Transcript Document
Chapter 2: How Cells Function 2.1: Chemical reactions take place inside cells 2.2: Cells capture and release energy 2.3: Materials move across the cell’s membranes Have already learned: -All living things are made of cells -Cells need energy to sustain life -Plant and animal cells have similarities and differences Will learn: -About the types of elements found in all cells -the functions of the large molecules in the cell -Why water is important to the activities of the cell Warm-up Questions • • • • True for animal cells, plant cells, or both? They need energy to sustain life They have organelles They have cell walls All cells are made of the same elements • The matter that makes up the cell itself is too small for a light microscope • All matter broken down into elements, each with own characteristics • Example: – Oxygen, on Earth, found as colorless odorless gas • 25 elements (of ~100 on Earth ) are essential for life – 6 elements account for about 99% of the mass of our bodies! • Oxygen: 65%, Carbon: 18.5%, Hydrogen: 9.5%, Calcium: 1.5%, Phosphorus: 1.0%, all other 19: 1.2% Elements RANK- simple to complex: cell, atom, molecule • Smallest unit of an element: atom • In our body: – mostly in the form of compounds – atoms of two or more elements chemically bonded – O + O = O2 C + O + O = CO2 • Most cellular activities: atoms and molecules interacting via chemical reactions (bonds broken and formed to make new molecules) • Need and release energy! Chemical energy! Large molecules for cell function • • • • • • 1) Carbohydrates 2) Lipids 3) Proteins 4) Nucleic Acids ALL have carbon atoms Work together in a cell Carbohydrates • Provide the cell with energy – Also structure • Breaking the bonds within the cell releases energy • Simple carbohydrates – carbon, oxygen, hydrogen • Complex carbohydrates – simple linked into chains: starch, cellulose, glycogen • Plants: energy not used makes starches and cellulose (cell wall) • Animals eat plants and get energy http://www.npr.org/templates/story/ story.php?storyId=130731888 Lipids • Fats, oils, and waxes • Similar to carbohydrates, also made of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen • Cells use lipids for energy and making structures • Atoms arranged differently than carbohydrates • Do not dissolve in water! – Cannot mix with water – (important for cell membranes…) Proteins • Made of amino acids • Carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and sometimes phosphorus and sulfur • Linked into long chains, folded into 3-D shapes • Structure and function determined by type, number, and order of the amino acids • We get amino acids from food: – meats, eggs, cheese, beans, or created by body • Different types: enzymes (control chemical reactions in cells), others support growth and repair, muscle movement, fight infections, deliver oxygen, form part of the cell membranes Nucleic Acids • Hold instructions for the maintenance, growth , and reproduction of a cell • DNA – Deoxyribonucleic acid • RNA – Ribonucleic acid • Both made of carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and phosphorus. • Subunits called nucleotides • DNA: information used by the cell for making all the protein the cell needs • Nucleotide pattern in DNA is copied to RNA, which delivers information into the cytoplasm…where it controls chemical reactions and form structures. Two thirds of all cells is water • All chemical reactions inside the cell take place in water • Water makes up: – 46% of body’s mass inside cells – 23% outside cells in body fluids • Polar: slight positive charge near hydrogen atoms, slight negative near oxygen • Attract opposite charges, repel like • Many substances dissolve in water Water & Cells • Most lipids do NOT dissolve in water • Cell membrane is made of a double layer of lipids – Head is polar, tail is not polar – Cell membrane is a boundary, keeping the inside of a cell separate from the outside • Water-hating tails repel water