ENERGY
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Transcript of ENERGY
What Just Happened?
What did the cracker taste like when you first put it in your mouth?
Did you experience any change in taste over the time you held the saltine in your mouth? Explain.
Discuss what you think was happening in your mouth while you held the saltine.
Cell Energy
Energy is essential to life
Organisms obtain energy from their environment: Plants: trap energy from the sun and store it for
later use
Animals: eat food; in some ways, they obtain energy from plants
Which of the following requires energy? (circle them)
Processes the require energy Active transport Cell division Production and transport of proteins Exercising Heart pumping Brain controlling all of the functions in your
body
What happens after you finish “work”?
Body needs a quick source of energy You may eat
Cellular level: energy is stored in the bonds of adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
Why is fat the choice?
Humans store their excess energy as fat rather than carbohydrates…WHY? When broken down by the body, each fat
molecule yields 51 ATP molecules; each carbohydrate yields 36 ATP molecules.
Carbohydrates bind and store water. The metabolism of water yields 0 ATP. Fat has no water bound to it.
An adult who weighs 70 kg (~150 lbs) can survive on energy derived from stored fat for 30 days without eating. The same person would have to weigh nearly 140 kg (~310 lbs) to survive 30 days on carbohydrates.
ATP Structure
Adenosine molecule + 3 phosphate groups
Recall: Phosphate groups are
charged particles Particles with the
same charges do not like to be too close together.
ATP is cyclic
The addition and release of a phosphate group on ADP creates a cycle of ATP formation and breakdown
ATP is cyclic
We cannot store ATP because Too reactive Transfers energy too easily Only short term energy storage
Carbs and fats are long term
As long as phosphate groups are available the cell can make more ATP
A working muscle recycles 10 million ATPs per second
How cells use the energy…
ATP is broken down and energy is released
Cells must capture the energy or it is wasted
Uses in the cell: making proteins or transporting molecules across the membrane
Just like batteries in a remote…
Let’s Revisit the Cracker
Amylase, an enzyme which degrades starch into sugars, is present in our saliva and changes cracker starch into sugar.
Sugars taste sweet; starch doesn't.
Breaking down starches to sugars is necessary for the body to use the starch for energy (MAKE ATP)!
HOW IS THIS ENERGY STORED? WHY?
WHY DO MARATHON RUNNERS “CARB LOAD”?