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Physiology: The Integrated Science of Life and Chemistry Basics

Explore the integration between biology, molecular and cellular processes, and the rules of the universe in physiology. Learn about the basics of chemistry, including elements, atoms, molecules, compounds, and chemical bonds, and their role in maintaining life.

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Physiology: The Integrated Science of Life and Chemistry Basics

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  1. Physiology is an Integrated Science • biology • molecular • cellular • organ and organism • physics • chemistry • we are made of stuff of universe • we follow rules of the universe

  2. chemistry basics • element substance with unique identity • atom single unit of element • molecule 2 + atoms • compound molecules of different atoms

  3. elements – table 2.1 H2O

  4. more elements

  5. atom = protons + electrons chargemass + 1 none 1 - none

  6. Periodic table • # protons identity atomic number • # electrons behavior

  7. electrons electron shells can hold: 1st 2 2nd 8 3rd 8 4th 8 outer electrons = valence electrons

  8. only the outer shell matters electron shells can hold: 1st 2 2nd 8 3rd 8 4th 8 outer electrons = valence electrons

  9. Nature’s rules • nature is lazy entropy • nature wants equilibrium • equal concentrations • equal electric charges opposites attract • equal pressure • nature wants a full outer shell octet rule

  10. Biology’s rule of living things • You can break nature’s 3 rules , if: • you supply energy • it aids survival • breaking the rules requires energy : • molecules are organized • gradients require work • these store energy

  11. what is life ? • Living things take energy from the environment • Living things use energy to break nature’s rules. • build molecules • change molecules • maintain gradients

  12. what is energy ? • it is the stuff that does work • holds molecules and atoms together • prevents equilibrium • maintains concentration gradients • maintains electrical gradients • breaks chemical bonds

  13. electron shells hold Energy

  14. Ions • ion = charged atom or molecule • cation = + charged • anion = - charged • nature wants a full outer shell octet rule • atoms gain/lose electron

  15. common ions • Sodium Na+ • Potassium K+ • Calcium Ca++ • Chlorine Cl- • Phosphates PO4--- • Iron Fe++ • Copper Cu++ • Bicarbonate HCO3- • see table 2.1

  16. which atoms form ions # electron shells  # electrons (valence) in outer shell  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 + -

  17. ions and physiology • many physiologic functions are merely molecules seeking to have equal charges : • molecules will move toward opposite charge • molecules will move away from like charge • molecules will change their shape to get equal charge

  18. Nature’s rules - bonding • Chemical bonds depend on nature’s desire for : • a full outer shell • equal charges • chemical bonds store energy decreases entropy

  19. types of chemical bonds • ionic • covalent • di-sulfide • hydrogen

  20. ionic bonds • ions with full outer shell nature happy? • ions with + / - charge nature happy? • opposites attract = ionic bond ions ionic bond

  21. covalent bond • too many electrons to gain or lose • nature still wants ? • shared electrons • neutral atoms

  22. octet rule? is nature happy? • neutral charge? is nature happy?

  23. What element can form the most covalent bonds ? # electron shells  # electrons (valence) in outer shell  1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8

  24. polar covalent • nonpolar • electrons shared equally • polar • electrons shared unequally • have + and - ends

  25. hydrogen bonds • H tends to be + • attracted to - end of other molecules (eg . O ) • water • 3D shape of proteins

  26. hydrogen bonds - Water

  27. Polarity - ions in water • universal solvent ions (salts) dissolve in water

  28. acid – base • pH = parts Hydrogen • acidity • increase H+pH < 7 • neutral pH =7 • alkalinity • decrease H+pH > 7 Figure 2.13

  29. Biochemistry • biomolecules molecules of life • based on Carbon • specific functions • store energy • carbohydrates • lipids • nucleic acids • proteins

  30. carbohydrates • Carbon + hydrates (water) CHO • C + H2O  C H2O C2 H4O2 C6 H12O6 • functions: • energy source glucose • store energy glycogen • DNA • antigens

  31. Figure 2.14a, b

  32. Figure 2.14a, b

  33. lipids • fats • mostly C and H (little O) • functions: energy storage triglycerides insulation “ cell membranes phospholipids hormones cholesterol • hydrophobic

  34. triglycerides • glycerol + 3 fatty acids • unsaturated FA • saturated FA • trans fats

  35. phospholipids • 2 fatty acids + phosphate group • cell membranes hydrophilic hydrophobic

  36. steroids • made from Cholesterol • cell membranes • hormones • Vitamin D • bile

  37. Cholesterol, other Steroids also: Estrogen ; Progesterone

  38. Nucleic Acids • DNA genetic code • RNA protein synthesis • gene code for protein code for AA order

  39. other nucleic Acids • ATP adenosine triphosphate • ADP adenosine diphosphate • cAMP cyclic adenosine monophosphate • NAD nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide • FAD flavin adenine dinucleotide • GTP

  40. amino acids • building blocks of proteins

  41. Proteins • polymers of amino acids 20 diff AA • diverse molecules • different order of AA - different protein • genes control AA order

  42. Protein functions Table 2.3.1

  43. Protein functions Table 2.3.2

  44. Proteins and 3D shape • 3D shape based on AA order • di-S bonds • H bonds in molecule in water • functions based on • 3D structure • change in 3D structure

  45. H-Bonds

  46. Fig. 2.27 tertiary

  47. 3D shape dictates function

  48. what changes 3D ? • other molecules covers some AA • ions change charge • ATP phosphorylation • change AA order genes damage • heat • pH

  49. Physiology and protein shape • function ~ CHANGE PROTEIN 3D SHAPE • examples: • open / close channels • receptors • hormone actions • transcription factors • enzyme functions and activation • immunity

  50. chemical reactions • anabolic make bonds = synthesis • A + B  AB • builds large biochemicals • require energy = endergonic • catabolic break bonds = decomposition • AB  A + B • breaks apart biochemicals • release energy = exergonic

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