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The Chemical Building Blocks of Life Organic Chemistry 1 Comparison of Molecules Inorganic – Chemistry of elements other than carbon Organic – Carbon-based chemistry • • Inorganic •Usually with + & - ions •Usually ionic bonding •Always with few atoms • Often associated with nonliving matter • Organic •Always contain carbon and hydrogen •Always covalent bonding •Often quite large, with many atoms • Usually associated living systems • 2 • • All living things are mostly composed of 4 elements: H, O, N, C "honk" Compounds are broken down into 2 general categories: – Inorganic Compounds: Do not contain carbon – Organic compounds Contain significant amounts of carbon. Often found with common "functional groups" … more on this in a minute! 3 Why Carbon? • Carbon is essential to life for several reasons: – It can form strong stable (usually nonpolar) covalent bonds – It can form up to 4 chemical bonds due to 4 valence electrons – It can form multiple bonds 4 More on the Carbon Atom • Carbon atoms: – – – – Contain a total of 6 electrons Often bonds with other carbon atoms to make hydrocarbons Can produce long carbon chains like octane Can produce ring forms like cyclohexane 5 • Carbon skeletons vary in many ways Ethane Propane Carbon skeletons vary in length. Isobutane Butane Skeletons may be unbranched or branched. 1-Butene 2-Butene Skeletons may have double bonds, which can vary in location. Cyclohexane Skeletons may be arranged in rings. Benzene Figure 3.1, bottom part 6 Functional groups help determine the properties of organic compounds • • Functional groups – specific groups of atoms attached to carbon backbones retain definite chemical properties Functional groups are the groups of atoms that participate in chemical reactions – Ex. Hydroxyl groups are characteristic of alcohols – Ex. The carboxyl group acts as an acid 7 Table 3.2 8 Macromolecules • • • Some molecules called macromolecules because of their large size Usually consist of many repeating units – Resulting molecule is a polymer (many parts) – Repeating units are called monomers Some examples: Category • Example • • Lipids • Fat • Glycerol & fatty acids • Carbohydrates •Polysaccharide • Monosaccharide • Proteins • Polypeptide • Amino acid • Nucleic Acids • DNA, RNA • Nucleotide • Subunit(s) 9 Cells make a huge number of large molecules from a small set of small molecules • Most of the large molecules in living things are macromolecules called polymers – Polymers are long chains of smaller molecular units called monomers (building blocks) – A huge number of different polymers can be made from a small number of monomers 10 Dehydration and Hydrolysis • • • Dehydration - Removal of water molecule – Used to connect monomers together to make polymers – Polymerization of glucose monomers to make starch Hydrolysis - Addition of water molecule – Used to disassemble polymers into monomer parts – Digestion of starch into glucose monomers Specific enzymes required for each reaction – Accelerate reaction – Are not used in the reaction 11 • Cells link monomers to form polymers by dehydration synthesis, removes OH and H during synthesis of a new molecule. 1 2 3 Short polymer Unlinked monomer Removal of water molecule 1 Figure 3.3A 2 3 4 Longer polymer 12 • Polymers are broken down to monomers by the reverse process, hydrolysis. (Breaks a covalent bond by adding OH and H.) 1 2 3 4 Addition of water molecule 1 2 3 Figure 3.3B 13 14 The Major Organic Groups 15 What you need to know: • • • • The monomer of each group… The function of each group… The characteristics of each group… Unique properties of each group… 16 • Carbohydrates Carbohydrates are loosely defined as molecules that contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in a 1:2:1 ratio. – monosaccharides - simple sugars – disaccharides - two monosaccharides joined by a covalent bond – polysaccharides – made of many monosaccharide subunits 17 Function • Primary Function: Quick Energy! 18 Monosaccharides are the simplest carbohydrates • • • • Monosaccharides are single-unit sugars These molecules typically have a formula that is a multiple of CH2O Hydrogen to oxygen ratio is 2:1. Hi Honey… Monosaccharides I’m home! are the fuels for cellular work Figure 3.4A 19 • The monosaccharides glucose and fructose are isomers – They contain the same atoms but in different arrangements Figure 3.4B Glucose Fructose 20 Isomers isomers - alternative forms of the same substance ex. 8 isomers of “glucose” 21 Cells link single sugars to form disaccharides • • Monosaccharides can join to form disaccharides, such as sucrose (table sugar) and maltose (brewing sugar) Which type of reaction forms a disaccharide? Glucose Glucose Sucrose Figure 3.5 Maltose 22 • Polysaccharides are long chains of sugar units. These large molecules are polymers of hundreds or thousands of monosaccharides linked by dehydration synthesis. Starch granules in potato tuber cells Glycogen granules in muscle tissue Cellulose fibrils in a plant cell wall Glucose monomer STARCH GLYCOGEN CELLULOSE Cellulose molecules Figure 3.7 23 Storage polysaccharides…. • • Starch - plant storage Glycogen - animal storage – stored in the liver Electron micrograph of a section of a liver cell showing glycogen deposits as accumulations of electron dense particles (arrows). Mitochondria are also shown. x30,000. 