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Outline: The Chemical Building Blocks of Life 1. Chemistry of Carbon 2. Polymers & Monomers 3. Biologically Important Compounds Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic Acids Biological Molecules Biological molecules consist primarily of -carbon bonded to carbon, or -carbon bonded to other molecules. Carbon can form up to 4 covalent bonds. Carbon may be bonded to functional groups with specific properties. 2 Carbon Chemistry Protons Neutrons Electrons Covalent Bonds in Carbon Electron Pair Covalent Bond 1. Carbon has 4 valence electrons 2. Each carbon atom Æ four covalent bonds 1 Carbon Chemistry Carbon Chemistry Molecular Formula C4H10 C4H10 CH4 C2H6 C4H8 C4H8 Carbon Chemistry Carbon Chemistry 2 Structural formula Summary: Carbon Chemistry H 4 Covalent Bonds Space-filling model Ball-and-stick model H H C H H Methane H H C C H H H H H H H C C C H H H Ethane HYDROXYL OH H C C OH H H Carbonyl C O H O H C C H H H Propane Carboxyl C OH H Unbranched or Branched H H H C C H H H H C C H H H H H H H C C H H C Amino H Isobutane H H H H C C C C H H Single or Double Bonds H H H H H H C C C C H H Sulfhydryl H S H H 1-Butene 2-Butene Skeletons may have double bonds, which can vary in location. O Phosphate H H Rings N Carboxyl H Skeletons may be unbranched or branched. H H H H C H C C C H C H H H H H H C H Cyclohexane C C C H HC C2H6O -114 O C H Melting Point (C) OH C2H5O2 17 H C Butane H O Carbon skeletons vary in length. H H H Hydroxyl H H The 4 single bonds of carbon point to the corners of a tetrahedron. H Structural Formula Functional Group C H Variable Length FUNCTIONAL GROUPS C C C – – O P OH O H H H C H H Methyl H Benzene Skeletons may be arranged in rings. O H H HO C C N CH3 H H H HO C C S H H H OH OH H O Boiling Point (C) C2H6O 78 C2H5O2 118 C C C O P O– H H H O– O O H O– C C C H H Dehydration synthesis is Polymer Building Importance of Functional Groups Unlinked monomer H A B C D OH H Short polymer A B C D OH H2O Dehydration reaction H E E OH Longer polymer 3 Classes of Biologically Important Compounds Hydrolysis is Polymer Breaking Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic Acids H2O OH H Hydrolysis H OH H OH Structure of Monosaccharides Carbohydrates O H C6H12O6 C Molecules • 1:2:1 ratio of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen empirical formula: (CH2O)n • examples: sugars, starch, glucose • C – H covalent bonds hold much energy • good energy storage molecules C OH HO C H H C OH H C OH H C OH H C OH C O HO C H H C OH H C OH H C OH H H Glucose H Carbonyl Group Hydroxyl Groups H Fructose 15 4 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Carbohydrates Monosaccharide Structure C6H12O6 H 3-carbon C 1 sugar 5-carbon sugars O 5 CH2OH 5 CH2OH O H C OH 2 H C OH 3 H O OH 1 H H 2 OH H Deoxyribose OH 1 4 H H H H 3 2 OH OH Ribose Glyceraldehyde 4 H H3 6-carbon sugars H5 H 4 OH HO3 17 6 CH2OH 5 OH OH 1 4 H OH H H H 2 3 H OH Galactose 6 CH2OH 6 CH2OH O H 1 H OH 2 OH H Glucose O H 5 H HO 2 CH2OH HO 3 1 4 OH H Fructose Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Polysaccharides – Complex Carbohydrates Carbohydrates - Disaccharides CH2OH O H H H 1 4 OH H OH HO H OH CH2OH CH2OH CH2OH CH2OH O H H O H H O H H O H H H H H 14 H OH H O OH H O OH H O OH H α form of glucose -2 monosaccharides linked together by dehydration synthesis -used for sugar transport or energy storage -examples: sucrose, lactose, maltose H OH H OH H OH H Cellulose Plant cell wall CH2OH H H O OH 1 4 OH H HO H H OH 19 β form of glucose OH Starch: chain of α-glucose subunits Starch O OH H O H H OH O CH2OH H O H OH H O CH2OH H H H H H CH2OH H O H OH O H O OH O OH H 14 H H CH2OH H OH Glycogen Cellulose: chain of β- glucose subunits 5 Carbohydrates Lipids Polysaccharides -long chains of sugars -used for energy storage -plants use starch; animals use glycogen -used for structural support -plants use cellulose; animals use chitin Properties Non-polar molecules Not Water soluble Dissolve in nonpolar