Lecture 3 - Chemical Reactions and Water in the Body
Enzymes: proteins that function as biological catalysts by...
- Lowering the activation energy necessary for a chemical reaction to start - Allowing the reaction to proceed multiple times as they are not used up by the reaction
Colloid Particle size: Appearance: Will particles settle out?: Will particles pass through selectively permeable membrane?: Examples:
1-100 nm Often cloudy No No Proteins in blood, Intracellular fluid, Milk protein, Gelatin
Water is what percentage of our body weight
50-75%
pH of a neutral solution
7.0 (equal amounts of H+ and OH-)
pH of blood range
7.35 to 7.45
Solution Particle size: Appearance: Will particles settle out?: Will particles pass through selectively permeable membrane?: Examples:
<1 nm Clear No Yes Glucose in blood, O2 in water, Saline solutions, sugar in coffee
Suspension Particle size: Appearance: Will particles settle out?: Will particles pass through selectively permeable membrane?: Examples:
>100 nm Cloudy-opaque Yes No Blood cells, Cornstarch in water, Fats in blood, Kaopectate
When two molecules exchange atoms or groups of atoms
AB+CD --> ABCD --> AC + BD
A proton donor (releases H+ ions) in water
Acid
Tendency of one substance to cling to another
Adhesion
What is an example of a synthesis reaction
Amino acids into a protein molecule
Energy storing synthesis reaction
Anabolism
A proton acceptor (accepts H+ ions)
Base
What temperature is optimum for human enzymes?
Body temperature
How does our body resist changes in pH
Buffers
Energy releasing decomposition reactions
Catabolism
Substances that temporarily bond to reactants, hold them in favorable position to react with each other, and may change the shapes of reactants in ways that make them more likely to react
Catalysts
Potential energy is stored in
Chemical bonds
Symbolizes the course of a chemical reaction
Chemical equation
A process in which a covalent or ionic bond is formed or broken
Chemical reaction
Most mixtures in our bodies consist of...
Chemicals dissolved or suspended in water
Tendency of like molecules to cling to each other
Cohesion
Reaction rates increase when the reactants are more
Concentrated
AB --> A + B is an example of
Decomposition reactions
Large molecule breaks down into two or more smaller ones
Decomposition reactions
Capacity to do work
Energy
What is required to form or break a bond
Energy
Proteins that function as biological catalysts
Enzymes
The pH scale measures the _______ in a solution
H+
Kinetic energy of molecular motion
Heat
Polar water molecules overpower the ionic bond in Na+ and Cl-forming _____________________ around each ion
Hydration spheres
What kind of bonds keep water molecules together
Hydrogen
Substances that dissolve in water
Hydrophilic
Substances that do not dissolve in water
Hydrophobic
Energy of motion; energy that is actively doing work
Kinetic energy
The sum of all chemical reactions of the body
Metabolism
Consist of substances physically blended but not chemically
Mixtures
Hydrophobic substances must be
Non-polarized, neutral, fat
What kind of bonds and v-shaped molecules give water a set of properties that account for its ability to support life
Polar bonds and V shaped molecules
Energy contained in an object because of its position or internal state
Potential energy
When a bond is broken energy is
Released
Reaction rates increase when temperature
Rises
Consists of particles of matter called the solute mixed with a more abundant substance (usually water) called the solvent
Solution
Ability to dissolve other chemicals
Solvency
What is an example of a decomposition reaction
Starch molecules into glucose molecules
A + B --> AB is an example of
Synthesis reaction
Two or more smaller molecules combine to form a larger one
Synthesis reactions
What are reaction rates affected by
Temperature and concentration
What is pH
The concentration of H+ ions in solution
Metabolic reactions depend on
The solvency of water
When hydrogen bonds inhibit temperature increases by inhibiting molecular motion
Thermal stability
What is considered the universal solvent
Water
Example of Adhesion
Watery serous fluid lining pleural and pericardial cavities
The more H+ ions the more
acidic
Name the characteristics of water
adhesion, cohesion, chemical reactivity, thermal stability, and solvency
The less H+ ions, the more
basic
What can pH disturbances cause
disrupt physiological functions and alter drug actions
Changes in pH and temperature alter or destroy the ability of the enzyme to bind to substrate
enzyme-substrate specificity
pH of a basic solution
greater than 7.0
What does molecular motion create
heat
What causes water to be cohesive
hydrogen bonds
pH of an acidic solution
less than 7.0
Basis for chemical reactions is
molecular motion and collisions
Where are the reactants located in a chemical reaction
on the left
Where are the products located in a chemical reaction
on the right
Enzymes vary in...
optimum pH
Factors that change enzyme shape
pH and temperature
A hydrophilic substance must be
polarized
A hydrogen ion is a
proton
What can deviations in normal pH range cause
tremors, paralysis, or death
What causes a reaction to occur
when molecules collide with enough force and the correct orientation