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Organic Chemistry, 6th Edition L. G. Wade, Jr. Chapter 25 Lipids Jo Blackburn Richland College, Dallas, TX Dallas County Community College District 2006, Prentice Hall Introduction • Classified by solubility, not structure. • Can be extracted from cells by nonpolar organic solvents. • Complex lipids are easily hydrolyzed. Waxes Triglycerides • Simple lipids are not easily hydrolyzed. Steroids Prostaglandins Terpenes Chapter 25 => 2 Examples of Lipids => Chapter 25 3 Waxes • Esters of long-chain fatty acids with long-chain alcohols. • Spermaceti is found in the head of the sperm whale and is probably used to control buoyancy. • Most natural waxes are protective coats for plants’ leaves, insects’ exoskeletons, mammals’ fur, and birds’ feathers. => Chapter 25 4 Triglycerides • Fatty acid esters of glycerol. • Fats Solid at room temperature Most are derived from mammals • Oils Liquid at room temperature Most are derived from plants or coldblooded animals. Chapter 25 => 5 Fatty Acids • Unbranched carboxylic acids with 12-20 carbons. • Most contain an even number of carbons because they are built from acetic acid units. • Melting points increase with increasing molecular weights. • Unsaturation greatly lowers the melting point. => Chapter 25 6 Melting Points • A cis double bond bends the molecule so it cannot pack efficiently. • A trans double bond has less effect. Chapter 25 => 7 Fats and Oils • Most fats have saturated fatty acids. • Most oils have unsaturated fatty acids. => Chapter 25 8 Saponification • “Soap-making” • Base-catalyzed hydrolysis of ester linkages in fats and oils. CH2 OH O CH2 O C O (CH2)16CH3 CH O C O (CH2)16CH3 CH2 O C CH OH CH2 OH + 3 NaOH O +- + 3 Na O C (CH2)16CH3 Chapter 25 A soap (CH2)16CH3 => 9 Soap Structure => Chapter 25 10 Grease in Soap Solution => Chapter 25 11 Detergents => Chapter 25 12 Phospholipids • Contain a phosphate ester bond. • Phosphoglycerides usually have one phosphoric acid group and two fatty acids. • The phosphate may have an additional alcohol attached by an ester linkage. O CH2 O C O (CH2)14CH3 CH O C O (CH2)14CH3 + CH2 O P O CH2CH2NH3 O_ Chapter 25 => 13 Lipid Bilayer Cell membranes are a bilayer of phosphoglycerides Chapter 25 14 => 18 12 CH3 Steroids 2 3 17 11 19 CH3 C 13 D 16 1 14 9 8 15 10 H A B 5 7 4 H 6 • Polycyclic, usually all trans. • Common structural features: =O or -OH at C3 Side chain at C17 Double bond from C5 to either C4 or C6. => Chapter 25 15 A-B Ring Junction May be cis, but usually is trans. => Chapter 25 16 Cholesterol CH3 CH3 3 HO 5 H 17 H H H 6 H • Common biological intermediate. • Probably a precursor to other steroids. • Side chain at C17 and double bond C5-C6. => Chapter 25 17 Sex Hormones CH3 CH3 H OH H CH3 H OH H H H O H H HO testosterone estradiol • Female hormone has an aromatic ring and one less methyl group than the male hormone. • Testosterone is converted to estradiol in the ovaries. => 18 Chapter 25 Prostaglandins • Biochemical regulators more powerful than steroids. • Regulate functions such as: Blood pressure Blood clotting Allergic response Digestive activity Labor onset => Chapter 25 19 Structure of Prostaglandins • Cyclopentane ring with two long side chains trans to each other. • Most have 20 carbon atoms. • Derived from arachidonic acid. => Chapter 25 20 Terpenes • • • • • Composed of 5-carbon isopentyl groups. Isolated from plants’ essential oils. C:H ratio of 5:8, or close to that. Pleasant taste or fragrant aroma. Examples: Anise oil Bay leaves => Chapter 25 21 Structure of Terpenes Two or more isoprene units, 2-methyl-1,3butadiene with some modification of the double bonds. myrcene, from bay leaves => Chapter 25 22 Classification • Terpenes are classified by the number of carbons they contain, in groups of 10. • A monoterpene has 10 C’s, 2 isoprenes. • A diterpene has 20 C’s, 4 isoprenes. • A sesquiterpene has 15 C’s, 3 isoprenes. => Chapter 25 23 Terpenoids => Chapter 25 24 End of Chapter 25 Chapter 25 25