Sunday 4 March 2012

human as chemical compination


The composition of the human body can be looked at from several different points of view.
By mass, human cells consist of 65–90% water (H2O). Oxygen therefore contributes a majority of a human body's mass. Almost 99% of the mass of the human body is made up of the six elements oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, calcium, and phosphorus.
About 0.85% is composed of only five elements: potassium, sulfur, sodium, chlorine, and magnesium. All are necessary to life. The remaining elements are trace elements, of which more than a dozen are thought to be necessary for life, or play an active role in health (e.g., fluorine, which hardens dental enamel but seems to have no other function).
Note that not all elements which are found in the human body in trace quantities play a role in life. Some of these elements are thought to be simple bystander contaminants without function (examples: caesium, titanium), while many others are thought to be active toxins, depending on amount (cadmium, mercury, radioactives). The possible utility and toxicity of a few elements at levels normally found in the body (aluminum) is debated. Trace amounts of cadmium and lead have had functions suggested, but are almost certainly toxic in amounts normally found in the body. There is evidence that one element normally thought a toxin (arsenic) is essential in ultratrace quantities, even in mammals. Some elements that are clearly used in lower organisms and plants (arsenic, silicon, boron, nickel, vanadium) are probably needed by mammals also, but in far smaller doses. Two halogens used abundantly by lower organisms (fluorine and bromine) are presently known to be used by mammals only opportunistically. However, a general rule is that elements found in active biochemical use in lower organisms are often eventually found to be used in some way by higher organisms.[citation needed]

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[edit]Elemental composition

The average 70 kg adult human body contains approximately 6.7 x 1027 atoms and is "composed of" 60 chemical elements. In this sense, "composed of" means that a trace of the element has been identified in the body. However, at the finest resolution, most objects on Earth (including the human body) contain measureable contaminating amounts of all of the 88 chemical elements which are detectable in nearly any soil on Earth. The number of elements thought to play an active positive role in life and augmentation of health in humans and other mammals, is about 24 or 25.[1]
The relative amounts of each element vary by individual. The numbers in the table are averages of different numbers reported by different references.
The human body is ~70% water, and water is ~11% hydrogen by mass but ~67% hydrogen by atomic percent.
Atomic numberElementPercent of Mass[2][3][4][5]Mass (kg)[6]Atomic percentPositive health role in mammals[7]Group
8Oxygen654324Yes (water, electron acceptor) /No (Reactive Oxygen Species)16
6Carbon181612Yes (organic compounds are hydrocarbon derivatives)14
1Hydrogen10763Yes (e.g. water)1
7Nitrogen31.80.58Yes (e.g. DNA and amino acids)15
20Calcium1.41.00.24Yes (e.g. Calmodulin and Hydroxylapatite in bones)2
15Phosphorus1.10.780.14Yes (e.g. DNA and phosphorylation)15
19Potassium0.250.140.033Yes (e.g. Na+/K+-ATPase)1
16Sulfur0.250.140.038Yes (e.g. Cysteine and Methionine)16
11Sodium0.150.100.037Yes (e.g. Na+/K+-ATPase)1
17Chlorine0.150.0950.024Yes (e.g. Cl-transporting ATPase)17
12Magnesium0.050.0190.0070Yes (e.g. binding to ATP)2
26Iron*0.0060.00420.00067Yes (e.g. Hemoglobin)8
9Fluorine0.00370.00260.0012Yes/No (topically hardens teeth; toxic in higher amounts)17
30Zinc0.00320.00230.00031Yes (e.g. Zinc finger proteins)12
14Silicon0.0020.00100.0058Yes (probable)14
37Rubidium0.000460.000680.000033No (?)1
38Strontium0.000460.000320.000033No (?)2
35Bromine0.000290.000260.000030No (?)17
82Lead0.000170.000120.0000045No (?) (toxic in higher amounts)14
29Copper0.00010.0000720.0000104Yes (e.g. copper proteins)11
13Aluminium0.0000870.0000600.000015No(?) (toxic?)13
48Cadmium0.0000720.0000500.0000045No(?) (toxic in higher amounts)12
58Cerium0.0000570.000040No
56Barium0.0000310.0000220.0000012No (toxic?)2
50Tin0.0000240.0000206.0e-7No(?)14
53Iodine0.0000160.0000207.5e-7Yes (e.g. Thyroxine)17
22Titanium0.0000130.000020No4
5Boron0.0000690.0000180.0000030Yes (probable)13
34Selenium0.0000190.0000154.5e-8Yes/No (toxic in higher amounts)16
28Nickel0.0000140.0000150.0000015Yes(e.g. urease)10
24Chromium0.00000240.0000148.9e-8Yes (not confirmed)6
25Manganese0.0000170.0000120.0000015Yes (e.g. Mn-SOD)7
33Arsenic0.0000260.0000078.9e-8Yes (not confirmed). Toxic in higher amounts15
3Lithium0.00000310.0000070.0000015Yes (not confirmed). Toxic in high amounts. Useful medically (mood stabilizer).1
80Mercury0.0000190.0000068.9e-8No (toxic)12
55Caesium0.00000210.0000061.0e-7No1
42Molybdenum0.0000130.0000054.5e-8Yes (e.g. the molybdenum oxotransferases Xanthine oxidase and Sulfite oxidase6
32Germanium0.000005No (?)14
27Cobalt0.00000210.0000033.0e-7Yes (e.g. vitamin B12)9
51Antimony0.0000110.000002No15
47Silver0.0000010.000002No (toxic)11
41Niobium0.000160.0000015No5
40Zirconium0.00060.0000013.0e-7No4
57Lanthanum0.0001378e-7No
52Tellurium0.0000127e-7No16
31Gallium7e-7No13
39Yttrium6e-7No3
83Bismuth5e-7No15
81Thallium5e-7No (toxic)13
49Indium4e-7No13
79Gold0.0000142e-73.0e-7No11
21Scandium2e-7No3
73Tantalum2e-7No5
23Vanadium0.0000261.1e-71.2e-8Yes (not confirmed)5
90Thorium1e-7No (toxic)
92Uranium1.3e-71e-73.0e-9No (toxic)
62Samarium5.0e-8No
74Tungsten2.0e-8No6
4Beryllium5e-93.6e-84.5e-8No (toxic)2
88Radium1e-173e-141e-17%No (toxic)2
*Iron = ~3 g in men, ~2.3 g in women
The elements needed for life are relatively common in the Earth's crust, and conversely most of the common elements are necessary for life. An exception is aluminium, which is the third most common element in the Earth's crust (after oxygen and silicon), but seems to serve no function in living cells. Rather, it is harmful in large amounts.[citation needed] Transferrins can bind aluminium.[8]
Periodic table highlighting dietary elements[9]
H He
LiBe BCNOFNe
NaMg AlSiPSClAr
KCaSc TiVCrMnFeCoNiCuZnGaGeAsSeBrKr
RbSrY ZrNbMoTcRuRhPdAgCdInSnSbTeIXe
CsBaLa*HfTaWReOsIrPtAuHgTlPbBiPoAtRn
FrRaAc**RfDbSgBhHsMtDsRgCnUutUuqUupUuhUusUuo
 
