The Chemical Basis of the Body

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Basic Chemistry.
Advertisements

AT THE CELLULAR LEVEL: CHEMISTRY BECOMES BIOLOGY
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
Biochemistry Review.
Anatomy and Physiology
Microbiology- a clinical approach by Anthony Strelkauskas et al Chapter 2: : Fundamental chemistry for microbiology.
Mr. Cengel.  Matter- Anything that occupies space and has mass (weight)  Solid  Liquid  Gas.
The Chemical Level of Organization Chapter 2. Atoms and Molecules Atoms are the smallest units of matter, they consist of protons, neutrons, and electrons.
Chemistry of Life Nature of Matter Matter- Anything that has Mass and Volume Atoms are the smallest unit of matter that cannot be broken down by chemical.
CHEMISTRY The Chemical Basis of the Body. MATTER Anything that has mass and occupies space Anything that has mass and occupies space Three states: solid.
CHEMISTRY The Chemical Basis of the Body. MATTER Anything that has mass and occupies space Anything that has mass and occupies space Three states: solid.
Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life.
CHEMISTRY The Chemical Basis of the Body. MATTER Anything that has mass and occupies space Anything that has mass and occupies space Three states: solid.
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Chapter 2 Chemistry.
Chemical Basis of Life. Matter – Anything that occupies space and has mass Mass – The amount of matter in an object (kg) Weight – Gravitational force.
Essentials of Human Anatomy & Physiology Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. publishing as Benjamin Cummings Slides 2.1 – 2.20 Seventh Edition Elaine.
ESSENTIALS OF BODY CHEMISTRY MATTER, ELEMENTS, AND ATOMS MATTER-anything that occupies space and has mass MATTER-anything that occupies space and has.
Matter – anything that takes up space and has weight; composed of elements Elements – composed of chemically identical atoms as of 2002, 114 elements known,
Chemistry of Life. Basic Structures of Life Matter: Matter: Has mass and occupies space Element: Element: Pure substance Compound: Compound: Chemical.
CHEMISTRY The Chemical Basis of the Body MATTER anything that has mass and occupies space solid - liquid - gas made up of ELEMENTS.
Chapter 2 Chemical Basis of Life Why study chemistry in an Anatomy and Physiology class ? - body functions depend on cellular functions - cellular functions.
Chapt2student 2-1 Human Anatomy and Physiology I CHAPTER 2 Chemical Basis of Life.
CHEMISTRY The Chemical Basis of the Body. MATTER Anything that has mass and occupies space Anything that has mass and occupies space Three states: solid.
ELAINE N. MARIEB EIGHTH EDITION 2 Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings PowerPoint ® Lecture Slide Presentation by.
CHEMISTRY The Chemical Basis of the Body. MATTER Anything that has mass and occupies space Three states: solid - liquid - gas Made up of chemical building.
Chemistry of Life.
CHEMISTRY The Chemical Basis of the Body. MATTER Anything that has mass and occupies space Three states: solid - liquid - gas Made up of chemical building.
Chemistry of Life. How small is an atom?  Placed side by side, 100 million atoms would make a row only about 1 centimeter long About the width of your.
ESSENTIALS OF HUMAN ANATOMY & PHYSIOLOGY
The Chemistry of Microbiology
Chapter 2 The Chemistry of Life.
The Chemical Basis of the Body
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
The chemical basis of Life
Anatomy and Physiology- Chemistry
THE CHEMICAL BASIS OF THE BODY
Chemistry of Living Things
CHEMISTRY OF LIFE Chapter 2.
Chemical Basis of Life Chapter 2
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
Chapter 02 Lecture Outline
Basic Chemistry.
Chemistry of Life Ms. Rosendo Biology 10th B.
The Chemical Basis of the Body
CH. 2 Basic Chemistry.
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
The Chemical Basis of the Body
Principles of Anatomy and Physiology
Chemistry of LIFE.
Principles of Chemistry
The Chemical Level of Organization
The Chemical Level of Organization
Anatomy and Physiology
Chemistry Basics Matter – anything that occupies space and has mass
Chapter 2: The Chemical Basis of Life
Chemistry.
The Chemistry of Life Unit One Biology Notes.
Chapter 6 Chemistry of Life.
Chapter 6 Chemistry of Life.
Chemical Basis of Life Chapter 2.
PowerPoint Lecture Outlines to accompany
Principles of Chemistry
Basic Chemistry.
The Chemical Level of Organization
Basic Chemistry of Life
The Chemical Basis of the Body
Basic Chemistry.
Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life.
Chapter 2 Basic Chemistry
Presentation transcript:

The Chemical Basis of the Body CHEMISTRY The Chemical Basis of the Body

MATTER anything that has mass and occupies space solid - liquid – gas Made up of chemical building blocks called ELEMENTS “you take up space, you have a mass, YOU MATTER!”

