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The Chemicals of Living Cells

The Wellcome Trust

The chemicals of life


All living organisms are made up of chemical substances
Reactions between these substances keep the cytoplasm
(and the organism) alive. They are living processes.
The chemical substances described in the next series
of slides are carbohydrates, proteins and lipids, but there
are hundreds of others.

Carbohydrates
Carbohydrates contain the elements carbon, hydrogen
and oxygen
Familiar carbohydrates are sugar and starch
Glucose, fructose, maltose and sucrose are sugars
Glucose and fructose have the same formula, C6H12O6
Sucrose and maltose have the same formula, C12H22O11
Carbohydrates provide the main source of energy for
respiration in living organisms

Glucose C H
6

HO
HO

12

O6

HO

OH

OH

C H2OH
A glucose molecule as a
straight chain

C
C

5 of the carbon atoms may


be arranged in a ring

This molecule is often represented


simply as a hexagon

Other carbohydrates
2 molecules of glucose can
join together to form a
molecule of maltose

sucrose is formed when


a molecule of glucose and
a molecule of fructose combine

maltose

Starch and cellulose are


formed from hundreds of
glucose molecules joined
to form a long chain

part of a starch
molecule

Proteins
Proteins are made up of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
molecules but with the addition of nitrogen
Carbohydrates are made up of glucose units.
Proteins are made up of units called amino acids
There are about 20 different amino acids. Examples are
glycine (Gly), alanine (Ala), valine (Val) and cysteine (Cyst)
The amino acids, Gly-Val-Val-Cyst-Ala-Gly-Ala-Val
joined together would make a small protein
Proteins make up the structure of cells; cytoplasm, nucleus
cell membranes and enzymes

Protein structure and shape


The way the amino acids join up, gives a protein molecule a
particular shape, which is different for every protein
Ser-Cyst-Val-Gly-Ser-Cyst Ala
Val
Val-Cyst-Ser-Ala-Ser-Cyst-Gly
Val- Cyst-Ala-Ala-Ser-Gly
This is a small, imaginary protein molecule showing how
it acquires a shape
High temperatures or certain chemicals can cause the
protein molecule to lose its shape and its properties.

Lipids

Lipids are fats and oils


They are made up from glycerol and fatty acids
Examples of fatty acids are stearic acid, oleic acid and
palmitic acid
H2 C

stearic acid

oleic acid

H2 C

palmitic acid

glycerol

fatty acids

A simple lipid

Salts and water


In addition to proteins, carbohydrates and lipids, cytoplasm
contains salts and water
Water makes up the bulk of cytoplasm
All the chemical reactions in cytoplasm take place in
solution, i.e. in water
Water itself takes part in many of these chemical reactions
Salts of sodium, potassium and calcium and many others
play an important part in these reactions

Enzymes
Enzymes are special proteins
They are present in the cytoplasm of all cells
They help to speed up the chemical reactions in the cell
There are hundreds of different enzymes but each enzyme
speeds up only one kind of reaction
For example, glucose and fructose might join up slowly to
form sucrose
glucose--fructose
With the right enzyme present, the reaction happens faster
glucose--fructose

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Enzyme action (1)

11

Enzymes are large protein molecules


Like all proteins, each enzyme molecule has a particular shape
This shape determines which chemical reaction the enzyme
can speed up
In speeding up the reaction, the enzyme combines temporarily
with the substances it is acting on
Any substance an enzyme acts on is called a substrate

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The substrate molecules fit the shape of the enzyme

enzyme

substrate A

substrate B

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14

substrates combine temporarily with enzyme

enzyme joins substrates together

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enzyme unchanged
and ready for
next reaction

new compound released


by enzyme

Different types of enzyme reaction


The last 4 slides show how an enzyme is involved in
combining substrates to create a larger molecule
For example, the enzyme could be building up a sucrose
molecule from glucose and fructose
The next sequence shows how an enzyme can help to
break a large molecule into smaller molecules
For example an enzyme can split a sucrose molecule
into the smaller glucose and fructose molecules

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A breaking-down reaction
this is called
the active site
of the enzyme

the shape of the substrate


molecule fits the enzyme
shape

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Intermediate stage (1)

substrate combines
temporarily with enzyme
enzyme will break
molecule here

Intermediate stage (2)


substrate splits and
separates from enzyme

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Final break-down products


enzyme ready for
next reaction

end-products

Properties of enzymes

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Enzymes can act on only one type of substrate


They always produce the same end products
Although they take part in the reaction, they are not used up
Because enzymes are proteins, they are denatured by heat
or some chemicals
Denaturing involves a change of shape in the enzyme
molecule so that it cannot combine with the substrate
Individual enzymes work best at a particular temperature
and pH (acidity or alkalinity)

Enzymes can act on only one type of substrate


this substrate cannot combine
with this enzyme

this substrate cannot combine


with this enzyme

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Because enzymes are proteins, they are denatured


by heat or some chemicals

enzyme +
substrate

enzyme
denatured
by heat

denatured enzyme cannot combine with substrate

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ENZYME ACTION

glucose
molecules

1. A glucose molecule combines


with the active site on an enzyme

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2 A region of the active site is still available

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3 One end of a growing starch


molecule combines with the
glucose molecule at the active
site

part of starch
molecule

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4 The growing starch molecule


breaks free from the enzyme which
is now free to repeat the reaction

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Enzyme action
11

glucose
molecules

part of starch
molecule

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Question 1
The correct formula for glucose is
(a) C12H22O11
(b) C5H10O5
(c) C4H8O4
(d) C6H12O6

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Question 2
Which is the most accurate description of a carbohydrate?
A carbohydrate contains
(a) carbon and oxygen
(b) carbon, oxygen and nitrogen
(c) carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
(d) carbon and hydrogen

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Question 3
When two molecules of glucose combine, they form
(a) maltose
(b) sucrose
(c) fructose
(d) ribose

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Question 4
Which is the most accurate description of a protein
Proteins contain
(a) carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
(b) carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen
(c) carbon, hydrogen and nitrogen
(d) carbon, nitrogen and oxygen

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Question 5
Which statements are correct?
Proteins are present in
(a) cell membranes
(b) cell walls
(c) cytoplasm
(d) nucleus

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Question 6
High temperatures damage proteins by
(a) decomposing them
(b) changing their chemical composition
(c) changing their shape
(d) making them soluble

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Question 7
A protein is made up of a series of
(a) glucose units
(b) fatty acids
(c) amino acids
(d) carbohydrates

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Question 8
Lipids are made up of
(a) glycerol and amino acids
(b) glycerol and fatty acids
(c) protein and fatty acids
(d) starch and fatty acids

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Question 9
Enzymes are
(a) proteins
(b) lipids
(c) carbohydrates
(d) a combination of these

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Question 10
An enzyme can
(a) change a reaction
(b) prevent a reaction
(c) slow down a reaction
(d) speed up a reaction

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Question 11
A substrate is a substance which
(a) an enzyme acts on
(b) is produced by an enzyme reaction
(c) is a particular kind of enzyme
(d) is any chemical substance in a cell

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Question 12
An enzyme can
(a) combine with different substrates
(b) form different kinds of end-product
(c) function at temperatures above 90oC
(d) speed up a reaction in the cytoplasm

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Question 13
The part of an enzyme which combines with the substrate
is called
(a) the reaction centre
(b) the active site
(c) the action centre
(d) the reaction site

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Question 14
After being exposed to a high temperature an enzyme
cannot function because
(a) it has been broken down
(b) its shape has been changed
(c) its composition has been changed
(d) it cannot separate from its substrate

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ANSWER

Correct

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ANSWER

Incorrect

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