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Macromolecules 1 Organic Compounds • Compounds that contain CARBON are called organic. 2 Carbon (C) • Carbon can form covalent bonds with as many as 4 other atoms (elements). • Usually bonds with C, H, O or N. • Example: CH4(methane) 3 Macromolecules • Macromolecules are POLYMERS (chains) of organic molecules. • Made up of smaller “building blocks” called MONOMERS. • Examples of marcromolecules: 1. Carbohydrates 2. Lipids 3. Proteins 4. Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) 4 Question: How Are Macromolecules Formed? Answer: Dehydration Synthesis 5 “Dehydrate” means remove water. “Synthesis” means build. • Dehydration is also called “condensation reaction.” • Combines monomers by “removing water” between molecules. HO H HO H H2O HO H 6 Question: How are Macromolecules broken down (or digested)? Answer: Hydrolysis 7 hydro” means water. “lysis” means split. • Hydrolysis separates or splits apart monomers by “adding water” HO H H2O HO H HO H 8 Animation • http://science.nhmccd.edu/BioL/dehydrat /dehydrat.html 9 Carbohydrates 10 Functions of carbohydrates Easy-to-access source of energy for organism. Provide structure. 11 Carbohydrates • Sugar molecules – singles, doubles, or long chains. • Three types: A. monosaccharide B. disaccharide C. polysaccharide 12 A. Monosaccharide: one sugar (single) Primary example: glucose (C6H12O6) glucose 13 Different Forms of Glucose 14 Other important monosaccharides: Deoxyribose – in DNA Ribose – in RNA Fructose – in honey Galactose – in milk and some foods 15 B. Disaccharide: two sugar units joined (by dehydration synthesis) Examples: – Sucrose (glucose+fructose) – Lactose (glucose+galactose) – Maltose (glucose+glucose) glucose glucose 16 C. Polysaccharide: many sugar units Examples: glucose starch (bread, potatoes) glycogen (beef muscle) cellulose (lettuce, corn) glucose glucose glucose cellulose glucose glucose glucose glucose 17 Lipids 18 Lipids • General term for compounds which are not soluble in water. • Lipids are soluble in hydrophobic solvents. • Definition of hydrophobic: “water fearing.” Oils are hydrophobic solvents. • Hydrophilic: “water loving.” 19 6 Groups : 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Fats Phospholipids Oils Waxes Steroid hormones Triglycerides 20 Lipids Six functions of lipids: 1. Long term energy storage 2. Protection against heat loss (insulation) 3. Protection against physical shock 4. Protection against water loss 5. Chemical messengers (hormones) 6. Major component of membranes (phospholipids) 21 Building blocks of lipids are fatty acids and glycerol. Fatty acids Glycerol 22 Lipids Triglycerides: Molecules made of 1 glycerol and 3 fatty acids. H O H-C----O C-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH3 O H-C----O C-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH3 O fatty acids H-C----O C-CH -CH -CH -CH 2 2 2 H glycerol 23 Fatty Acids There are two kinds of fatty acids: 1. Saturated fatty acids: no double bonds between C (bad for you) 2. Unsaturated fatty acids: double bonds between C (good) saturated O C-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH3 O unsaturated C-CH -CH -CH 2 2 2 CH 24 Proteins 25 Proteins (Polypeptides) • Long chains of amino acids • 20 different kinds of amino acids • Amino acids bonded together by peptide bonds. • Six functions of proteins: 1. Storage: albumin (egg white) 2. Transport: hemoglobin 3. Regulatory: hormones 4. Movement: muscles 5. Structural: membranes, hair, nails 6. Enzymes: cellular reactions 26 • Amino Acid • Amino group on 1 end (NH2) • Carboxyl group on other end (COOH) •“R” group is variable, from 1 atom to 20. • Two amino acids can join together to form a dipeptide (by dehydration synthesis). 27 Proteins Four levels of protein structure: A.Primary Structure B. Secondary Structure C. Tertiary Structure D.Quaternary Structure 28 Primary Structure Amino acids bonded together through dehydration synthesis to form peptide bonds Amino Acids (aa) aa1 aa2 aa3 aa4 aa5 aa6 Peptide Bonds 29 Secondary Structure • 3-dimensional folding arrangement of a primary structure into coils and pleats held together by hydrogen bonds. • Two examples: Alpha Helix Beta Pleated Sheet Hydrogen Bonds 30 Tertiary Structure • Secondary structures bent and folded into a more complex 3-D arrangement of linked polypeptides • Bonds: H-bonds, ionic, disulfide bridges (S-S) • Called “subunit” Alpha Helix Beta Pleated Sheet 31 Quaternary Structure • Composed of 2 or more “subunits” • Globular in shape • Form in Aqueous environments • Example: enzymes (hemoglobin) subunits 32 One important group of proteins - ENZYMES • Biological catalysts* are called enzymes • A catalyst reduces the amount of activation energy required in a chemical reaction. 33 • Enzymes are an important class of catalysts in living organisms – Mostly protein – Thousands of different kinds – Each specific for a different chemical reaction 34 Enzyme Shape due to tertiary structure of the protein. • Enzymes work on substances called substrates • Substrates must fit into a place on an enzyme called the active site • Enzymes are reusable! 35 Lock and Key Theory • Enzymes are specific to their substrates. • Enzyme fits the substrate like a key fits a lock. 36 Nucleic Acids 37 Functions of nucleic acids: • Carry genetic information • Structure of cell parts called ribosomes 38 Basic subunit of a nucleic acid: • Nucleotides • Nucleic acids are composed of long chains of nucleotides linked by dehydration synthesis. 39 • Two types: a. Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNAdouble helix) b. Ribonucleic acid (RNA-single strand) 40 • Nucleotides include 3 parts: -phosphate group -pentose sugar (5-carbon) -nitrogenous base 41 There are 5 different nitrogenous bases adenine (A) thymine (T) DNA only uracil (U) RNA only cytosine (C) guanine (G) 42 Nucleotide Phosphate Group O O=P-O O 5 CH2 O N C1 C4 Nitrogenous base (A, G, C, T, or U) Sugar (deoxyribose) C3 C2 43 DNA - double chain of O nucleotides 5 3 3 O P 5 O C G 1 P 5 3 2 4 4 2 3 1 P T 5 A P 3 O O P 5 O 3 5 P 44 45