Enzymes
ATP
Energy Flow
Diagrams
Vocabulary
100

What are enzymes responsible for?

Speeding up the rate of reactions to a level that allows us to survive.

100

What is ATP?

The energy carrying/storage molecule for your body. 

100

What is different about a food web and a food chain?

A food web shows multiple food chains at once and has all of the feeding relationships within the ecosystem.

A food chain only shows one relationship between the autotrophs and heterotrophs. 

100

Draw a trophic pyramid with 4 levels, labeling each level with the correct type of organism.

See page 19 example.

100

What is an active site?

The spot where the substrate (reactant) binds to the enzyme

200

Describe what a lock and key model is?

When a reactant/substrate binds to an enzyme, that has a very specific shape, and a reaction to takes place, forming a product. 


200

To get from ATP to ADP, what happens?

A phosphate is broken off and energy is released. 

200

What do the following types of organisms eat?

Herbivores, carnivores, omnivores, decomposers

Plants, meat, plants and meat, dead and decaying matter

200

Draw a trophic pyramid, with 4 levels. Show the passing of energy if the producers start with 143 Joules of energy.

143 J --> 14.3 J --> 1.43 J --> .143 J

200

What is denaturation?

When an enzyme has a drastic change in temperature, pH, etc, that causes the shape to change. This results in a loss of biological activity as the reaction can not proceed. 

300

Enzymes can never renature. 

True or false.

False

300

ADP + P + energy --> ATP.

Is this an example of an endothermic or exothermic reaction?

Endothermic. Energy is entering the system.

300

What is the rule of 10?



An organism uses 90% of the energy it receives for growth and cellular processes. Only 10% is passed on to the next level within the food chain.



300

Draw an endothermic reaction graph.

Label the reactants, products, and activation energy. 


300

What is the energy currency for a cell?

ATP
400

What are the 5 ways to change the rate of a chemical reaction? Include the specific response to that factor. 

Temperature: increasing temp, causes an increased reaction

pH: the more acidic something is, the faster that rxn will occur

Substrate []: more substrate, faster rxn

Catalyst: speeds up a rxn

Competitive inhibitor: slows down a rxn

400

Describe what makes up the structure of ATP.

1 adenine (nitrogen base)

1 ribose (sugar)

3 phosphates

400

A food pyramid has 4 levels. What are these levels called, in order?



Producers-Primary consumers-Secondary consumers- Tertiary consumers



400

Draw a lock and key model where one reactant becomes two products.

See page 5; the second diagram

400

How would you define the following consumers? 

Carnivore

Herbivore

Omnivore

Carnivore: meat eating

Herbivore: plant eating 

Omnivore: plant and meat eating

500

Photosynthesis and Cellular respiration. Which reaction is an example of endothermic and which one is an example of exothermic?

Photosynthesis: endothermic (energy enters --> sun)

C.R.: exothermic (energy released --> ATP)

500

What is the order that your body breaks down macromolecules?

Carbs

Lipids

Proteins

500

A hawk, a secondary consumer, exists in an ecosystem. It eats a mouse, which eats the grass. If the grass contains 435 J of energy, how much energy does the hawk take in? 

*Assume the rule of 10 holds true here!

The hawk would have 4.35 J of energy



500

Draw an exothermic reaction with an enzyme added.

Label the reactants, products, activation energy, and enzyme.

See your diagram on page 11, #6, B.

500

Autotroph vs heterotroph. What's the diff?

Autotroph: producers; make their own ATP

Heterotroph: consumers; must consume other organisms in order to get energy

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