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
Macromolecules of Life Regular Biology Mr. Wilbrandt Today’s Targets I will be able to identify and construct …. The 4 main macromolecules Living matter is made of cells, but what are cells made of? 4 main elements C, H, O and N These 4 can combine in different ways to make other molecules, which are used for the 5 functions of life. The 4 main macromolecules Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids Monosaccharides Monosaccharides (simple sugars; monomers) = energy for cells Glucose: grape sugar, corn sugar, dextrose Fructose: honey Galactose: part of milk sugar (lactose) Turns Benedict’s solution orange For each of these 4 macromolecules, you should know: 1. What the monomer (basic building block) is 2. What types of polymers result 3. What the functions of each macromolecule are in cells. Carbohydrates (sugars, starches, cellulose) Made from joining H2O and CO2 by plants during photosynthesis . -Bread, cereal, potatoes, fruits, vegetables, and pasta = are made mostly of carbohydrates (sugars and starches). Monomer: Simple sugars: CH O (ratio of one carbon and one oxygen to every 2 hydrogens or a 1:2:1 ratio ). 2 Three main functions: energy for cells, structural support, cell-cell communication . Dissaccharides Disaccharides (double sugars) or oligosaccharides (short-sugars) = energy for cells Maltose = glucose - glucose (brewing beer) Lactose = glucose - galactose (milk sugar) Sucrose = glucose - fructose (table sugar) No reaction with Benedict’s or Iodine Polysaccharides Polysaccharides (long chains of sugar polymers) - these sugar polymers are not "sweet" although they are made up of repeating glucose monomers! (turns Iodine dark blue/black) * Cellulose (plants), chitin (insects, fungi): structural polymers. Function: Structural support Examples: Cellulose: Paper, wood, cotton, the chewy stuff in celery.... Chitin: The crunchy exoskeleton of insects and shrimp, the soft spongy material that makes up a mushroom. Polysaccharides * Starch (plants), glycogen (animals): storage polymers • Function: Energy storage Examples: Potatoes - pure starch! Pasta, bread, crackers - ground up wheat starch • If you take in more carbs than you use, the more you put in storage. That is how we gain excess weight. Useful Info Once we have eaten, monosaccharides, disaccharides and starches are converted to the monomer glucose, our bodys preferred fuel, and circulate through the blood (reserves are stored in our bodies as glycogen). Disorders of blood glucose (diabetes, hypoglycemia) are very serious! Why is it better to eat "complex carbohydrates" (poly-saccharides) over "simple" or "refined carbohydrates" (mono- and disaccharides)? Dehydration vs. Hydrolysis Dehydration Synthesis (a/k/a Condensation) Water formed The carbo subunits are then bonded together (book-pg. 177) “forming a polymer” Makes the chain Hydrolysis Water used up or the addition of water “breaking of a polymer” (pg. 177) Takes place during digestion Breaks the chain Dehydration (Condensation)-Hydrolysis Reaction Dehydration Glucose + Fructose Sucrose + Water (co Dehydration / Hydrolysis reaction Hydrolysis Polymer + water monomer Lipids (all are insoluble in water) Functions: long term energy storage Make up cell membrane Make hormones Protective coating for animals & plants Phospholipid bilayer 2 types of lipids Saturated—single C bonds (solid fat) Unsaturated –double C bonds (oils) Lipids * Monomers: Fatty acids Composed of C, H, O…..BUT more H’s than in carbs. (look for hydroxyl groups --OH ) * Polymers: 3 main types 1. Triacylglycerols (fats and oils) 2. Diacylglycerides (phospholipids): 3. Steroids: (cholesterol, steroid hormones) Lipids (all are insoluble in water) 3 Fatty Acids + 1 Glycerol unit = Lipid + water Triacylglycerol “De-confusion” Saturated fats— Monounsaturated ---- Polyunsaturated--- Liquids at room temperature - corn Hydrogenated Oils (“trans-fats)--- Solids at room cholesterol solid at room temp; bacon, butter **raise Liquids at room temperature - olive oil, canola oil, peanut oil. These are the GOOD fats. Lowers Bad cholesterol. oil, soybean oil, Omega-3 and -6 fish oils. These are also the GOOD fats. Lowers bad cholesterol. temperature - these oils are factory-made. REALLY BAD! Lowers good cholesterol and raises bad cholesterol! Examples would be: crisco, margarine, products that contain this! Lipids (all are insoluble in water) Single carbon bonds ( fats ) (solid at room temp) Double carbon bonds (liquid at room temp) ( oils ) Take TWO….. Discuss with your partner next to you …. 3 types of carbs Dehydration/hydrolysis 2 types of Lipids …….GO !! Proteins Composed of C, H, O AND……N Monomers = amino acids (a.a.) Many a.a.’s bond together to form polypeptides. Polymers = proteins = polypeptides (which can contain 100’s of a.a.’s) Proteins Amino Acids amino group – NH2 (on one end) carboxyl group – COOH (other end) They bond thru dehydration N H H O C OH Proteins Amino group and carboxyl group on a single amino acid Peptide Bond The bond that holds the polypeptide together. (dehydration synthesis) (yes, the same process used with carbohydrates!) Functions of Proteins Hair Skin Muscle All of these are structural functions Energy (not much) Enzymes (speeds up chemical Rxn’s. Nucleic Acids Function: stores information in cells in the form of a code Monomers: nucleotides Consist of C, H, O, N and………..P Arranged in 3 groups: 1) base, 2) simple sugar, 3)phosphate group Nucleic acid polymers DNA, deoxyribonucleic acid Contributes to what an organism looks like and how it acts RNA, ribonucleic acid Forms a copy of DNA for protein synthesis (production) Boy, are we ever going to talk more about these next semester! DNA strand And so…… I can identify and construct …. The 4 main macromolecules ( which are ?? ) The End I love carbs