteins
                                                    Four Levels of Protein Structure
                                                                        Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.



                                                                        Amino acids                                                                                            H    H




Primary structure                                                                                                                      Tertiary structure




                                                                                                                                                                Three-dimensional
                                  C                     C                                                  R
                              H   N
                                          H         H
                                                            C       O
                                                                                                                           H                                    folding
                                                                                                           C
                                                                                                                   C
Secondary structure                   C       O
                                              H   H
                                                    H       N
                                                                                           H
                                                                                                       H
                                                                                                           HO
                                                                                                                       N
                                                                                                                               C
                                                                                                                                   R

                                                                                                                                   H
                                          C             C                                          R
                                  R                             R                                                          C
                                                                                                                   N
                                      N       H     O       C                              N       C       C
                                                                                   R                                   O
                              O   C                         N       H                  C                       H
                                      R             R                              H           H O
                                                                                                           R
                                  C                     C                              C                               H
                                                                                               N
                              H   N
                                      H             H
                                                            C       O
                                                                                       O
                                                                                                   H
                                                                                                       C
                                                                                                               C       N
                                                                                                                                   R
                                                                                                                                       Quaternary structure
                                      C       O     H       N                                                  O               C
                                                                                           H               H                       H
                                              H H                                                      R
                                  R       C             C       R                                                  N       C
                                                                                           N                   C
                                      N       H     O       C                      R               C                       O
                                                                                       C                           H
                              O   C                         N       H
                                                                                   H               HO
                                      R             R                                                      R
                                                                                       C                               H
                                  C                     C                                      N       C
                                      H             H                                                          C       N
                              H   N                         C       O                  O
                                                                                                   H
                      Pleated         C       O     H       N               Coiled                             O
                                              H   H
                      structure           C             C
                                                                            structure
                                                                                                                                                                                        38
Organic Substances
           Nucleic Acids
• Carry genes
• Encode amino acid sequences of proteins
• Building blocks are nucleotides
           Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.




          P                                                                                         B
                                                        S

• DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) – double polynucleotide
• RNA (ribonucleic acid) – single polynucleotide      39
Organic Substances
                                                               Nucleic Acids
                                                                                                       Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.


                                                                                                                                                                                             S
               P                                             B                             P       B                                                                     B
                                                                                                                                                                                                      P
                                       S                                                       S

                                                                                                                                                                                             S
               P                                             B                             P       B                                                                     B
                                                                                                                                                                                                      P
                                       S                                                       S

                                                                                                                                                                                             S
               P                                             B                             P       B                                                                     B
                                                                                                                                                                                                      P
                                       S                                                       S

                                                                                                                                                                                             S
               P                                             B                             P       B                                                                     B
                                                                                                                                                                                                      P
                                       S                                                       S

                                                                                                                                                                                             S
               P                                             B                             P       B                                                                     B
                                                                                                                                                                                                      P
                                       S                                                       S

                                                                                                                                                                                             S
               P                                             B                             P       B                                                                     B
                                                                                                                                                                                                      P
                                       S                                                       S                                                                                                          40
           (a)                                                                           (b)
2.3 From Science to Technology

    CT Scanning and PET Imaging




                                  41
Important Points in Chapter 2:
             Outcomes to be Assessed
2.1: Introduction
 Give examples of how the study of living materials requires and
understanding of chemistry.
2.2: Structure of Matter
 Describe how atomic structure determines how atoms interact.
 Describe the relationships among matter, atoms, and molecules.
 Explain how molecular and structural formulas symbolize the
composition of compounds.
 Describe three types of chemical reactions.
 Explain what acids, bases, and buffers are.
                                                                    42
 Define pH.
Important Points in Chapter 2:
  Outcomes to be Assessed Continued
2.3: Chemical Constituents of Cells
 List the major groups of inorganic chemicals common in cells.
 Describe the general functions of the main classes of organic molecules
in cells.




                                                                       43
Quiz 2
Complete Quiz 2 now!

  Read Chapter 3.

