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Chapter Two Terms

Chemistry of Life

QuestionAnswer
acid any substance that, when dissolved in water, contributes to an excess of H- ions (that is, a low pH)
alkaline base; any substance that, when dissolved in water, contributes to an excess of OH- ions (thus creating a high pH)
aqueous solution liquid mixture in which water is the solvent; for example, saltwater is an aqueous solution because water is the solvent
atom smallest particle of a pure substance (element) that still has the chemical properties of that substance; composed of protons, electrons, and neutrons (subatomic particles)
atomic mass combined total number of protons and neutrons in an atom
atomic number total number of protons in an atom's nucleus; atoms of each element have a characteristic atomic number
base 1. A chemical that, when dissolved in water, reduces the relative concentration of H+ ions in the whole solution (sometimes by adding OH- ions)
base 2. In the context of nucleic acids, base or nitrogen base refers to one part of a nucleotide (sugar, phosphate, and base) that is the basic building block of nucleic acid molecules; possible bases include adenine, thymine, guanine, cytosine, and uracil.
carbohydrate organic compounds containing carbon, hydrogen and oxygen in certain specific proportions (C, H, O in a 1:2:1 ratio); for example, sugars, starches, and cellulose
compound substance whose molecules have more than one kind of element in them
covalent chemical bond formed when atoms share electrons by overlapping their energy levels (electron shells)
dehydration excessive loss of body water; the most common fluid imbalance; an abnormally low volume of one or more body fluids
dissociation separation of ions as they dissolve in water
double helix shape of DNA molecules; a double spiral
electrolyte substance that ionizes (dissociates to form ions) in solution, rendering the solution capable of conducting an electric current
electron negatively charged particle orbiting the nucleus of an atom
element pure substance, composed of only one type of atom
energy level limited region surrounding the nucleus of an atom at a certain distance containing electrons; also called a shell
enzyme a functional protein acting as a biochemical catalyst allowing chemical reactions to take place in a suitable time frame
glycogen polysaccharide made up of a chain of glucose (monosaccharide) molecules; animal starch
hydrolysis chemical reaction in which water is added to a large molecule causing it to break apart into smaller molecules
inorganic compound compound whose molecules do not contain carbon-carbon or carbon-hydrogen bonds
ionic bond chemical bond formed by the positive-negative attraction between two ions
lipid organic molecule usually composed of glycerol and fatty acid units; types include triglycerides, phospholipids, and cholesterol; a fat, wax, or oil
matter any substance that occupies space and has mass
molecule particle of matter composed of one or more smaller units called atoms
neutron electrically neutral particle withing the nucleus of an atom
nucleic acid the two nucleic acids are ribonucleic acid, found in the cytoplasm, and deoxyribonucleic acid, found in the nucleus; made up of units called nucleotides that each include a phosphate, a five-carbon sugar, and a nitrogen base
nucleus spherical structure within a cell; a group of neuron cell bodies in the brain or spinal cord; central core of the atom, made up of protons and (sometimes) neutrons
organic compound compound whose large molecules contain carbon and that include C-C bonds and/or C-H bonds
peptide bond covalent bond linking amino acids within a protein molecule
pH mathematical expression of relative H+ concentration (acidity); pH value higher than 7 is basic, pH value less than 7 is acidic, pH value equal to 7 is neutral
product in any kind of synthesis reaction, the reactants combined to form a larger product, e.g., K+ + Cl- ---->KCl
protein one of the basic nutrients needed by the body; a nitrogen-containing organic compound composed of a folded strand of amino acids
proton positively charged particle within the nucleus of an atom
reactant any substance entering (and being changed by) a chemical reaction
solute substance that dissolves into another substance; for example, in saltwater the salt is the solute dissolved in water
solvent substance in which other substances are dissolved; for example, in saltwater the water is the solvent for salt
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