Transcript Connect!
Connect!
•If you eat a pizza, what does your body do to it?
•Why?
•Why are chemicals necessary for life?
•What does digestion mean?
•Why do you have to digest your food?
•How do plants get their food?
Processing Chemicals
• Chemicals are necessary because they
compose structures. In addition, chemicals
must be processed in different ways to maintain
homeostasis.
Organisms are constantly taking in chemicals as
well as releasing chemicals.
Once chemicals are inside an organism they are
changed in different ways.
• Unfortunately, we can’t always use
chemicals the way they exist.
When you eat food or inhale oxygen your
body uses these substances in chemical
processes that keep you alive.
We use the following processes to change
chemicals:
1. Digestion
• when we eat food the molecules are too big to
enter our cells; as a result, our digestive system
changes the larger molecules into smaller
molecules
Large
Digested to
Small
Carbohydrates
simple sugars (glucose)
Proteins
amino acids
Lipids
fatty acids and glycerol
Chunk Time!
• What do living things need to survive?
• Why do the chemicals need to be
changed?
• Name the 4 processes that change
chemicals.
• Define digestion. Why is it necessary?
• Name the 3 large molecule types, and
what they are digested into.
2. Synthesis
• after digestion you have small molecules
in your cells; some of these molecules will
be put together to form larger molecules to
make structures, hormones, and
enzymes
Synthesis is
the opposite
of digestion.
3. Respiration
•as mentioned previously, after digestion
you have small molecules such as
glucose in your cells. Some of this
glucose combines with oxygen in the
mitochondria of cells to release energy
needed to run the cell. This energy is
stored in ATP.
4. Photosynthesis
•plants and algae use
light energy to
convert simple
inorganic compounds
into food which is
organic
• What do plants need?
water + light + CO2
• What do plants make?
food (glucose) + O2
Chunk!
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Define synthesis. Why is it necessary?
What happens during respiration?
Where does respiration occur?
What is the energy molecule?
Define photosynthesis.
Explain what happens to a steak when you
eat it.
Connect!
• What does a red face on a person
indicate?
• How do people with pools test for pH?
• How does pH paper work?
Indicators
• Indicators are chemicals that change color
to indicate the presence of another
chemical. pH paper is an example.
• There are many other indicators
available…we will use 4 other indicators in
bio this year.
Benedict’s Solution
Benedict’s Solution
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Indicates glucose
Is bright blue
Heat to boiling
Turns brick red if glucose is
present
Lugols’s Iodine Solution
• Indicates starch
• Is reddish brown
• Turns black if starch
is present
Biuret Solution
• Indicates protein
• Is light blue
• Turns pink/purple if protein is present
Brown Paper
• indicates lipid
• rub on brown paper
• leaves a grease spot if lipid is present
Chunk
• Define indicator.
• Name the indicator, it’s start and end colors, and what it
tests for…
*lipids
*glucose
*protein
*starch
• What indicators would test positive for a cheeseburger?
For grilled tuna? For potato?
• If you order an Italian sub for take-out, what will the
wrapper look like when you get home, and why?
• Name your favorite food, tell what organic molecules are
in it, and how you would test for them.