Elements The building blocks of matter

Atoms the smallest unit of Matter That can enter into chemical reactions two basic parts Nucleus Electrons

Nucleus Protons (+ charge) Neutrons (uncharged) # of protons = elements Atomic Number Neutrons (uncharged) charge of the Nucleus is + Electrons - negatively charged particles-orbit around the nucleus # of electrons always equals the # of protons in an atom

Other Elements

Ions When an element loses or gains an electron Potassium( K+) and Sodium(Na+) are important ions in the body Also called Cations and Anions

Most Abundant Elements There are 26 elements in the body Most abundant are CHON 96% of total body mass O2 is most abundant at 65%

Molecules The combination of two or more elements held together by a chemical reaction. May be atoms of the same element H2, O2, N2, etc. May be atoms of different elements NaCl, HCl etc.

Compounds A substance that can be broken down into two or more elements by chemical means. Molecules of a compound always contain atoms of two or more different elements. ***All compounds are molecules but not all molecules are compounds***

Compounds Combination of two or more atoms

Cations Cations Cations are formed when an atom loses an electron or electrons to another atom creating an overall positive charge. Example: Na+

Anions Anions An anion is formed when an atom gains an electron or electrons from another atom creating an overall negative charge. Example: Cl-

Chemical Bonding Chemical bonds are formed between atoms when electrons in the outermost orbital are gained, lost, or shared

Ionic Bonding One loses and one gains an electron held together by the attraction strongest type of chemical bonding

Covalent Bonding the sharing of electron pairs single covalent bond = share one pair of electrons double covalent bond = share two pairs of electrons triple covalent bonds = share three pairs of electrons

Hydrogen Bonds covalently bond with H and another element very weak bond (5%) Often serves as a bridge between molecules. Easily broken

Polar Bond Unequal sharing of electrons Property of water that aids in movement of water

pH A scale used to describe the degree of acidity or alkalinity (basicity) of a solution. Actually represents the number of H+ ions or OH- ions in solution. H+ is acidic OH- is basic

pH scale ranging from 0-14. Based on the number of H+ ions Acid-below 7 Base-above 7 A neutral substance has a pH of 7.0. The Ph of blood: (alkaline) ranging from 7.35 to 7.45.

Water Universal solvent transports substances Lubricant Absorbs and releases heat slowly Aids in chemical reactions Most important inorganic compound

Solute, solvent, solution L/G in which some other solute has been dissolved Solute Atom or molecule that has been dissolved

Solution The aqueous combination of a solvent and solute

Inorganic compounds Lack carbon Vital for homeostasis Many are ionically bonded Water Acids Bases Salts

Organic Compounds Organic Compounds Contain carbon, hydrogen and Oxygen Held together by covalent bonds

Carbohydrates Formula is C6H12O6. structural units in DNA and cell membrane MAJOR ENERGY SOURCE for the body. ONLY energy source for brain and nerve cells. Blood sugar is known as glucose

Lipids (FATS) insoluble in water Most common are triglycerides composed of glycerol and fatty acids. second source of energy Protects body organs Provides insulation and warmth Absorbs fat soluble vitamins Forms sex hormones and steroids--see handout

Proteins building blocks called Amino Acids (20) structure of body tissues Form enzymes which are catalysts antibodies Regulate Osmotic pressure in the blood Function as storage molecules

Nucleic Acids DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ribonucleic acid). Contain the atoms C,H,O,N AND P DNA stores the genetic code on chromosome DNA and RNA assist with protein synthesis A-T & C-G

Structure of RNA RNA is formed by a single strand of nucleotides RNA can leave the nucleus Helps make proteins Transfers amino acids for proteins

Adenosine-TriPhosphate (ATP) in all living systems Drives all chemical reactions Occurs through a process called cellular respiration ATP + H20 <----> ADP + P + ENERGY

Electrolytes Ions in the fluids of the body Essential to many processes in the body Can be lost through fluid loss

The End! ATP is found in the Mitochondria