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Class Notes Topic: Carbon Compounds Name: _______________________________________ Period:_______________________________________ Date: _______________________________________ Questions/Main Idea: What is an organic compound? Why is carbon ideal for making different compounds? What are macromolecules? What is polymerization? What are the organic compounds needed by all living things? What are carbohydrates? How is extra sugar stored? What are the uses of polysaccharides? What are lipids? (fats, oils, & waxes) How are lipids formed? Notes: In Biology, the word organic means “relating to organisms” NOT food grown without the use of pesticides, antibiotics, or other industrial chemicals. All organic compounds contain covalently bound carbon. Organic compounds can also be synthesized in the lab. Carbon atoms have four valence (outer shell) electrons, allowing carbon to form covalent bonds with many elements including hydrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, sulfur and nitrogen. Carbon can also bond to other carbon atoms, which gives carbon the ability to form chains that are almost unlimited in length. These carbon-carbon bonds can be single, double, or triple. The chains are straight, branched, or even ring-shaped. Therefore, carbon is unique in that it can form millions of different large and complex structures. They are giant molecules which are made from many smaller molecules. It is the process in which smaller units (monomers) join together to form larger compounds (polymers). Carbohydrates Lipids Nucleic Acids Proteins main source of energy for organisms can also be used for structural purposes made of C, H, and O; usually in a 1:2:1 ratio The monomers of carbohydrates are called monosaccharides, like glucose, fructose (in fruits) and galactose (in milk). The breakdown of monosaccharides supplies immediate energy. Usually end in –ose. Extra sugar is stored as macromolecules called polysaccharides. Polysaccharides are made from monosaccharides. Many animals store extra sugar as glycogen. Glycogen stored in your muscle supplies energy for contractions. Glycogen stored in your liver is released when glucose in your blood runs low. Plants store excess sugar as starch. Plants also make cellulose, a strong, rigid fiber used for support. uses: long-term energy storage, insulation, waterproof covering, part of biological membranes, chemical messengers (steroids) contain mostly carbon and hydrogen generally not soluble in water Many lipids are formed when a glycerol molecule combines with fatty acids. If all carbon atoms have only single bonds, the lipid is saturated. It holds as many hydrogen atoms as possible. What are unsaturated lipids? What are nucleic acids? What are proteins made up of? What are the functions of proteins? What is a polypeptide? • • • How are proteins organized? What are enzymes? Summary: If there is at least one double bond between carbon atoms, the lipid is unsaturated. Unsaturated lipids like cooking oils tend to be liquid at room temp. store and transmit hereditary, or genetic, information contain hydrogen, carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and phosphorus The monomers of nucleic acids are nucleotides, which contain three parts: a 5-carbon sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogen base. examples: DNA and RNA contain nitrogen, carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (most also have sulfur) The monomers of proteins are amino acids. Amino acids contain an amino group, a carboxyl group, and a variable R-group. They can provide structural support in bones and muscles form parts of cell membranes, function as hormones to regulate the body form antibodies to protect against infection Increase the rate of chemical reactions to name a few. When the amino acids join, they form a polymer called a polypeptide. The monomers are held together by peptide bonds. More than 20 different amino acids are found in nature. Since the R-group varies, it allows for much variety. That is why proteins have so many functions. Primary: chain of amino acids Secondary: when sequence of amino acids are linked by hydrogen bonds Tertiary: occurs when attractions are present between alpha helices & pleated sheets Quaternary: consisting of more than one amino acid chain. • This allows for the unique shape of proteins. • Shape is very important; if a protein is not the right shape, it will not work. Enzymes are biological catalysts, which work to speed up a chemical reaction. Without enzymes, several reactions in cells would never occur or happen to slowly to be useful.