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THE MOLECULES OF LIFE CH 5 I. Carbon and the Molecules of Life Properties of Carbon: Carbon can form 4 covalent bonds. Why? Bonds can be single or double bonds Carbon easily bonds with other elements like S H O P N Carbon can form rings, chains or branches Result: HUGE variety of carbon based molecules of life II. The 4 Molecules of Life Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids A. Monomers and Polymers Polymer: molecule made of many repeating units linked together Monomer: a single unit B. Building and Breaking down polymers 1. Making polymers Dehydration reaction: link monomers together with the removal of water. Uses energy 2. Breaking polymers Hydrolysis reaction: break down polymer to monomers with the addition of water. Releases energy http://resource.rockyview.ab.ca/t4t/bio 20/mm/m7/hydrolysis/Bio20_Hydrolys is_Final.swf C. Carbohydrates Molecules that are made of sugar 3 types: Monosaccharides Disaccharides Polysaccharides 1. Monosaccharide Structure: single sugar molecules Function: Isomers: molecules with same chemical formula but different arrangement of atoms 2. Disaccharides Structure: 2 monosaccharides linked by dehydration reactions http://www2.nl.edu/jste/biochem.htm Function: 3. Polysaccharides Structure: many GLUCOSE molecules linked by dehydration reactions 3 groups: starch glycogen cellulose Function: i. Starch: store glucose in plants for later use ii. Glycogen: store glucose in animals for later use iii. Cellulose: makes up cell wall in plants 4. Interconversion of starch and glycogen http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp03/0302002.html D. Lipids Molecules that are all hydrophobic 3 groups Triglycerides Phospholipids Waxes and steroids 1. Triglycerides Structure: 1 glycerol + 3 fatty acids linked by http://www2.nl.edu/jste/biochem.htm Fatty acid: long chain of carbon and hydrogen Saturated fatty acid: no carbon-to carbon double bond Unsaturated fatty acid: at least one carbon-to-carbon double bond Function: long term energy storage and insulation and buoyancy Triglycerides are completely hydrophobic http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp03/0302002.html 2. Phospholipids Structure: 1 glycerol + 2 fatty acids + 1 phosphate head Phospholipids are amphipathic: polar head and nonpolar tail Function: form phospholipid bilayer in cell membranes http://www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios100/l ectures/membranes01.htm http://www.wisconline.com/objects/ViewObject.aspx?I D=AP1101 3. Waxes and steroids Waxes: protection and prevent water loss Steroids: chemical messengers in a body E. Proteins 1. Structure: long chains of amino acids linked by http://www2.nl.edu/jste/biochem.htm 2. Amino acids: there are 20 different amino acids each with different R group There are 100,000 different proteins yet only 20 different amino acids. How? http://bcs.whfreeman.com/thelifewire/content/chp03/0302002.html 3. Protein folding As a protein is made, it folds into a particular shape. o The shape of a protein is important in the job it does o The way a protein folds is determined by o Different proteins perform different jobs because Proteins can also unfold by denaturation due to changes in temp and pH When a protein unfolds 4. Function of Proteins Transport molecules Defense Structure/support/movement Enzymes 5. Enzymes Protein catalysts that speed up a chemical reaction Lower the activation energy needed to start a reaction Each enzyme only catalyzes one reaction How enzymes work: o Substrate binds to enzyme’s active site like lock and key o In active site, substrate is converted to product o Product leaves active site and enzyme is free to work on another reaction http://www.stolaf.edu/people/giannini/fla shanimat/enzymes/enzyme.swf http://highered.mcgrawhill.com/sites/0072943696/student_view0/ chapter2/animation__how_enzymes_wor k.html Enzyme reactions are affected by temperature and pH o All enzymes have an optimal temperature and pH where they produce the most amount of product EX: o Above the optimal temp the enzyme o Below the optimal temp the enzyme and substrate are moving more slowly so they react less F. Nucleic Acids 1. structure: many nucleotides linked by 2. nucleotides: a 5 carbon sugar, a phosphate, 1 of 4 bases 3. Function: DNA: stores hereditary information RNA: expresses hereditary information