 *CePrNdPmSmEuGdTbDyHoErTmYbLu
 **ThPaUNpPuAmCmBkCfEsFmMdNoLr
The four organic basic elementsQuantity elementsEssential trace elementsFunction suggested from biochemistry and handling, but no specific identified biological function in humans

[edit]Composition by molecule type

The composition can also be expressed in terms of chemicals, such as:
The composition of the human body can be viewed on an atomic and molecular scale as shown in this article.
The estimated gross molecular contents of a typical 20-micrometre human cell is as follows:[11]
MoleculePercent of MassMol.Weight (daltons)MoleculesPercent of Molecules
Water65*18*1.74e14*98.73*
Other Inorganics1.5N/A1.31e120.74
Lipids12N/A8.4e110.475
Other Organics0.4N/A7.7e100.044
Protein20N/A1.9e100.011
RNA1.0N/A5e73e-5
DNA0.11e1146*3e-11
Water: Obviously the amount of water is highly dependent on the level of hydration. DNA: A human cell also contains mitochondrial DNASperm cells contain less mitochondrial DNA than other cells. A mammalian red blood cell contains no nucleus and thus no DNA.

[edit]Materials and tissues

Body composition can also be expressed in terms of various types of material, such as:

[edit]Composition by cell type

There are many species of bacteria and other microorganisms that live on or inside the healthy human body. In fact, 90% of the cells in (or on) a human body are microbes, by number[12][13] (much less by mass or volume). Some of these symbionts are necessary for our health. Those that neither help nor harm us are called commensal organisms.

[edit]See also

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