The elements of life
Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen make up 96% of living matter.
Most of the remaining 4% consists of calcium, phosphorus, potassium, and sulfur.
Trace elements are those required by an organism in minute quantities.
Figure 1. the elements of life
The formation and function of molecules depend on chemical bonding between atoms.
- Covalent Bonds: strong chemical bonds
- Ionic Bonds
- Hydrogen Bonds
- Van der Waals Interactions
Chemical reactions make and break chemical bonds.
- The starting molecules of a chemical reaction are called reactants.
- The final molecules of a chemical reaction are called products.
Figure 2. chemical reactions
Photosynthesis is an important chemical reaction.
Sunlight powers the conversion of carbon dioxide and water to glucose and oxygen.
6 CO2 + 6 H20 → C6H12O6 + 6 O2
water and life
- Water is the biological medium on Earth.
- Most cells are surrounded by water, and cells themselves are about 70–95% water.
- The abundance of water is the main reason the Earth is habitable.
- Water: The Solvent of Life
- Acidic and basic conditions affect living organism.
- Water is in a state of dynamic equilibrium in which water molecules dissociate at the same rate at which they are being reformed.
Figure 3. water dissociation
Carbon and Molecular Diversity of Life
Living organisms consist mostly of carbon-based compounds.
Proteins, DNA, carbohydrates, and other molecules are all composed of carbon compounds.
Isomers
Isomers are compounds with the same molecular formula but different structures and properties.
- Structural isomers have different covalent arrangements of their atoms
- Cis-trans isomers have the same covalent bonds but differ in spatial arrangements
- Enantiomers are isomers that are mirror images of each other
The Structure and Function of Large Biological Molecules
Macromolecules are polymers, built from monomers.
- A polymer is a long molecule consisting of many similar building blocks
- These small building-block molecules are called monomers
- Three of the four classes of life’s organic molecules are polymers
Carbohydrates
Proteins
Nucleic acids
Dehydration reaction: synthesizing a polymer
Figure 4. dehydration
Hydrolysis: breaking down a polymer
Figure 5. hydrolysis
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