24 Structural Carbohydrates • • Cellulose - plants – alpha form or beta form of ring – animals can not digest cellulose - “fiber” – most abundant form of living terrestrial biomass. Chitin - exoskeleton of arthropods and in fungi cell walls – modified form of cellulose 25 Lipids: Basic Information • • Lipids are loosely defined as groups of molecules that are insoluble in water. – Fats (triglycerides), oils, waxes, and steroids. Phospholipids ( a special category) form the core of all biological membranes. 26 Lipids • – – • Insoluble in water Long chains of repeating CH2 units Renders molecule nonpolar Types of Lipids Type • Fats • Oils • Phospholipids • Steroids • Waxes • Organismal Uses • Long-term energy storage & thermal insulation in animals •Long-term energy storage in plants and their seeds •Component of plasma membrane •Component of plasma membrane; hormones •Wear resistance; retain water • Human Uses • • Butter, lard • Cooking oils • No-stick pan spray • Medicines • Candles, polishes 27 Lipids are hydrophobic • • Lipids repel water. Ex. The cuticle of plants is waxy. The waxy covering makes the plant water proof and minimizes water loss. 28 • • Building Blocks of Lipids One glycerol Three fatty acids 29 Fats and Oils (triglycerides) • Fats and oils consist of a glycerol molecule with three attached fatty acids (triglyceride / triglycerol). – Saturated fats - all internal carbon atoms are bonded to at least two hydrogen atoms usually a solid at room temperature – Unsaturated fats - at least one double bond between successive carbon atoms Polyunsaturated - contains more than one double bond usually liquid at room temperature 30 • Fats as Energy Storage Molecules Fats, on average, yield about 9 kcal per gram versus 4 kcal per gram for carbohydrates. – Animal fats are saturated while most plant fats are unsaturated. Consumption of excess carbohydrates leads to conversion into starch, glycogen, or fats for future use. 31 Triglycerides 32 Saturated vs. unsaturated fatty acids 33 Hydrogenated Fats • Hydrogenation is used to add hydrogens to unsaturated fats and make them more solid. If a fat is FULLY saturated, it becomes solid, like candle wax. If it is PARTIALLY saturated (the same as partially hydrogenated) the result is a semi-solid, like margarine. 34 Steroids • • • • Steroid hormones are crucial substances for the proper function of the body. They mediate a wide variety of vital physiological functions ranging from anti-inflammatory agents to regulating events during pregnancy. They are synthesized and secreted into the bloodstream by endocrine glands such as the adrenal cortex and the gonads (ovary and testis). Skeleton made of four fused carbon rings Cholesterol is a steroid as well as the foundation for other steroids. 35 36 Waxes Long-chain fatty acid bonded to a long-chain alcohol High melting point Waterproof • Resistant to degradation Why do you wax a car? 37 Waxes 38 Phospholipids 39 Phospholipids • • Derived from triglycerides – Glycerol backbone – Two fatty acids attached instead of three – Third fatty acid replaced by phosphate group The fatty acids are nonpolar and hydrophobic The phosphate group is polar and hydrophilic Molecules self arrange when placed in water – Polar phosphate “heads” next to water – Nonpolar fatty acid tails” overlap and exclude water – Spontaneously form double layer & a sphere 40 Phospholipid Structure • Phospholipid molecules have one end which is attracted to water while the other is repelled by it. The fatty acid end is not attracted to water and is called hydrophobic. At the other end of the molecule the phosphate group is attracted to water, it is said to be hydrophilic. Hydrophobic Tail Hydrophilic Head 41 Phospholipids Form Membranes 42 Proteins • Protein functions: – enzyme (catalyst) – defense – transport – support – motion – regulation – storage 43 7 Classes of Proteins • • • • Structural – Spider silk – Mammal hair – Fibers of tendons and lipids Contractile – Muscular movement Storage – Egg white Defense – Antibodies • • • Transport – Hemoglobin Signal – Some hormones Chemical catalyst – Enzymes 44 Structure is related to function! • • • Structurally sophisticated. Shape determines function and is crucial to the job of a protein. Composed of amino acids joined together by peptide bonds. – 20 types of amino acids – Made at the ribosomes in a cell. 45 • Monomer: Amino Acids (AA) contain an amino group (-NH2), a carboxyl group (-COOH) and a hydrogen atom, all bonded to a central carbon atom – twenty common AA grouped into five classes based on side groups nonpolar AA polar uncharged AA charged AA aromatic AA special-function AA 46 Structural Formulas for the 20 Amino Acids 47 • Amino Acids Peptide bond links two amino acids. – A protein is composed of one or more long chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds (dipetide and polypeptides). 