General Biology
101-Bio NYA
                Lecture goals
• Course outline
• Properties of life
• Energy flow
Properties of Life
                What is life?
• Please list the properties that you think define
  life.
              Properties of life
1. Order
2. Reproduction
3. Growth & development
4. Energy utilization: organisms take in energy
   (food) and transform the energy to do work
5. Homeostasis: regulation of the internal
   environment
6. Evolutionary adaption: survival of the fittest
7. Response to the environment
Properties of life
Life comes in many forms
Levels of biological organization
 The next few classes will focus on
• Energy
• Biomolecules
  – Carbohydrates
  – Lipids
  – Proteins
  – Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
• How molecules are changed into other
  molecules and energy the cell can use.
Energy!
     Life requires the transfer and
 transformation of energy and matter
• A fundamental characteristic of living
  organisms is the transformation of energy and
  use of energy to carry out activities.
• The primary source of energy for life on Earth
  is the Sun.
  Organisms can be classified by how
         they obtain energy
• Autotrophs (ex. Photosynthetic organisms)
  – Producers                      Organicmolecules
                                   Molecules w   C C bond
• Do not consume other organisms
• Make their own organic molecules by
  photosynthesis
• Plants, some bacteria and algae
  Organisms can be classified by how
         they obtain energy
• Heterotrophs (consumers)
• Cannot make their own food
• Must consume other organisms or molecules
  made from other organisms
• Animals, some bacteria, some archaea and
  some algae
                      Food Chain
Transfer
           ofenergy
               Food web
                          Terrestrial food web
Aquatic food web
Trophic structure of the food web
The energy pyramid
             Only ~10% of the energy is
             transferred to the next
             trophic level.
            Other90   lost in environment heat
Energy flow
            The flow of energy
• Photosynthesis: transformation of solar E to
  chemical E (glucose)
• Occurs in plants, algae and some bacteria
• In the chloroplast within the cell
• Organisms that perform photosynthesis are
  producers
   CO2 + H2O + solar E → C6H12O6 (glucose) + O2
             The flow of energy
• Cellular respiration: breaks down organic molecules,
  releases energy trapped in bonds and uses it to make
  ATP.
• Releases chemical E in the form of ATP
• Chemical Energy → Chemical Energy
• Occurs in all organisms, including plants
• In the mitochondria within the cell
   C6H12O6 (glucose) + O2 → CO2 + H2O + ATP
                What is ATP you ask?
•   ATP (adenosine triphosphate)
•   Molecule
•   Energy currency for the cell
•   Stores E for:
    – Cellular work (muscular contraction, chromosomal
      movements during cell division)
    – Transportation (pumping molecules across
      membranes)
    – Chemical reactions
    All   beings use   ATP   respiration   incl plants
   ATP consists of 3 components
1. A nitrogenous base called adenine
2. A 5-carbon sugar called ribose
3. Three phosphate groups which are     If no atom
                                       in one corner
   negatively charged                  C is present
    What’s so special about ATP?
• Breaking bonds in ATP releases energy
• The process is called hydrolysis because water
  is involved in breaking the bonds
                                 lysis   breaking
Hydrolysis of ATP
ATP is a renewable resource in the cell
• When ATP is broken down E is released and this can be used
  by the cell for a process that requires E
• When the cell carries out a reaction that releases E, this E can
  be used to build ATP from its components
• When ATP breaks down, it releases a phosphate group, called
  inorganic phosphate (Pi). The adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
  has been converted to adenosine diphosphate (ADP)
    What types of processes release
               energy?
• Catabolism: The process involving a series of
  degradative chemical reactions that break
  down complex molecules into smaller units,
  usually releasing E in the process.
• Catabolic processes are exergonic
                                   Release energy
    What types of processes require
               energy?
• Anabolism: The process involving a sequence of
  chemical reactions that construct or synthesize
  molecules from smaller units, usually requiring an
  input of E (ATP) in the process.
• Anabolic processes are endergonic
               But… wait…
• If we need to break molecules to release
  energy to be used to make ATP so that we can
  break ATP to release energy to do cellular
  work, why can’t we just the energy from the
  first round of molecular breaking???
               But… wait…
• If we need to break molecules to release
  energy to be used to make ATP so that we can
  break ATP to release energy to do cellular
  work, why can’t we just the energy from the
  first round of molecular breaking???
                But… wait…
• If we need to break molecules to release
  energy to be used to make ATP so that we can
  break ATP to release energy to do cellular
  work, why can’t we just the energy from the
  first round of molecular breaking???
• In actuality, breaking the bond doesn’t just
  release energy that is captured. More
  complicated chemistry is at work that you will
  learn about in Bio II.