                       44

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Chapter 2 Chemical Basis of Life

  • 1. Chapter 2 Lecture PowerPoint Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
  • 2. Paris Junior College 2401 Anatomy and Physiology I Chapter 2 Susan Gossett sgossett@parisjc.edu Department of Biology 2
  • 3. Hole’s Human Anatomy and Physiology Twelfth Edition Shier w Butler w Lewis Chapter 2 Chemical Basis of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 3
  • 4. 2.1: Introduction Why study chemistry in an Anatomy and Physiology class? - Body functions depend on cellular functions - Cellular functions result from chemical changes - Biochemistry helps to explain physiological processes 4
  • 5. 2.2: Structure of Matter Matter – anything that takes up space and has mass (weight). It is composed of elements. Elements – composed of chemically identical atoms: • Bulk elements – required by the body in large amounts • Trace elements - required by the body in small amounts • Ultratrace elements – required by the body in very minute amounts Atoms – smallest particle of an element 5
  • 6. Table 2.1 Some Particles of Matter 6
  • 7. Elements and Atoms • All matter is composed of elements • Elements are the parts of compounds • Elements are: • Bulk elements • Trace elements • Ultratrace elements • The smallest parts of atoms are elements 7
  • 8. Atomic Structure Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Atoms - composed of Neutron subatomic particles: (n0) - • Proton – carries a single positive charge Proton • Neutron – carries no (p+) electrical charge + 0 Electron • Electron – carries a single + 0 - (e–) negative charge 0 0 + Nucleus • Central part of atom • Composed of protons and neutrons Nucleus • Electrons move around the - nucleus 8 Lithium (Li)
  • 9. Atomic Number, Mass Number and Atomic Weight Atomic Number • Number of protons in the nucleus of one atom • Each element has a unique atomic number • Equals the number of electrons in the atom Mass Number • The number of protons plus the number of neutrons in one atom • Electrons do not contribute to the weight of the atom Atomic Weight • Average of mass numbers of the isotopes of an element 9
  • 10. Isotopes Isotopes • Atoms with the same atomic numbers but with different mass numbers • Different number of neutrons • Oxygen often forms isotopes (O16, O17, and O18) 10
  • 11. Molecules and Compounds Molecule – particle formed when two or more atoms chemically combine Compound – particle formed when two or more atoms of different elements chemically combine Molecular formulas – depict the elements present and the number of each atom present in the molecule H2 C6H12O6 H2O 11
  • 12. Bonding of Atoms • Bonds form when atoms combine with other atoms • Electrons of an atom occupy regions of space called electron shells which circle the nucleus • For atoms with atomic numbers of 18 or less, the following rules apply: • The first shell can hold up to 2 electrons • The second shell can hold up to 8 electrons • The third shell can hold up to 8 electrons 12
  • 13. 2.1 From Science to Technology Radioactive Isotopes Reveal Physiology 13
  • 14. 2.2 From Science to Technology Ionizing Radiation: From the Cold War to Yucca Mountain 14
  • 15. Bonding of Atoms • Lower shells are filled first Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. • If the outermost shell is full, the atom is stable - - - + + 0 + 0 0 + - 0 0 + 0 + - - Hydrogen (H) Helium (He) Lithium (Li) 15
  • 16. Bonding of Atoms: Ions Ion • An atom that gains or loses electrons to become stable • An electrically charged atom Cation • A positively charged ion 11p+ 12n0 17p+ 18n0 • Formed when an atom loses electrons Anion Sodium atom (Na) Chlorine atom (Cl) • A negatively charged ion • Formed when an atom gains electrons 16
  • 17. Ionic Bonds Ionic Bonds • An attraction between a cation and an anion • Formed when electrons are transferred from one atom to another atom Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Na+ Cl– + 11p+ 12n0 17p+ 18n0 – Sodium ion (Na+) Chloride ion (Cl–) Sodium chloride 17
  • 18. Covalent Bonds • Formed when atoms share electrons Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H H H2 - - - + + + + - Hydrogen atom + Hydrogen atom Hydrogen molecule • Hydrogen atoms form single bonds H―H • Oxygen atoms form two bonds O=O • Nitrogen atoms form three bonds N≡N • Carbon atoms form four bonds O=C=O 18
  • 19. Bonding of Atoms: Structural Formula • Structural formulas show how atoms bond and are arranged in various molecules Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H H H H O O O O C O H2 O2 H2O CO2 19
