Chemical Reactions and Enzymes 2
Chemical Reactions and Enzymes 2
Chemical Reactions and Enzymes 2
Lesson Overview
2.4 Chemical Reactions and Enzymes
Lesson Overview
THINK ABOUT IT
Living things are made up of chemical compounds, but chemistry isnt just what life is made ofchemistry is also what life does. Everything that happens in an organismits growth, its interaction with the environment, its reproduction, and even its movementis based on chemical reactions.
Lesson Overview
Chemical Reactions
What happens to chemical bonds during chemical reactions?
Lesson Overview
Chemical Reactions
What happens to chemical bonds during chemical reactions? Chemical reactions involve changes in the chemical bonds that join atoms in compounds.
Lesson Overview
Chemical Reactions
A chemical reaction is a process that changes, or transforms, one set of chemicals into another by changing the chemical bonds that join atoms in compounds. Mass and energy are conserved during chemical transformations, including chemical reactions that occur in living organisms. The elements or compounds that enter into a chemical reaction are known as reactants. The elements or compounds produced by a chemical reaction are known as products.
Lesson Overview
Chemical Reactions
An important chemical reaction in your bloodstream enables carbon dioxide to be removed from the body.
Lesson Overview
Chemical Reactions
As it enters the blood, carbon dioxide (CO2) reacts with water to produce carbonic acid (H2CO3), which is highly soluble. This chemical reaction enables the blood to carry carbon dioxide to the lungs.
Lesson Overview
Chemical Reactions
In the lungs, the reaction is reversed and produces carbon dioxide gas, which you exhale.
Lesson Overview
Energy in Reactions
How do energy changes affect whether a chemical reaction will occur?
Lesson Overview
Energy in Reactions
How do energy changes affect whether a chemical reaction will occur? Chemical reactions that release energy often occur on their own, or spontaneously. Chemical reactions that absorb energy will not occur without a source of energy.
Lesson Overview
Energy Changes
Energy is released or absorbed whenever chemical bonds are formed or broken during chemical reactions. Energy changes are one of the most important factors in determining whether a chemical reaction will occur.
Chemical reactions that release energy often occur on their own, or spontaneously.
Chemical reactions that absorb energy will not occur without a source of energy.
Lesson Overview
Energy Changes
An example of an energy-releasing reaction is the burning of hydrogen gas, in which hydrogen reacts with oxygen to produce water vapor.
The energy is released in the form of heat, and sometimeswhen hydrogen gas explodeslight and sound.
Lesson Overview
Energy Changes
The reverse reaction, in which water is changed into hydrogen and oxygen gas, absorbs so much energy that it generally doesnt occur by itself. 2H2O + energy 2 H2 + O2
The only practical way to reverse the reaction is to pass an electrical current through water to decompose water into hydrogen gas and oxygen gas.
Thus, in one direction the reaction produces energy, and in the other direction the reaction requires energy.
Lesson Overview
Energy Sources
Every organism must have a source of energy to carry out the chemical reactions it needs to stay alive. Plants get their energy by trapping and storing the energy from sunlight in energy-rich compounds.
Animals get their energy when they consume plants or other animals.
Humans release the energy needed to grow, breathe, think, and even dream through the chemical reactions that occur when we metabolize, or break down, digested food.
Lesson Overview
Activation Energy
Chemical reactions that release energy do not always occur spontaneously. The energy that is needed to get a reaction started is called the activation energy.
Lesson Overview
Activation Energy
The peak of each graph represents the energy needed for the reaction to go forward. The difference between the required energy and the energy of the reactants is the activation energy. Activation energy is involved in chemical reactions whether or not the overall reaction releases or absorbs energy.
Lesson Overview
Enzymes
What role do enzymes play in living things and what affects their function?
Lesson Overview
Enzymes
What role do enzymes play in living things and what affects their function? Enzymes speed up chemical reactions that take place in cells. Temperature, pH, and regulatory molecules can affect the activity of enzymes.
Lesson Overview
Enzymes
Some chemical reactions are too slow or have activation energies that are too high to make them practical for living tissue. These chemical reactions are made possible by catalysts. A catalyst is a substance that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction.
Lesson Overview
Natures Catalysts
Enzymes are proteins that act as biological catalysts. They speed up chemical reactions that take place in cells. Enzymes act by lowering the activation energies, which has a dramatic effect on how quickly reactions are completed.
Lesson Overview
Natures Catalysts
For example, the reaction in which carbon dioxide combines with water to produce carbonic acid is so slow that carbon dioxide might build up in the body faster than the bloodstream could remove it.
Your bloodstream contains an enzyme called carbonic anhydrase that speeds up the reaction by a factor of 10 million, so that the reaction takes place immediately and carbon dioxide is removed from the blood quickly.
Lesson Overview
Natures Catalysts
Enzymes are very specific, generally catalyzing only one chemical reaction. Part of an enzymes name is usually derived from the reaction it catalyzes.
Carbonic anhydrase gets its name because it also catalyzes the reverse reaction that removes water from carbonic acid.
Lesson Overview
Lesson Overview
Lesson Overview
Lesson Overview
Enzymes work best at certain pH values. For example, the stomach enzyme pepsin, which begins protein digestion, works best under acidic conditions.
The activities of most enzymes are regulated by molecules that carry chemical signals within cells, switching enzymes on or off as needed.