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Chapter 5 The Structure and Function of Macromolecules 1 Carbon Chemistry • Organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds • Carbon atoms can form diverse molecules by bonding to four other atoms • Carbon compounds range from simple molecules to complex ones • Carbon has four valence electrons and may form single, double, triple, or quadruple bonds 2 Isomers • Isomers are molecules with the same molecular formula but different structures and properties • Three types of isomers are – Structural H – Geometric H C H H C H H H H H H H H – Enantiomers H C C C C C H H C C C H (a) Structural isomers H H H H H H H H (b) Geometric isomers X H C C X H H X CO2H (c) Enantiomers H C CH3 C C X H CO2H NH2 NH2 C CH3 H 3 Figure 4.7 A-C • Enantiomers Are important in the pharmaceutical industry Figure 4.8 L-Dopa D-Dopa (effective against Parkinson’s disease) (biologically inactive) 4 • Pararhodopsin (inactive) and rhodopsin (active) – made by rods in the retina • Conversion between the two is done by an enzyme complex that requires Vitamin A 5 The Molecules of Life • Overview: – Another level in the hierarchy of biological organization is reached when small organic molecules are joined together – Atom ---> molecule --- compound 6 Macromolecules – Are large molecules composed of smaller molecules – Are complex in their structures Figure 5.1 7 Macromolecules •Most macromolecules are polymers, built from monomers • Four classes of life’s organic molecules are polymers – Carbohydrates – Proteins – Nucleic acids – Lipids 8 • A polymer – Is a long molecule consisting of many similar building blocks called monomers – Specific monomers make up each macromolecule – E.g. amino acids are the monomers for proteins 9 The Synthesis and Breakdown of Polymers • Monomers form larger molecules by condensation reactions called dehydration synthesis HO 1 2 3 H Unlinked monomer Short polymer Dehydration removes a water molecule, forming a new bond HO 1 2 H HO 3 H 2O 4 H Longer polymer Figure 5.2A (a) Dehydration reaction in the synthesis of a polymer 10 The Synthesis and Breakdown of Polymers • Polymers can disassemble by – Hydrolysis (addition of water molecules) HO 1 2 3 4 Hydrolysis adds a water molecule, breaking a bond HO 1 2 3 H H H 2O HO H Figure 5.2B (b) Hydrolysis of a polymer 11 • Although organisms share the same limited number of monomer types, each organism is unique based on the arrangement of monomers into polymers • An immense variety of polymers can be built from a small set of monomers 12 Carbohydrates • Serve as fuel and building material • Include both sugars and their polymers (starch, cellulose, etc.) • 1:2:1 ratio of C:H:O 13 Sugars • Monosaccharides – Are the simplest sugars – Can be used for fuel – Can be converted into other organic molecules – Can be combined into polymers 14 Types of Monosaccharides Triose – formula ______ ex. glyceraldehyde and dihydroxyacetone Tetrose – formula Pentose- formula ____ Ex. ribose Hexose – formula ____ ex. glucose, dextrose, fructose, galactose Heptose – formula ____ 15 • Examples of monosaccharides Triose sugars Pentose sugars (C3H6O3) (C5H10O5) Aldoses H C O H O C H O C H C OH H C OH H C OH H C OH H C OH HO C H C OH H H C OH H Glyceraldehyde H H H H C OH H HO C H C OH HO C H H C OH H C OH H C OH H C OH H H Glucose Galactose H C OH C O H C OH C O O C OH H C OH HO H H C OH H C OH Dihydroxyacetone H C OH H C OH H C OH H H O H H C OH C Ketoses H C Ribose Figure 5.3 Hexose sugars (C6H12O6) Ribulose C H H Fructose 16 • Monosaccharides – May be linear – Can form rings H H HO H H H O 1C 2 6CH C OH C H C OH 3 4 5 C 6 C OH OH 2OH 5C H 4C OH 3 H OH C H 6CH O H 2C OH H 1C H O H 4C OH 2OH 5C H OH 3C H CH2OH O H H 1C 2C OH OH 6 H 5 4 HO H OH 3 H O H 1 2 OH OH H Figure 5.4 (a) Linear and ring forms. Chemical equilibrium between the linear and ring structures greatly favors the formation of rings. To form the glucose ring, carbon 1 bonds to the oxygen attached to carbon 5. 