  • 20. Bonding of Atoms: Polar Molecules Polar Molecules • Molecule with a slightly negative end and a slightly positive end • Results when electrons are not shared equally in covalent bonds • Water is an important polar molecule Slightly negative ends 20 (a) Slightly positive ends
  • 21. Hydrogen Bonds Hydrogen Bonds • A weak attraction between the positive end of one polar molecule and the negative end of another polar molecule • Formed between water molecules • Important for protein and nucleic acid structure H H O H Hydrogen bonds O H H O H H O H H O 21 H (b)
  • 22. Chemical Reactions Chemical reactions occur when chemical bonds form or break among atoms, ions, or molecules Reactants are the starting materials of the reaction - the atoms, ions, or molecules Products are substances formed at the end of the chemical reaction NaCl  Na+ + Cl- Reactant Products 22
  • 23. Types of Chemical Reactions Synthesis Reaction – more complex chemical structure is formed A + B  AB Decomposition Reaction – chemical bonds are broken to form a simpler chemical structure AB  A + B Exchange Reaction – chemical bonds are broken and new bonds are formed AB + CD  AD + CB Reversible Reaction – the products can change back to the reactants A + B n AB 23
  • 24. Acids, Bases, and Salts Electrolytes – substances that release ions in water NaCl  Na+ + Cl- Acids – electrolytes that dissociate to release hydrogen ions in water HCl  H+ + Cl- Bases – substances that release ions that can combine with hydrogen ions NaOH  Na+ + OH- Salts – electrolytes formed by the reaction between an acid and a base HCl + NaOH  H2O + NaCl 24
  • 25. Acid and Base Concentration pH scale - indicates the concentration of hydrogen ions in solution Neutral – pH 7; Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. indicates equal Relative Acidic + 6.6 7.4 8.4 Sodium Amounts H cow’s Human biocarbonate concentrations of H+ of H+ (red) and OH– 3.0 4.2 tomato 5.3 cabbage milk blood 11.5 2.0 apple 10.5 and OH- (blue) gastric juice juice juice 8.0 milk of magnesia Household ammonia 7.0 Egg 6.0 Acidic – pH less than Distilled white Basic corn water OH– pH 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 7; indicates a greater Acidic H+ concentration increases Neutral OH– concentration increases Basic (alkaline) concentration of H+ Basic or alkaline – pH greater than 7; indicates a greater concentration of OH- 25
  • 26. Neutralization and Buffers • Neutralization occurs when an acid and base react to form a salt and water in a displacement reaction. – HCl + NaOH  NaCl + H2O – Termed neutralization because water is formed neutralizing the solution. • Buffers act as acids when pH is high and bases when pH is low. – Carbonic acid-bicarbonate system.
  • 27. 2.3: Chemical Constituents of Cells Organic v. Inorganic Molecules Organic molecules • Contain C and H • Usually larger than inorganic molecules • Dissolve in water and organic liquids • Carbohydrates, proteins, lipids, and nucleic acids Inorganic molecules • Generally do not contain C and H • Usually smaller than organic molecules • Usually dissociate in water, forming ions • Water, oxygen, carbon dioxide, and inorganic salts 27
  • 28. Inorganic Substances Water • Most abundant compound in living material • Two-thirds of the weight of an adult human • Major component of all body fluids • Medium for most metabolic reactions • Important role in transporting chemicals in the body • Absorbs and transports heat Oxygen (O2) • Used by organelles to release energy from nutrients in order to drive cell’s metabolic activities • Necessary for survival 28
  • 29. Inorganic Substances Carbon dioxide (CO2) • Waste product released during metabolic reactions • Must be removed from the body Inorganic salts • Abundant in body fluids • Sources of necessary ions (Na+, Cl-, K+, Ca2+, etc.) • Play important roles in metabolism 29
  • 30. Organic Substances Carbohydrates • Provide energy to cells • Supply materials to build cell structures • Water-soluble • Contain C, H, and O • Ratio of H to O close to 2:1 (C6H12O6) • Monosaccharides – glucose, fructose • Disaccharides – sucrose, lactose • Polysaccharides – glycogen, cellulose 30
  • 31. Organic Substances Carbohydrates Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H O C Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H C O H H H O C H H C O H Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H C O H C O O H H H C O H H C O H H C O O H H C O H C C H H O H (a) Some glucose molecules (b) More commonly, glucose (c) This shape symbolizes (C6H12O6) have a straight molecules form a ring structure. the ring structure of a chain of carbon atoms. glucose molecule. 31
