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Unit III: Lively Molecules Organic Molecules & Enzymes Chapter 2 – pp 50, 59 - 68 Review 1. What are the primary types of passive transport? 2. What are the two types of carrier-mediated transport? 3. Which of the following processes could occur only in the plasma membrane of a living cell? a.) simple diffusion, b.) filtration, c.) active transport, d.) osmosis 4. Osmosis is a special case of a.) pinocytosis, b.) carrier-mediated transport, c.) active transport, d.) facilitated diffusion, e.) simple diffusion 5. What were the three tonicities of osmosis? Organic Molecules The important organic molecules found in living things: Carbohydrates Sugar Starch Lipids Proteins Nucleic Acids Fat Enzymes Deoxyribonucleic Structural Proteins Ribonucleic Acid Cellulose All contain Carbon, Hydrogen, and generally Oxygen. Organic Molecules Carbohydrates • Hydrophilic organic molecule • General formula – (CH2O)n – for glucose formula is C6H12O6 • Names of carbohydrates – word root sacchar- or the suffix -ose often used • monosaccharide or glucose Carbohydrates Monosaccharides • Simple sugars • General formula is C6H12O6 • Structural isomers • Major monosaccharides – glucose, galactose and fructose • glucose is blood sugar Carbohydrates Disaccharides • Composed of 2 monosaccharides • Major disaccharides – Sucrose = table sugar • glucose + fructose – Lactose = sugar in milk • glucose + galactose – Maltose = grain products • glucose + glucose Carbohydrates Polysaccharides • Long chains of glucose • Cellulose: • Starch: • Glycogen: Carbohydrates Functions • Converted to glucose and oxidized to make ATP • Conjugated carbohydrate = – glycolipids – glycoproteins – proteoglycans • gels that hold cells and tissues together Organic Molecules Lipids • Hydrophobic organic molecule – composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen • Less oxidized and thus has more calories/gram • Five primary types in humans Lipids Fatty Acids • Chain of 4 to 24 carbon atoms – carboxyl (acid) group on one end – methyl group on the other • Classified – saturated – unsaturated - Lipids Triglycerides (neutral fat) • 3 fatty acids bonded to glycerol molecule • dehydration synthesis • At room temperature – when liquid called oils – when solid called fat • Function - Lipids Phospholipids • Triglyceride with a phosphate group • Amphiphilic character – fatty acid “tails” are hydrophobic – phosphate “head” is hydrophilic Glycocalyx (extracellular carbohydrates) Integral protein with channel Glycolipid CYTOPLASM Integral glycoproteins Lipids Eicosanoids • Derived from a fatty acid • Hormone-like chemical signals between cells • Includes prostaglandins – – role in inflammation, blood clotting, hormone action, labor contractions, blood vessel diameter Lipids Steroids and Cholesterol • Steroid = • cortisol, progesterone, estrogens, testosterone and bile acids • Cholesterol • naturally produced by our body Organic Molecules Proteins Amino group Central carbon • Polymer of amino acids Carboxylic acid group R group (variable side chain of one or more atoms) • Amino acid = – Amino (NH2), carboxyl (COOH) and radical group (R group) • 20 unique amino acids – -R groups differ – properties determined by -R group Proteins Peptides • Peptide = • Named for the number of amino acids – dipeptides – tripeptides – polypeptides – proteins have more than 50 Proteins Structure • Primary structure • Secondary structure – hydrogen bonds between negative C=O and positive N-H groups • Tertiary structure • Quaternary structure – associations of two or more separate polypeptide chains Proteins • Conformation – • opening and closing of cell membrane pores • Denaturation – destroys function • extreme heat or pH Protein Functions • • • • • Structure: Communication: Membrane Transport: Recognition and protection: Movement – molecular motor = • Cell adhesion: • Catalysis: enzymes Enzymes • Proteins as biological catalysts • Catalyst – a substance that can increase the rate at which a chemical reaction takes place without actually entering into the reaction. – promote rapid reaction rates Enzymes • Activation energy = – Example: add heat energy or raise the temperature of the reactants • Enzymes (catalysts) speed up reactions by lowering the activation energy Activation energy Energy Energy Activation Energy Activation energy Progress of reaction Progress of reaction Without a catalyst With a catalyst Steps of an Enzyme Reaction 1. The active site on an enzyme molecule fits the shape of the substrate molecule 2. Substrate binds to active site forming enzyme-substrate complex 3. Enzyme breaks bonds in substrate – Reaction products released • Enzyme repeats process over and over Steps of an Enzyme Reaction Cofactors and Coenzymes • Cofactors – nonprotein partners (iron, copper, zinc, magnesium or calcium ions) – bind to enzyme and change its shape • Coenzymes – organic cofactors derived from water-soluble vitamins (niacin, riboflavin) – transfer electrons between enzymes Cofactors • Example: amylase – Catalyzes the conversion of starch to sugar – Works best with NaCl Enzymatic Action • Astonishing speed • Temperature and extremes in pH – alter the structure or denature them – enzymes vary in optimum pH • Between a pH of 2 – 9.5 – temperature optimum = 37°C Metabolic Pathways • Chain of reactions • Regulation of metabolic pathways – activation or deactivation of the enzymes – cells can turn on or off pathways