Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Carbon and Organic Chemistry • The unique properties of an organic compound depend not only on its carbon skeleton but also on the atoms attached to the skeleton – These atoms are called functional groups – Some common functional groups include: Hydroxyl group Carbonyl group Amino group Carboxyl group Found in alcohols and sugars Found in sugars Found in amino acids and urea in urine (from protein breakdown) Found in amino acids, fatty acids, and some vitamins Macromolecules *most macromolecules are polymers polymer monomer The making and breaking of polymers: Dehydration reaction: Hydrolysis: Proteins • Proteins perform most of the tasks the body needs to function – They are the most elaborate of life’s molecules MAJOR TYPES OF PROTEINS Structural Proteins Storage Proteins Contractile Proteins Transport Proteins Enzymes Proteins as Polymers • Cells link amino acids together by dehydration synthesis – The resulting bond between them is called a peptide bond Carboxyl group Amino group Side group Side group Amino acid Amino acid Dehydration synthesis Side group Side group Peptide bond Amino Acids Protein Structure – The arrangement of amino acids makes each protein different • Primary structure – The specific sequence of amino acids in a protein 5 1 15 10 30 35 20 25 45 40 50 55 65 60 70 85 80 75 95 90 100 110 105 115 120 125 129 Amino acid Protein Structure • A slight change in the primary structure of a protein affects its ability to function – The substitution of one amino acid for another in hemoglobin causes sickle-cell disease 1 2 (b) Sickled red blood cell 6 7. . . 146 4 5 Normal hemoglobin (a) Normal red blood cell 1 3 2 3 6 7. . . 146 4 5 Sickle-cell hemoglobin Macromolecules Secondary structure Tertiary structure Macromolecules Quaternary structure How does this all happen? ●Spontaneously ●Chaperonins Nucleic Acids ● Include DNA and RNA Information storage molecules They provide the directions for building proteins Gene DNA Nucleic acids Amino acid RNA Protein Nucleic Acids ●Nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides Nitrogenous base (A,G,C, or T) – DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid – RNA, ribonucleic acid Nitrogenous base A, G, C, or U Thymine (T) Phosphate group Sugar (deoxyribose) Uracil U Phosphate Phosphate group Base Sugar Sugar ribose Nucleic Acids ●Each nucleotide has one of the following bases: Nucleic Acids ●Nucleic Acid Structure Sugar-phosphate backbone Base Nucleotide pair Hydrogen bond Bases a DNA strand polynucleotide b Double helix two polynucleotide strands Nucleic Acids ●Nucleic Acid Structure Nucleic Acids DNA Structure Carbohydrates • Carbohydrates include – Small sugar molecules in soft drinks • Monosaccharides & Disaccharides – Long starch molecules in pasta and potatoes • Polysaccharides Monosaccharides • Monosaccharides are simple sugars – Glucose, found in sports drinks – Fructose, found in fruit • Honey contains both glucose and fructose Glucose Fructose Isomers Monosaccharides • In aqueous solutions, monosaccharides form rings (b) Abbreviated ring structure Disaccharides • A disaccharide is a double sugar • Disaccharides are joined by the process of dehydration synthesis Glucose Glucose Maltose Disaccharides • The most common disaccharide is sucrose, common table sugar – It consists of a glucose linked to a fructose – Sucrose is extracted from sugar cane and the roots of sugar beets Polysaccharides – They are long chains of sugar units – They are polymers of monosaccharides Glucose monomer Starch granules in potato tuber cells (a) Starch Glycogen Granules In muscle tissue (b) Glycogen Cellulose fibril in a plant cell wall Cellulose molecules (c) Cellulose Lipids ●Lipids are: Large biological molecules that do not include polymers. Hydrophobic, unable to mix with water. Oil (hydrophobic) Vinegar (hydrophilic) Lipids ●FATS ● Dietary fat consists largely of the molecule triglyceride – A combination of glycerol and three fatty acids Fatty acid Glycerol (a) A dehydration reaction linking a fatty acid to glycerol (b) A fat molecule with a glycerol “head” and three energy-rich hydrocarbon fatty acid “tails” Lipids (Fats) ●Unsaturated fatty acids – Have less than the maximum number of hydrogens bonded to the carbons ●Saturated fatty acids – Have the maximum number of hydrogens bonded to the carbons Lipids (Fats) TYPES OF FATS Saturated Fats Unsaturated Fats Margarine INGREDIENTS: SOYBEAN OIL, FULLY HYDROGENATED COTTONSEED OIL, PARTIALLY HYDROGENATED COTTONSEED OIL AND SOYBEAN OILS, MONO AND DIGLYCERIDES, TBHO AND CITRIC ACID Plant oils Trans fats ANTIOXIDANTS Omega-3 fats Lipids Phospholipids Steroids Lipids ●STEROIDS Steroids are very different from fats in structure and function. Cholesterol Testosterone A type of estrogen Biological Molecules