Download NOTES+Macromolecules+2013

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts
no text concepts found
Transcript
Macromolecules
“The molecules of life”
1
Organic Chemistry
• All living things are mostly composed of
6 elements: C, H, N, O, P, S
• Compounds are brokendown into 2
general categories:
• Inorganic Compounds:
– Do not contain carbon
• Organic compounds
– Contain significant amounts of carbon.
– Often found with common "functional
groups"
Carbon (C)
• Carbon has 4 electrons in outer
shell.
• Carbon can form covalent bonds
with as many as 4 other atoms
(elements).
• Usually with C, H, O or N.
• Example:
CH4(methane)
3
Macromolecules
• LARGE organic molecules.
• Also called POLYMERS (poly- means
“many”)
– Made up of smaller “building blocks”
called MONOMERS (mono- means “one”)
• 4 types:
1. Carbohydrates
2. Lipids
3. Proteins
4. Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA)
5
Monomer vs. Polymer
5
Macromolecules are formed
from Dehydration Synthesis
• Also called “condensation reaction”
• Forms polymers by combining
monomers by “removing water”.
HO
H
HO
H
H2O
HO
H
6
Macromolecules are broken
down by Hydrolysis
• Separates monomers by “adding
water”
HO
H
H2O
HO
H
HO
H
7
Carbohydrates
• Carbohydrates are made from
simple sugars like: glucose and
fructose.
• Carbohydrates store energy.
• Examples:
A. monosaccharide
B. disaccharide
C. polysaccharide
8
Carbohydrates
Monosaccharide: one sugar unit
Examples:
glucose
glucose (C6H12O6)
deoxyribose
ribose
Fructose
Galactose
10
Carbohydrates
Disaccharide: two sugar unit
Examples:
– Sucrose (glucose+fructose)
– Lactose (glucose+galactose)
– Maltose (glucose+glucose)
glucose
glucose
10
Carbohydrates
Polysaccharide: many sugar units
Examples: starch (bread, potatoes)
glycogen (beef muscle)
cellulose (lettuce, corn)
glucose
glucose
glucose
glucose
cellulose
glucose
glucose
glucose
glucose
11
Lipids
• Not soluble in water(do not dissolve).
• Functions:
– Store the most energy
– Make up cell membranes
– Act as chemical messengers (hormones)
– Protect and insulate
• Examples:
1. Fats
2. Phospholipids
3. Oils
4. Waxes
5. Steroid hormones
6. Triglycerides
14
Lipids
Triglycerides:
composed 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
13
Fatty Acids
There are two kinds of fatty acids you may see
these on food labels:
1. Saturated fatty acids: no double bonds
(bad)
O
saturated
C-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH3
2. Unsaturated fatty acids: double bonds
(good)
O
unsaturated C-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH
14
Proteins (Polypeptides)
• Amino acids (20 different kinds
of aa) bonded together by
peptide bonds (polypeptides).
• Functions of proteins:
albumin (egg white)
1. Storage:
hemoglobin
2. Transport:
hormones
3. Regulatory:
4. Movement:
muscles
membranes, hair, nails
5. Structural:
6. Enzymes:
cellular reactions
15
Proteins (Polypeptides)
Four levels of protein structure:
A.Primary Structure
B. Secondary Structure
C. Tertiary Structure
D.Quaternary Structure
16
Primary Structure
Amino acids bonded together
by peptide bonds (straight
chains)
Amino Acids (aa)
aa1
aa2
aa3
aa4
aa5
aa6
Peptide Bonds
20
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
18
Tertiary Structure
• Secondary structures bent and folded
into a more complex 3-D arrangement
of joined poypeptides
• Bonds: H-bonds, ionic, disulfide
bridges (S-S)
• Call a “subunit”.
Alpha Helix
Beta Pleated Sheet
19
Quaternary Structure
• Composed of 2 or more
“subunits”
• Globular in shape
• Form in Aqueous environments
• Example: enzymes (hemoglobin)
subunits
20
Nucleic acids
• Carry the genetic information to make
proteins.
• Two types:
a. Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNAdouble helix)
b. Ribonucleic acid (RNA-single
strand)
• Nucleic acids are composed of long
chains of nucleotides linked by
dehydration synthesis.
21
Nucleic acids
•
Nucleotides
include:
phosphate
group
pentose sugar (5carbon) nitrogenous
bases:
adenine (A)
thymine (T) DNA
only uracil (U)
RNA only
cytosine (C)
guanine (G)
22
Nucleotide
Phosphate
Group
O
O=P-O
O
5
CH2
O
N
C1
C4
Nitrogenous base
(A, G, C, or T)
Sugar
(deoxyribose)
C3
C2
27
5
DNA - double helix
O
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
28
Related documents