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Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization

Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

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Role of Water in the Body Most important inorganic compound for life Almost all chemical reactions in the body need water to occur Water is a solvent – dissolves important substances Water has high heat capacity – doesn’t change temperatures easily Water also acts as a lubricant (mucus) for joints, food movement, and between thoracic organs

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Page 1: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Ch. 2Part 2

The Chemical Level of Organization

Page 2: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Inorganic vs. Organic• Inorganic

– Usually lack carbon– Structurally simple– Include:

• Water• Salts• Acids• Bases

– Exceptions• Carbon dioxide (CO2)

• Bicarbonate (HCO3-)

• Carbonic acid (H2CO3)

• Organic– Always contain carbon– Usually contain

hydrogen– Always have covalent

bonds– Most are large

molecules made up of long chains

Page 3: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Role of Water in the Body

• Most important inorganic compound for life• Almost all chemical reactions in the body need

water to occur• Water is a solvent – dissolves important

substances• Water has high heat capacity – doesn’t change

temperatures easily• Water also acts as a lubricant (mucus) for joints,

food movement, and between thoracic organs

Page 4: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Acids and Bases

• This is also a review• pH scale – 0-14• Acids (0-6)– Dissociate into hydrogen (H+) ions– Example: HCl

• Bases (0-14)– Dissociate into hydroxide (OH-) ions– Example: NaOH

Page 5: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Acids and Bases in the Body

• Buffer system – the body’s ability to control pH of certain fluids

• Example:– Blood should have a pH of 7.35-7.45– If the pH of blood gets to high or too low, serious

complications can occur– A buffer system can help correct a pH imbalance• Does this by converting strong acids or bases into weak

acids or bases

Page 6: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Organic Compounds of the Body

• Organic compounds contain carbon

• Organized into various structures– Macromolecules – large

molecules– Polymers – built by putting

together repeating monomers

Page 7: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Organic Compounds in the Body

• In order to make a macromolecule– Dehydration synthesis must occur– Removing a water molecule, bind to monomers

together– XOH + YOH → XOY + H2O

• In order to break a macromolecule– Hydrolysis must occur– Adding a water molecule, break to monomers apart– XOY + H2O → XOH + YOH

Page 8: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

4 Major Groups of Organic Compounds

• Carbohydrates• Lipids• Proteins• Nucleic Acids

Page 9: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Carbohydrates

• Include: sugars, glycogen, starches, cellulose• Examples in our diet– Bread, pasta, rice, cereal

• Function as a source of chemical energy (quick energy)• Made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen• 3 major groups– Monosaccharides– Disaccharides– polysaccharides

Page 10: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Carbohydrates

• Monosaccharides – one sugar (sweet)– Glucose, fructose, galactose

• Disaccharides – two sugars (sweet)– Sucrose, lactose, maltose

• Polysaccharides – many sugars (not sweet)– Glycogen, starch, cellulose

Page 11: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Lipids

• Include: triglycerides, phospholipids, steroids• Examples in our diet:– Fats, oils

• Function as a source of energy storage• Made of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen• Are hydrophobic – do not dissolve in water• Lipids are made of repeating fatty acids

Page 12: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Lipids

• Triglycerides– Saturated fats – only single covalent bonds– Monounsaturated fats – one double bond– Polyunsaturated fats – more than one double bond

• Phospholipids– Important part of cell membrane

• Steroids– Important part of cell membrane, not all steroids are

anabolic

Page 13: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Proteins

• Include: proteins and enzymes• Examples in our diet:– Meat, fish, eggs, milk

• Function as catalysts, protect against invaders, hormones, cell transport, building blocks of body

• Made of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, sulfur

• Proteins are made of repeating amino acids

Page 14: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Proteins• 20 different amino acids• Amino acids are joined by peptide bonds to

create polypeptide chains• Enzymes– Speed up chemical reactions within the body

Page 15: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Nucleic Acids

• Include: DNA and RNA• Examples in our diet:– none – but we eat the building blocks (amino

acids)• Function as inherited genetic material• Made of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen,

and phosphorous• Made of repeating chains of nucleotides

Page 16: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

Nucleic Acids

• Nucleotides have 3 parts– Sugar– Phosphate– Nitrogenous base

Page 17: Ch. 2 Part 2 The Chemical Level of Organization. Inorganic vs. Organic Inorganic – Usually lack carbon – Structurally simple – Include: Water Salts Acids

ATP

• Adenosine triphosphate• ATP is not one of the 4 major groups of

organic molecules• ATP is essential to life – energy source