48 The Polypeptide Backbone • Amino acids joined together end-to-end – – – – COOH of one AA covalently bonds to the NH2 of the next AA Special name for this bond - Peptide Bond Two AAs bonded together – Dipeptide Three AAs bonded together – Tripeptide Many AAs bonded together – Polypeptide Characteristics of a protein determined by composition and sequence of AA’s Virtually unlimited number of proteins 49 Protein Structure • • • Protein function is determined by its shape. The shape is driven by a number of noncovalent interactions such as hydrogen bonding. Protein structure primary - specific amino acid sequence secondary - folding of amino acid chains 50 Protein Structure tertiary - final folded shape of globular protein quaternary - forms when two or more polypeptide chains associate to form a functional protein 51 Summary: Levels of Structure • • • • Primary: – Literally, the sequence of amino acids – A string of beads (up to 20 different colors) Secondary: – The way the amino acid chain coils or folds – Describing the way a knot is tied Tertiary: – Overall three-dimensional shape of a polypeptide – Describing what a knot looks like from the outside Quaternary: – – Consists of more than one polypeptide Like several completed knots glued together 52 Levels of Protein Organization 53 Examples of Fibrous Proteins 54 How enzymes work…Induced Fit Model • • • The substrate (what the enzyme is going to work upon) comes into contact with the active site of the enzyme. The enzyme “wraps” around the substrate breaking or forming bonds. The product is released. 55 Enzyme at work 56 Unfolding Proteins • Denaturation refers to the process of changing a protein’s shape. – usually rendered biologically inactive salt-curing and pickling used to preserve food temperature - high temperatures break bonds. pH - designed to work at a specific pH! 57 Examples • • • • • You can not use fresh pineapple in jello but you can used canned! Why? Pepsin is an enzyme that helps break down proteins in the stomach during digestion. It works at a pH of 2! Trypsin is an enzyme that helps break down proteins as well. It works in the intestines with a pH of 8. Many snake venoms are enzymes that work when directly injected into blood or tissue (pH = 7.4). If swallowed, they are denatured by the acidity of the stomach! (Don’t try it, just take my word for it!) Why do people without refrigeration salt their food for long term storage? 58 Nucleic Acids 59 Nucleic Acids • • Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) – Encodes information used to assemble proteins. Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) – Reads DNA-encoded information to direct protein synthesis. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) – Provides energy 60 • Nucleic Acid Structure Nucleic acids are composed of long polymers of repeating subunits, nucleotides - the monomer. – five-carbon sugar – phosphate – nitrogenous base purines adenine and guanine pyrimidines cytosine, thymine, and uracil 61 Nucleic Acid Structure • • DNA exists as double-stranded molecules. – Genetic info. - coded for by the order of the nucleotides. – double helix – complementary base pairing hydrogen bonding base pairing: A-T, C-G RNA exists as a single stand. – contains ribose instead of deoxyribose – contains uracil in place of thymine 62 Nucleotides 63 Comparison of DNA & RNA Feature • Sugar • • • Bases • Strands • Helix • DNA Deoxyribose RNA • • Ribose Cytosine, guanine; •Cytosine, guanine; adenine, thymine •adenine, uracil •Double-stranded; Pairing across strands •Mostly single stranded • • Yes Heredity; cellular •Function control center •Chromosomes of cell •Where nucleus • • No Interprets genetic info; protein synthesis • • Cell nucleus and cytoplasm 64 Structure of DNA 65 RNA Structure 66 DNA RNA Protein 67 Other Nucleic Acids • • • ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is composed of adenine, ribose, and three phosphates In cells, one phosphate bond is hydrolyzed – Yields: – The molecule ADP (adenosine diphosphate) – An inorganic phosphate molecule pi – Energy Other energy sources used to put ADP and pi back together again 68 ATP 69 Summary • Biological Molecules (contain Carbon) – Macromolecules (polymers made of *monomers) Proteins (*amino acids) Polypeptides Enzymes Nucleic Acids (*nucleotides) DNA and RNA Lipids (*glycerol + 3 fatty acids) Fats, Oils, Waxes, Steroids, and Phospholipids Carbohydrates (*monosaccharides) Monosaccharides, Disaccharides, and Polysaccharides (Starch, Glycogen, Cellulose, and Chitin) 70 Summary and Enzymes Phosphate group Not all inclusive! 71