Download pptx - Chemical Aspects Of Life

Transcript
Page 1: Chemical Aspects Of Life

5

10

15

20

25

ChemicalAspectsOf Life

OrganicMolecules Cells Cell

ProcessesGenetic Vocab

5

10

15

20

25

5

10

15

2025

5

10

15

2025

5

10

15

2025

Page 2: Chemical Aspects Of Life

This is the smallest particle of an element that can retain the properties

of that element.

What is an atom?

5

Page 3: Chemical Aspects Of Life

This is the type of bond formed when two atoms share a pair of electrons.

What is covalent?

10

Page 4: Chemical Aspects Of Life

This is any atom that has lost or gained electrons and therefore

carries a charge?

15What is an ion?

Page 5: Chemical Aspects Of Life

We say a molecule has been reduced if it has done this.

What is gain electrons?

20

Page 6: Chemical Aspects Of Life

Because the electrons of hydrogen and oxygen atoms in a water molecule are

not shared equally, the molecule is described by this term?

25What is polar?

Page 7: Chemical Aspects Of Life

All organic compounds contain this element.

5What is carbon?

Page 8: Chemical Aspects Of Life

Sugar, cellulose and glycogen are three examples of this type of

organic compound.

What is a carbohydrate?

10

Page 9: Chemical Aspects Of Life

Saturated fats, cholesterol, and earwax are three examples of this

type of organic compound.

What is a lipid?

15

Page 10: Chemical Aspects Of Life

This type of protein controls the rate of chemical reactions in a living

organism.

What are enzymes?

20

Page 11: Chemical Aspects Of Life

The formation of ADP and inorganic phosphate from ATP and water is

an example of this type of chemical reaction.

What is a hydrolysis reaction?

25

Page 12: Chemical Aspects Of Life

These simple cells are the only example of prokaryotic

cells.

5What are bacteria?

Page 13: Chemical Aspects Of Life

In most eukaryotic cells, their supply of ATP is produced in this

cell structure.

What is the mitochondria?

10

Page 14: Chemical Aspects Of Life

Ribosomes make these very important molecules.

What are proteins?

15

Page 15: Chemical Aspects Of Life

In addition to the nucleus, these two cell structures also contain their own

DNA.What are mitochondria

and chloroplasts?

20

Page 16: Chemical Aspects Of Life

These organelles package and distribute proteins.

What are the Golgi bodies?

25

Page 17: Chemical Aspects Of Life

What is diffusion?

5

Small molecules such as oxygen move into a cell through this process.

Page 18: Chemical Aspects Of Life

What is osmosis?

10

Water moves into or out of a cell by this process.

Page 19: Chemical Aspects Of Life

What is pyruvic acid? 15

Two molecules of this substance are produced by

glycolysis and are then converted into acetyl coA.

Page 20: Chemical Aspects Of Life

During cellular respiration, electrons are donated to the electron transport chain by these two electron carrying

molecules.What is FADH2 and NADH?

20

Page 21: Chemical Aspects Of Life

Chemiosmosis in the thylakoid membrane is directly responsible for

producing this molecule.

What is ATP?

25

Page 22: Chemical Aspects Of Life

Who is Gregor Mendel?

5

This man is known as the “Father of Modern

Genetics”.

Page 23: Chemical Aspects Of Life

A genetic trait that appears in every generation of offspring is described

as this.

What is dominant?

10

Page 24: Chemical Aspects Of Life

This is a change in a gene due to damage or incorrect copying.

What is a mutation?

15

Page 25: Chemical Aspects Of Life

This would be the blood type of a person who inherited a B

allele from one parent and an O allele from the other.

What is type B?

20

Page 26: Chemical Aspects Of Life

What is the probability that the offspring of a homozygous dominant individual and a

homozygous recessive individual will exhibit the dominant

phenotype?

What is 100%?

25


Recommended