17 What is the difference between alpha and beta glucose? Top of page 73 in your book 18 • Disaccharides – Consist of two monosaccharides – Are joined by a bond called a glycosidic linkage – These bonds are numbered. The numbers come from what two carbons the bond forms between 19 • Example: In sucrose, glucose and fructose are bonded together by a 1-2 glycosidic linkage. The 1 C on the glucose molecule and the 2 C on the fructose molecule. Extremely important that you know the numbers. 20 (a) Dehydration reaction in the synthesis of maltose. The bonding of two glucose units H forms maltose. The glycosidic link joins the number 1 carbon of one glucose to the HO number 4 carbon of the second glucose. Joining the glucose monomers in a different way would result in a different disaccharide. H (b) Dehydration reaction H in the synthesis of O sucrose. Sucrose is a disaccharide formed from glucose and fructose. Notice that fructose, though a hexose like glucose, forms a five-sided ring. CH2OH CH2OH O H OH H H H H OH HO H OH H 2O H O H Glucose CH2OH H O H HO H 2O O H H OHOH H HO H O H H OH O H CH2OH H 1–4 1 glycosidic linkage HO OH H Fructose H O H H O H H OH OH Maltose H H 4 O CH2OH O H OH Glucose Glucose CH2O H O H O H H H OH CH2OH CH2OH H HO H O H O H OH H 1–2 H glycosidic 1 linkage O CH2OH O 2 H HO H CH2OH OH H Sucrose Figure 5.5 21 Maltose is glu + glu with a 1 – 4 glycosidic linkage. Maltose is the sugar in beer, found in germinating grain and some in corn syrup. If you turn the second glucose molecule around so that the bond is a 1 – 1 glycosidic linkage, you don’t get maltose. You get trehalose which is the sugar found in insects’ blood (also used in some hair care products). 22 Polysaccharides • Polysaccharides – Are polymers of sugars – Serve many roles in organisms 23 Storage Polysaccharides Chloroplast Starch • Starch – Is a polymer consisting entirely of glucose monomers – Is the major storage form of glucose in plants 1 m Amylose Amylopectin Figure 5.6(a) Starch: a plant polysaccharide 24 • Glycogen – Consists of glucose monomers – Is the major storage form of glucose in animals in liver Mitochondria Giycogen granules 0.5 m Glycogen Figure 5.6(b) Glycogen: an animal polysaccharide 25 • Glucagon – made by the alpha cells in the islet of Langerhans in the pancreas breaks glycogen down and makes it glucose again (glycogenolysis) Insulin is made by beta cells of the islet of Langerhans They are antagonistic hormones. 26 Structural Polysaccharides • Cellulose – Is a polymer of glucose 27 – Has different glycosidic linkages than starch H 4 H O CH2O H O HO H H H O H H H O H glucose O C H H O H C H C H C O H H O H O H O H C C CH2O H O H O H H H 4 H O O H H O H 1 H glucose (a) and glucose ring structures H O CH2O H O O H 1 O 4 CH2O H O O H 1 O 4 CH2O H O O H 1 O 4 CH2O H O O H H O Figure 5.7 A–C O H 1 O 4 O H O CH2O H O O H O O H O O O H H H (b) Starch: 1– 4 linkage of glucose monomers CH2O H O O H 1 O H O O H O O CH2O CH2O O O H H H H (c) Cellulose: 1– 4 linkage of glucose monomers O H 28 – Is a major component of the tough walls that enclose plant cells Cell walls Cellulose microfibrils in a plant cell wall Microfibril About 80 cellulose molecules associate to form a microfibril, the main architectural unit of the plant cell wall. 0.5 m Plant cells Parallel cellulose molecules are held together by hydrogen bonds between hydroxyl groups attached to carbon atoms 3 and 6. Figure 5.8 OH CH2OH OH CH2OH O O O O OH OH OH OH O O O O O O CH OH OH CH2OH 2 H CH2OH OH CH2OH OH O O O O OH OH OH OH O O O O O O CH OH OH CH 2 2OH H CH2OH OH OH CH2OH O O O O OH OH OH O O OH O O O O CH OH OH CH2OH 2 H Glucose monomer Cellulose molecules A cellulose molecule is an unbranched glucose polymer. 