What is Life?
Biochemistry:
Chemistry of a specific process or art of living organisms.
Venn Diagram as a lab table.
Compare characteristic of living and nonliving things.
It must be true for all not just for some. Things to ponder…what do living things look
like, act like, and have that nonliving things don’t. Next, in the middle section what is similar to both
categories?
Life’s characteristics
Energy Use- use to grow and repair injured parts Development- a process of change that occurs
during an organisms life that produces a more complex organism
Stimulus- a change in an organisms surroundings that causes a reaction.
Response- an action or change in behavior Reproduce- produce offspring
Evolution?
Living Things..cont.
10 million different types of organisms on Earth.
All composed of basic elements: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen.
Rules of interaction between these chemicals. Spontaneous Generation: theory by Francesco
Redi (1668) that stated life could come from nonliving matter.
Redi’s Experiment
2 Jars filled with rotten meat One closed and one open Thus proving spontaneous generation is not
possible. Life comes from NON LIVING things is NOT
true!
Life as we know it…Video
Pasteur’s Experiment
Clear broth into two flasks w/ curved necks Boil one set- killing the bacteria Didn’t boil the other and bacteria grew in it. Conclusion- New bacteria appears only when
existing bacteria produces it.
Needs of Living things… Energy: primary source-sun Food: energy source as well, repair body parts. Water; few day without and death, chemical
reaction/transport Oxygen: respiration Living space: enough food/etc Ability to maintain body temperature,
homeostasis. Cold use movement.
Life…the beginning 4.6 billion years ago earth formed 1st Theory: Stanley Miller mixed hydrogen, methane,
and ammonia-added an electrical current and found some building blocks of life.
First living organisms arose- form early soup of chemicals.
Little or no oxygen in earth’s early atmosphere.
2nd Theory..Trapped in the Clay
2nd Theory Other say chemicals in clay, chemicals that make-up life were found on Earth-ocean.
Chemicals like carbohydrates, alcohols, and lipids also may have been in the “soup”.
All living things began after “droplets” surrounded by clay walls over time became cells.
Then Amino acids made when conditions are right: basic building blocks of life.
3rd Theory…Ocean Vents
Life started in the chemical reactions within the hydrothermal vents located throughout the ocean floor (ridges)
Bacterium is largest “bio” mass known to man. Larger than all of bio-mass of all living organisms
on land. Life is living off of toxic, 760 degree F water
using chemosynthesis.
Yellowstone Hydrothermal Vents
First Cells…
Fossils indicate 3.5 billion years ago, did not require oxygen
Plenty of food in the “soup” but when it ran out, producer cells evolved.
Used chemicals from environment to produce food (energy and gases)
Green plants produce food through photosynthesis
Important: oxygen is a waste product
First Cells cont.
Theory is just that, an educated guess. Consumers to Producers Cells that use Oxygen are more efficient in their
production of energy. Unicellular (“uni” means one) Next came multi-cellular organisms and asexual
or sexual reproduction.
History of Cells
Living things..chemical activities
Metabolism: sum total of all chemical reactions in living things.( ex. Digest)
Ingestion: take in food or produce their own. Digestion: process by which food is broken
down into simpler substances Respiration: take in oxygen and use it to
produce energy Excretion: getting rid of waste materials
Classification(taxonomy); the process of placing living organisms into categories based on similar characteristics.
History: Aristotle fourth century B.C. Animals-appearance, behavior, and movement.
1750’s Carolus Linnaeus; categorized 12,000 organisms and gave each a two-word name:
binomial nomenclature. Genus is the first word-closely related
organisms, species is the second-can mate and produce offspring
All latin words-easy for scientists to communicate
Today’s classification begins with Domain(Eukarya- cells with a nucleus, then sub divides them into kingdom, phylum, subphylum, class, order, family, genus, species.
Dichotomous key-series of paired statements that describe the physical characteristics.
Use to be Monerans- now Archaebacteria, Bacteria, and Eukarya contain: Protists, Fungi, Plants, Animals
Domains Bacteria
Prokaryotes cells without a nucleus
Archaea “ancient” Discovered at U of I, type of bacteria with DNA very diffferent in genetic make-up
Live in exstreme conditions Ex. Yellowstone National Park in Hot Springs
Eukarya Cells have a nucleus Protists, Fungi, Plants, Animals
QuickTime™ and a decompressor
are needed to see this picture.
Six Kingdoms- no longer used.
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