ATP and Sources of Energy
Download
Report
Transcript ATP and Sources of Energy
ATP
A compound
that stores energy
Stands for Adenosine
triphosphate
Made up of 3 parts
5 carbon sugar
Adenosine
3 Phosphates
Making Energy with ATP
Energy
is
released when a
bond holding the
phosphate group
is broken.
The energy is
used by the cell
to do work.
How Cells use Energy
Mechanical
functions
Moving cilia/flagellum
Muscle contraction
Active
transport
Sodium-Potassium Pump
Building
and breaking down large
molecules
Starch, glycogen, amino acids etc.
The ATP Cycle
Energy is stored in chemical bonds.
Energy is released by breaking the
chemical bonds and is used to power
cell activities.
Energy is depleted and a new molecule
ADP is formed.
Energy is created by using energy
released from other chemical reactions
to bond a phosphate group to
ADP...making ATP.
ATP Cycle
ADP is ATP minus 1 P
ATP
= Adenosine
triphosphate
ADP = Adenosine
diphosphate
When energy is used
one phosphate
group is removed
from ATP and ADP is
formed.
Organisms and ATP
Two
Groups based on how they
obtain food:
Autotrophs – Producers
Heterotrophs – Consumers
Food = Organic compounds that
can be broken down into energy
Autotrophs
Make
food from carbon dioxide and
the sun’s energy.
Examples: Plants, algae, some
bacteria
Usually make Glucose as food
molecule.
Sunlight is not absolutely needed, but
is most commonly used.
Hydrothermal Vents
Heterotrophs
Cannot
make their own food.
Dependent on the consumption of
autotrophs or other heterotrophs for
food.
The energy in the food is:
Lost and expelled as waste.
Used for cellular processes.
Stored by the organism for future use.
Left-side Activity
Draw and label an ATP molecule
Specific Sugar
Phosphate
Specific Nitrogenous Base
Draw and label ATP cycle