29 • Cellulose is difficult to digest – Cows have microbes in their stomachs to facilitate this process Figure 5.9 30 • Chitin, another important structural polysaccharide – Is found in the exoskeleton of arthropods – Can be used as surgical thread CH2O H O OH H H OH H OH H H NH C O CH3 (b) Chitin forms the exoskeleton (a) The structure of the of arthropods. This cicada chitin monomer. is molting, shedding its old exoskeleton and emerging Figure 5.10 A–C in adult form. (c) Chitin is used to make a strong and flexible surgical thread that decomposes after the wound or incision heals. 31 Nucleic Acids • Nucleic acids store and transmit hereditary information • Genes – Are the units of inheritance – Program the amino acid sequence of polypeptides – Are made of nucleotide sequences on DNA 32 The Roles of Nucleic Acids • There are two types of nucleic acids – Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) – Ribonucleic acid (RNA) 33 Deoxyribonucleic Acid • DNA – Stores information for the synthesis of specific proteins – Found in the nucleus of cells 34 DNA Functions – Directs RNA synthesis (transcription) – Directs protein synthesis through RNA DNA (translation) 1 Synthesis of mRNA in the nucleus NUCLEUS 2 Movement of mRNA into cytoplasm via nuclear pore mRNA CYTOPLASM mRNA Ribosome 3 Synthesis of protein Figure 5.25 Polypeptide Amino acids 35 The Structure of Nucleic Acids 5’ end • Nucleic acids – Exist as polymers called polynucleotides 5’C O 3’C O O 5’C O 3’C (a) Polynucleotide, or nucleic acid Figure 5.26 OH 3’ end 36 • Each polynucleotide – Consists of monomers called nucleotides – Sugar + phosphate + nitrogen base Nucleoside Nitrogenous base O O P 5’C O CH2 O O Phosphate group Figure 5.26 3’C Pentose sugar (b) Nucleotide 37 Nucleotide Monomers • Nucleotide monomers Nitrogenous bases Pyrimidines NH2 O O C C CH C 3 N CH C CH HN HN CH C CH C C CH N N O N O O H H H Cytosine Thymine (in DNA)Uracil (in RNA) RNA) Uracil (in U C U T – Are made up of nucleosides (sugar + base) and phosphate groups Purines O NH2 N C C N C C NH N HC HC C CH N C N NH2 N N H H Adenine Guanine A G 5” Pentose sugars HOCH2 O 4’ OH H H 1’ 5” HOCH2 O OH 4’ H H 1’ H H H 3’ 2’ H 3’ 2’ OH H OH OH Deoxyribose (in DNA) Ribose (in RNA) Figure 5.26 (c) Nucleoside components 38 Nucleotide Polymers • Nucleotide polymers – Are made up of nucleotides linked by the–OH group on the 3´ carbon of one nucleotide and the phosphate on the 5´ carbon on the next 39 Gene • The sequence of bases along a nucleotide polymer – Is unique for each gene 40 The DNA Double Helix • Cellular DNA molecules – Have two polynucleotides that spiral around an imaginary axis – Form a double helix 41 • The DNA double helix – Consists of two antiparallel nucleotide strands 5’ end 3’ end Sugar-phosphate backbone Base pair (joined by hydrogen bonding) Old strands A 3’ end Nucleotide about to be added to a new strand 5’ end 3’ end Figure 5.27 5’ end New strands 3’ end 42 A,T,C,G • The nitrogenous bases in DNA – Form hydrogen bonds in a complementary fashion (A with T only, and C with G only) 43 DNA and Proteins as Tape Measures of Evolution • Molecular comparisons – Help biologists sort out the evolutionary connections among species 44 45