solvents 21 Types of Lipids 1. Fatty acids 2. Triglycerides or neutral fats 3. Phospholipids 4. Steroids, prostaglandins and waxes Lipids Fatty acids are long hydrocarbon chains which may be -saturated -unsaturated -polyunsaturated Triglycerides (fats) -composed of 1 glycerol + 3 fatty acids 24 6 Saturated & Unsaturated Fatty Acids Fatty Acid Structure Hydrocarbon chain Carboxyl Group Cis & Trans Unsaturated Fatty Acids Structure of a Triglyceride Glycerol H H H C OH H C Fatty acid H C OH H C Fatty acid H C OH H C Fatty acid H H 7 Triglycerides or Neutral Fats Lipids Triglycerides excellent molecule for energy storage twice as much energy as carbohydrates animal fats usually saturated solid at room temperature plant fats (oils) usually unsaturated liquid at room temperature 30 Phospholipid Structure Membrane Structure Hydrophilic Polar Head Hydrophobic Nonpolar Tails Phospholipid bilayer Water 8 Steroids Cholesterol Steroids Digitoxin Hydrocortisone Lipid Functions Other Lipids 1. Long term energy storage Triglycerides Waxes 1. Protection Terpenes Citronellol Taxol Prostaglandins Fat deposits around kidneys Prostaglandin (thromboxane) induces clotting & inflammation response Waxes on leaf surface 2. Synthesis: hormones Cholesterol 9 Proteins Classes of Biologically Important Compounds Enzyme catalysts Support Motion Defense Proteins Regulation insulin Transport Calcium storage 38 Amino Acid Structure Proteins Carboxyl Group Proteins are polymers of amino acids. Amino acids -20 different amino acids -joined by dehydration synthesis -peptide bonds connect amino acids Amino Group 39 10 Amino Acid Structure Nonpolar Amino Acids Amino Acid Structure Polar Charged Amino Acid Structure Polar Uncharged Amino Acid Structure Aromatic 11 Protein Synthesis Proteins Have Four Levels of Organization • Primary • Secondary • Tertiary • Quaternary ..\ Secondary Protein Structure Primary Protein Structure Chain of amino acids 1 R H H O R H H O R H H C C N C C N C C N C C N C C N C H O H H O H H O R R R Tensile strength e.g. silk Flexible e.g. wool 12 Tertiary Protein Structure 1. 2. 3. 4. Tertiary Structure: Domains structural regions within a larger protein folds into stable areas Modular units of 100 to 250 amino acids Domains are functional regions of a protein Bonds Stabilize Protein Structure 1. Hydrogen Bond 2. Disulfide bridge 3. Ionic bond 4. Van der Waals attraction Proteins Denaturation is a change in the shape of a protein, usually causing loss of function. -may involve complete unfolding -caused by changes in the protein’s environment -pH -temperature -salt concentration 5. Hydrophobic Exclusion 52 13 Normal Protein Folding is Critical to Function Normal (Good) PrPC 43% α-helix Mistake in tertiary protein structure Prion (Bad) PrPSc 30% α-helix 43% β-sheet Creutzfeldt Jacob Disease Chronic Wasting Disease Bovine Spongiform encephalopathy (Mad Cow Disease) Fig. 3.8h(TE Art) Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Quaternary Protein Structure Protein Structure Primary Secondary Secondary Tertiary Quaternary 56 14 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Fig. 3.14(TE Art) Nucleic Acids ¾ Nucleic Acid = polymer of nucleotides ¾ Types of Nucleic Acids ¾ Deoxyribonucleic Acid = DNA Genetic material A Nucleotide is a monomer of a nucleic acid Nitrogenous base NH2 N N Phosphate group O P O CH2 O– O ¾ Ribonucleic Acid = RNA Protein synthesis OH in RNA OH R Sugar Nitrogen Bases of Nucleic Acids N N O – H in DNA Nucleic Acid Structure 15 Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Fig. 3.16(TE Art) Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. DNA Structure Double Helix RNA Structure P C G O C P Paired Nitrogen P Bases C P U P OH 3’ end A P A Nitrogenous Bases P G Phosphate P Nucleotide T P G U P A T Ribose (sugar) C A P G P P Hydrogen bonds P P P Sugar-phosphate "backbone" P G 5’ end Adenosine Triphosphate Nitrogenous base (adenine) ATP NH2 N Triphosphate group O – O P O – O P O – N O O O P O N O CH2 N – O OH OH 5-carbon sugar 16