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Chapter 5 The Structures and Functions of Macromolecules Polymer Principles Most Macromolecules are polymers • • • • Polymer – large molecule consisting of identical subunits Monomer – one subunit or a polymer Macromolecule – large organic polymer the four classes of macromolecules are carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids Polymerization Reactions – reactions that link monomers together • • Condensation Reactions – monomers are covalently linked producing a net removal of a water molecule for each linkage Hydrolysis – breaks covalent bonds by monomers by the addition of water Digestion Carbohydrates Sugars are the smallest carbohydrates that serve as fuel and carbon sources • Carbohydrates – organic molecules made of sugars and their polymers • Monosaccharides – monomers of simple sugars • Polymers are formed by condensation synthesis Monosaccharide Monosaccharides – simple sugar with C,H,O occurring in the ratio of (CH2O) • • • Most common is glucose Stores energy in chemical bonds Can be used as monomers in di/polysaccharides Structure • • Every carbon has an (-OH) group bonded to it except one that has a (=O) in form of an aldehyde or ketone Carbon skeleton my have numbers from 3-7, may be branched, ringed, or straight Disaccharides Disaccharide – double sugar consisting of two monosaccharides joined by a glycosidic linkage • Glycosidic Linkage – covalent bond formed due to condensation syn. of two monomers Disaccharride Maltose Lactose Sucrose Monomers Glucose + Glucose Glucose + Galactose Glucose + Fructose General Comments - Beer production - Present in milk - Table sugar Polysaccharides Polysaccharides – few hundred thousand monosaccharides responsible for storage and structural roles in organisms • Formed by condensation synthesis • Energy storage (starch and glycogen) • Structural support (cellulose and chitin) Storage Polysaccharides Starch – storage polysaccharide in plants • Stored as granules in plants called plastids • Potato tubers and grains contain most starch Glycogen – storage polysaccharide in animals • Stored in muscle and liver Structural Polysaccharides Cellulose – major component of cell walls • Reinforces cell walls by forming parallel molecules called microfibrils • Chitin – forms exoskeletons of arthropods, and building material in fungi. Lipids Compounds that are insoluble in water but will dissolve in nonpolar solvents (kerosene,benzene,ethenol) Important groups are fats, oils, waxes and phospholipids • Fats – store long term energy Composed of one glycerol molecule Composed of three fatty acids • Nonpolar hydrocarbon chain Glycerol Molecule This side of the molecule makes bonds with fatty acids. Fatty acids -composed of a carboxyl group at one end and an attached hydrocarbon with a skeleton of 16-18 C’s. -nonpolar C-H bonds make the chain hydrophobic and not water soluble. Fatty acid Saturated Fatty acid Unsaturated Fatty acid -no double bond in fatty acid tail -carbon skeleton of fatty acid is bonded to a maximum number of hydrogen atoms -most animal fats -solids at room temp. -one or more double bond sin fatty acid tail -tails kink at C=C bonds not allowing it to pack closely together -most vegetable and fruits fats -liquids at room temp. Fatty Acid Useful functions • One gram of fat stores twice as much energy as one gram of carbohydrate • Cushions and insulates vital organs Phospholipids Compounds with molecular building blocks of glycerol, two fatty acids, and a phosphate group attached to another polar molecule Hydrocarbon tails are hydrophobic while phosphate heads are hydrophilic (cell membranes) Phospholipds Ester Linkage Bond produced from the condensation synthesis due to enzyme activity between the (OH) group on the glycerol and the carboxyl group on the fatty acid. Triglyceride-three fatty acids bonded by ester linkages to one glycerol. Tryglyceride Formation Proteins polypeptide chains-polymers of amino acids that are linked by peptide bonds protein-macromolecule that consists of one or more polypeptide chains folded and coiled into specific conformations • Makes up 50% of body’s dry weight, structural support, chemical signaling, enzymes...... Proteins Polypeptide chain- polymer of connected amino acids. • amino acid- building block of a protein; most consist of an asymmetric carbon (alpha carbon),hydrogen atom, carboxyl group, amino group, and an R group Amino acid Structure Peptide Bonds peptide bond- covalent bond formed by a condensation rxn. That links the carboxyl group of one aa to an amino group of another aa Levels of Protein Structure Primary structure- unique sequence of amino acids. • determined by genes • Sanger sequenced insulin by acid hydrolysis and chromatography separation in the 1940's Levels of Protein Structure Secondary structure-folding of the polypeptide backbone. • alpha helix-helical coil that is stabilized by hydrogen bonding-(3.6 aa per turn) • Pauling and Corey 1951 • beta pleated sheet-sheet of antiparallel chains folded into accordion pleats Levels of Protein Structure Levels of Protein Structure Tertiary Structure- three dimensional shape due to side chain bonding (R groups). • Weak interactions due to H bonding between polar side chains, ionic bonds between charged side chains, hydrophobic bonds between non polar side chains of the proteins' interior • Covalent linkage due to disulfide bridges Levels of Protein Structure Levels of Protein Structure Quaternary structure-interactions between many polypeptide chains Denaturation Denaturation- process that alters' protein conformation and biological activity. • organic solvents disrupt hydrophobic side chains • chemical agents that disrupt H bonds • excessive heat Nucleic Acids Deoxyribonucleic Acid • double stranded • contains instructions for cell activity and its own replication • makes up genes; primarily found in nucleus Nucleic Acids Ribonucleic Acid • single stranded • involved in protein synthesis -messenger RNA carries genetic code in form of aa to ribosomes. • flow of genetic information travels from • DNA-RNA-Cytoplasm Nucleic Acids Phosphate group- attached to number 5 carbon Nitrogen base • Pyrimidine-six member ring cytosine/thymine/uracil • Purine-five member ring guanine/adenine Nucleic Acids Phosphodiester linkages-bond between the phosphate of one nucleotide and the sugar of another (sugar backbone of DNA) Inheritance is based on the replication of the double helix. (Watson and Crick) • two chains wound around a double helix with sugar backbones on the outside • two strands are held together by H bonding between nitrogenous bases • base pairing is as follows: A-T/G-C • both strands are complimentary Nucleic Acids Nucleic acid strand is a polymer of nucleotides • nucleic acid-polymer of nucleotides linked by condensation rxn. • nucleotide-building block of nucleic acid; made of a five-carbon sugar bonded to a phosphate group and a nitrogenous base Nucleic Acids Pentose (5-carbon sugar) • ribose or deoxyribose