  • 32. Organic Substances Carbohydrates Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. O O O O (a) Monosaccharide (b) Disaccharide Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. O O O (c) Polysaccharide 32
  • 33. Organic Substances Lipids • Soluble in organic solvents; insoluble in water • Fats (triglycerides) • Used primarily for energy; most common lipid in the body • Contain C, H, and O but less O than carbohydrates (C57H110O6) • Building blocks are 1 glycerol and 3 fatty acids per molecule • Saturated and unsaturated Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H O H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H C O C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H O H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H C O C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C C H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H H O H H H H H H H C O C C C C C C H H H H H H 33 Glycerol Fatty acid portion portions
  • 34. Neutral Fats • Triglycerides are formed from a fatty acid and glycerol (a sugar). • They are the most plentiful source of stored energy to our bodies. – Two types: • Saturated- contain only single bonds • Unsaturated- contains one(mono) or more(poly) double bonds • Short, unsaturated fats are liquids (oils) and come from plants. • Long, saturated fats are solid (butter and meat fat) and come from animals.
  • 35. Organic Substances Lipids • Phospholipids • Building blocks are 1 glycerol, 2 fatty acids, and 1 phosphate per molecule • Hydrophilic and hydrophobic • Major component of cell membranes Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. H H C O Fatty acid H C O Fatty acid H C O Fatty acid Water-insoluble (hydrophobic) H C O Fatty acid “tail” O H H H H C O Fatty acid Water-soluble H C O P O C C N (hydrophilic) H H “head” H O– H H Glycerol portion Phosphate portion (a) A fat molecule (b) A phospholipid molecule (c) Schematic representation 35 (the unshaded portion may vary) of a phospholipid molecule
  • 36. Organic Substances Lipids • Steroids • Four connected rings of carbon • Widely distributed in the body, various functions • Component of cell membrane • Used to synthesize hormones • Cholesterol Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. CH3 CH3 H2 CH3 H C C CH CH2 CH2 CH2 CH H2 C C CH2 CH3 CH3 H2 C HC CH CH2 H2C C CH HO C C CH2 H C C H2 H 36 (a) General structure of a steroid (b) Cholesterol
  • 37. Organic Substances Proteins • Structural material • Protein building blocks are • Energy source amino acids • Hormones • Amino acids held • Receptors together with peptide bonds • Enzymes H • Antibodies H C C C H H H C C H S C R H C H H C H H N C C OH H N C C OH H N C C OH H H O H H O H H O 37
  • 38. Organic Substances Proteins Four Levels of Protein Structure Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Amino acids H H Primary structure Tertiary structure Three-dimensional C C R H N H H C O H folding C C Secondary structure C O H H H N H H HO N C R H C C R R R C N N H O C N C C R O O C N H C H R R H H O R C C C H N H N H H C O O H C C N R Quaternary structure C O H N O C H H H H H R R C C R N C N C N H O C R C O C H O C N H H HO R R R C H C C N C H H C N H N C O O H Pleated C O H N Coiled O H H structure C C structure 38
  • 39. Organic Substances Nucleic Acids • Carry genes • Encode amino acid sequences of proteins • Building blocks are nucleotides Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. P B S • DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) – double polynucleotide • RNA (ribonucleic acid) – single polynucleotide 39
  • 40. Organic Substances Nucleic Acids Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. S P B P B B P S S S P B P B B P S S S P B P B B P S S S P B P B B P S S S P B P B B P S S S P B P B B P S S 40 (a) (b)
  • 41. 2.3 From Science to Technology CT Scanning and PET Imaging 41
  • 42. Important Points in Chapter 2: Outcomes to be Assessed 2.1: Introduction  Give examples of how the study of living materials requires and understanding of chemistry. 2.2: Structure of Matter  Describe how atomic structure determines how atoms interact.  Describe the relationships among matter, atoms, and molecules.  Explain how molecular and structural formulas symbolize the composition of compounds.  Describe three types of chemical reactions.  Explain what acids, bases, and buffers are. 42  Define pH.
  • 43. Important Points in Chapter 2: Outcomes to be Assessed Continued 2.3: Chemical Constituents of Cells  List the major groups of inorganic chemicals common in cells.  Describe the general functions of the main classes of organic molecules in cells. 43
  • 44. Quiz 2 Complete Quiz 2 now! Read Chapter 3. 44