Transcript Big Picture

Do Now
What do you think your weight would be if there
were no water in your body? What else besides
water is your body composed of? Where do you
think you get the minerals that make up your body
mass?
Record your answers in your science journal.
Big Picture
LS1.A: Structure and Function
All living things are made up of cells, which
is the smallest unit that can be said to be
alive. An organism may consist of one single
cell (unicellular) or many different numbers
and types of cells (multicellular).
Objective: Explain why organisms need food, water, air,
and living space and Describe the chemical building
blocks of cells by analyzing and interpreting data.
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Learning Target
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Today I will: Learn about the four
building blocks of cell.
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Agenda
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Today we will:
So that I can: Apply that
knowledge to the structure and
function of cells.
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Watch a video on lipids, proteins,
carbohydrates and nucleic acids.
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Teacher presentation with notes.
I will know if I got it if: I can
clearly explain the properties of
each of the four building blocks
of cells.
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Group work reading about
molecules.
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Center on microscopes.
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Exit ticket.
Vocabulary
protein
carbohydrate
lipid
ATP
nucleic acid
Vocabulary
 protein
 carbohydrate
 lipid
 ATP
 nucleic
acid
Video
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gFuEo2ccTPA
The Necessities of Life
Water
• Your cells and the cells of almost all living
organisms are approximately 70% water. Most of the
chemical reactions involved in metabolism require
water.
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Air
• Air is a mixture of several different gases, including
oxygen and carbon dioxide. Most living things use
oxygen in the chemical process that releases energy
from food.
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The Necessities of Life
A Place to Live
• All organisms need a place to live that
contains all of the things they need to survive.
Space on Earth is limited, so organisms are
often in competition with each other.
Food
• All living things need food. Food gives
organism energy and the raw material needed
to carry on life processes.
Food, continued
• Making Food Some organisms, such as plants,
are called producers. Producers can make their
own food by using energy from their surroundings.
• Taking Food Other organisms are called
consumers because they must eat (consume)
other organisms to get food. Decomposers are
consumers that get their food by breaking down
the nutrients in dead organisms or animal wastes.
Putting It All Together
• All organisms need to break down that food in order to use the
nutrients in it.
• Nutrients are made up of molecules.
• Molecules found in living things are usually made up of six
elements: carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and
sulfur.
Proteins
• Proteins are large molecules made up of amino acids.
•Making Proteins Organisms break down the proteins in
food to supply their cells with amino acids that are then linked
together to form new proteins.
• Proteins in Action Some proteins form structures that are
easy to see. Other proteins help cells do their jobs. Proteins
called enzymes start or speed up chemical reactions in cells.
Carbohydrates
• Molecules made of sugars are called carbohydrates.
•Simple Carbohydrates Simple carbohydrates are
made up of one sugar molecule or a few sugar
molecules linked together.
• Complex Carbohydrates Complex carbohydrates
are made of hundreds of sugar molecules linked
together. Organisms store extra sugar as complex
carbohydrates.
Lipids
• Lipids are compounds that cannot mix with
water.
•Phospholipids are the molecules that form
much of the cell membrane.
• Fats and Oils Fats and oils are lipids that
store energy. When an organism has used up
most of its carbohydrates, it can get energy from
these lipids.
Nucleic Acids
• Nucleic acids are large molecules made
up of subunits called nucleotides.
• Nucleic acids are sometimes called the
blueprints of life because they have all the
information needed for a cell to make
proteins.
• DNA is a nucleic acid.
ATP
• Adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, is the major
energy-carrying molecule in cells.
• The energy in carbohydrates and lipids must first be
transferred to ATP, which then provides fuel for
cellular activities.
Exit Ticket
 What
life?
are the four molecules necessary for