Utilisateur
anything that has mass and occupies space (solid, liquid, gas)
smallest unit of matter that retains original properties, made up of even smaller structures called subatomic particles (protons, neutrons, electrons)
number of protons in atomic nucleus: defines every element
substance that cannot be broken down into simpler substance by chemical means, each element is made of atoms with same number of protons
Human body is made up of 4 major elements (hydrogen, oxygen, carbon, nitrogen)
a heterogeneous mixture of a finely distributed solid in a liquid
two or more substances mixed together but not chemically combined
a homogeneous mixture of one or more solutes dissolved in a solvent
matter can be combined chemically when atoms are combined
formed by chemical bonding between two or more atoms
formed when two or more atoms from different elements combine by chemical bonding
electrons are transferred between atoms: results in formation of ions (cations and anions)
positively charged ion: loses one or more electrons
negatively charged ion: gains one or more electrons
strongest bond: two or more nonmetals share electrons (single, double, or triple bonds)
two nonmetals in molecule with similar or identical electronegativity pull with equal force, share electrons equally
nonmetals with different electronegativities share electrons unequally, atom with higher e becomes partially negative, atom with lower e becomes partially positive
weak attractions between the partially positive end of one dipole and the partially negative end of another dipole, responsible for the key property of water-surface tension
only able to dissolve hydrophilic solutes (with fully or partially charged ends)"like water": water dissolves ionic and polar covalent solutes
do not have full or partially charged ends: do not dissolve in water: include uncharged nonpolar covalent molecules ex: oils and fats
when chemical bond is formed, broken, or rearranged, or electrons are transferred between two or more atoms (or molecules)
series of symbols and abbreviations demonstrates what occurs in a reaction
basic form of chemical notation
starting ingredients: will undergo reaction (left side of equation)
results of chemical reaction (right side of equation)
AB --> A +B
AB + CD --> AD + BC
A +B --> AB
for reaction to occur atoms must collide with enough energy to overcome repulsion of their electrons
energy required for all chemical reactions
biological catalysts: increases the reaction rate by lowering activation energy: not consumed or altered in reaction
substance that can bind to enzymes active site (highly specific)
chemistry of life
generally do not contain carbon bonded to hydrogen: water, acids, bases, and salts
do not contain carbon bonded to hydrogen
single subunits
monomers combined to build larger structures
composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen: function primarily as fuel: some limited structural roles
monomers from which all carbohydrates are made (glucose, fructose, galactose, ribose, and deoxyribose are most abundant)
formed by union of two monosaccharides
sucrose --> glucose +frutose
many monosaccharides joined to one another by dehydration synthesis reactions
storage polymer of glucose: mostly in skeletal muscle and liver cells
storage polymer of glucose in plants
we don't have the enzymes to break apart the linages between the sugars in cellulose
group of nonpolar hydrophobic molecules composed primarily of carbon and hydrogen: include fats and oils
lipid monomers
solid at room temp, no double bonds between carbon atoms, carbons are "saturated" with maximum number of hydrogen atoms
generally liquid at room temperature, one double bond between two carbons in hydrocarbon chain
liquid at room temp, two or more double bonds between carbons in hydrocarbon chain
3 fatty acids linked by dehydration synthesis to modified 3-carbon carbohydrate
glycerol backbone, two fatty acid "tails", one phosphate "head" in place of 3rd fatty acid
nonpolar group (fatty acid tail), molecule with polar group is phosphate head, makes phospholipids vital to structure of cell membranes
nonpolar: share four-ring hydrocarbon structure called steroid nucleus
steroid that forms basis for all other steroids
made of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen, the most abundant cell components
give amino acids different chemical properties
monomer subunit
amino acid sequence of polypeptide chain
one or more segments of primary structure folded in specific ways: help together by hydrogen bonds
coiled spring
venetian blind
three-dimensional shape of peptide chain, stabilized by hydrogen bonding
linking together more than one polypeptide chain in a specific arrangement: critical to function of protein
Destroying protein's shape by heat, ph changes, or exposure to chemicals, disrupts hydrogen bonding and ionic interactions that stabilize structure and function
monomer of nucleic acids, make up genetic material
composed of nucleotides, a complex organic substance present in living cells
nitrogenous base with hydrocarbon ring structure, five-carbon pentose sugar, phosphate group
double-ringed molecule: adenine(A) or guanine (G)
single-ringed molecule: cytosine (C), uracil (U), and thymine (T)
phosphate and sugar backbone
nitrogenous base (A, T, C, or, G)
extremely large molecule in nuclei of cells, composed of two long chains that twist around each other to form double-helix
held together by hydrogen bonding between the bases of each strand
recipe(code) for protein synthesis
process to make every protein
contains ribose, instead of deoxyribose sugars, single-stranded, thymine replace by uracil
copies genetic information from DNA to RNA, occurs in nucleus
reads information in RNA to produce proteins, occurs in cytoplasm