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Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules Organic Molecules • Why is this important? • Cells are mostly water and carbon-based molecules • Carbon has a valence of 4 so it will form a tremendous variety of large, complex and diverse molecules • Large variety of molecules = diversity of life Unity in Diversity • All life is composed of carbon compounds (Unity) • Diversity of life is due to various ways carbon can be assembled • Organic chemistry = study of the compounds formed by carbon Organic Chemistry • The four valence electrons in carbon enable it to be bonded in four different directions • Usually forms COVALENT bonds with Hydrogen • Often oxygen, nitrogen • Four most common elements are: CHON 1 1 6+ 1 1 Hydrocarbons ISOMER Ethane Functional group Ethanol • Functional groups – • • • • groups of atoms that have properties/role on the molecule OH – hydroxide (polar) NH2 – amino (polar) COOH – carboxyl (polar) CH3 – methyl (nonpolar) Organic Chemistry • Biochemistry - chemistry of living things • Functional groups change the chemical properties/function of a molecule • The great diversity of life is caused by only a few molecules with different arrangements of functional groups The rearrangement of FUNCTIONAL GROUPS on a molecule causes major changes in the molecule’s function Biochemistry • Four basic carbon molecules important to all living things: • Carbohydrates • Lipids •Proteins • Nucleic acids Biochemistry • The four basic molecules are long chains of smaller molecules linked together • A train formed by various types of cars Biochemistry • Smaller molecules are called MONOMERS • Long chains are called……… •POLYMERS • Polymers are large molecules • MACROMOLECULES – large polymer What You Have to Know: • For each of the 4 types of molecules: 1. The types and names of the monomers 2. The role of each molecule in life How Are Organic Compounds Formed? • Monomers = smaller functional molecules that can be linked together • Macromolecule = ‘large molecule’ • Polymers = macromolecules formed by linking monomers together Polymerization • Many monomers are linked together to form macromolecules • Dehydration synthesis How Are Organic Compounds Formed? • Dehydration synthesis • OH- combines with OHfrom adjacent monomer • OH + OH = HOH + O • HOH = H2O • All four compounds important to life are formed by dehydration synthesis Macromolecules – dehydration synthesis Monomers/Polymers • Hydrolysis - breaking down polymers into monomers 4 Types of Macromolecules Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids Carbohydrates • Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen • C(n)H2O – C6H12O6 – glucose – C6H12O6 - fructose – C5H10O5 - ribose – C12H22O11 – sucrose Carbohydrates • Sugars; three types: – Monosaccharides ‘one sugar’ – Disaccharides ‘two sugar’ – Oligosaccharides ‘few sugar’ – Polysaccharides ‘many sugar’ Carbohydrates – Monomers • Simple sugars • Monosaccharides – ‘one sweet’ – Glucose, fructose, ribose, deoxyribose, galactose Carbohydrates: Monomers • Glucose; #1 sugar, most used sugar for energy in most organisms • Fructose; very sweet (fruits) • Most monosaccharides are used as a source of energy – Ribose and deoxyribose form part of the structure of DNA, RNA Di-saccharides • Di = ‘two’ • Two monosaccharides joined together by DEHYDRATION SYNTHESIS • Energy storage • Glucose + glucose = maltose; germinating seeds, malt in beer • Glucose + fructose = sucrose; table sugar • Galactose + glucose = lactose; milk Oligosaccharides • ‘few’ • Short chains of monosaccharides on the outside of the cell membrane • Cell-to-cell communication, identification Polysaccharides • • • • • ‘Poly’ = many Long chain of monosaccharides Starch Glycogen Cellulose Polysaccharides • Examples: – _______ – used to make cell walls of plants; indigestible without bacteria in gut; fiber – ______ - cell walls of fungi; cells of arthropods – ______ – stored glucose in plants – _______ – stored glucose in animals Check Point • What is the primary function of carbs? • Plant cell walls are made of ____ • What is the process by which macromolecules are assembled _____ • By what process are macromolecules broken down? _____ • Name 2 monosaccharides • What is a hydrocarbon? _____ Types of Macromolecules Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids Lipids • Three types of lipids: –Triglycerides –Phospholipids –Steroids Triglycerides • • • • • Fats, Oils, Waxes Insoluble in water – nonpolar Glycerol + three fatty acids Dehydration synthesis Lots of C-H bonds (energy) Triglycerides • 2 types of triglycerides: – Saturated – Unsaturated • Saturated fats have no double bonds; are full (saturated) with hydrogen – Arteriosclerosis Saturated fatty acid Saturated fatty Unsaturated fatty acid Unsaturated fatty acid acids Types of Fats • • • • • • Saturated No double bonds Saturated w/ H Solids @ (200) Animal fats Bacon grease, lard, butter • • • • • • Unsaturated Double bond(s) Unsaturated Liquids @ (200) Plant fats (oil) Corn, peanut, olive oils Fats: Functions • Store energy – More energy in fats than in carbs; birds eat sunflower seeds first • Padding (eye, other organs) • Insulation (keep you warmer; seals, whales) • Waterproofing - oils Lipids - Phospholipids • Triglyceride - One of the fatty acid ‘tails’ is replaced with a phosphate group • Phospho – lipid • Major component of cell membrane Fatty acids Steroids • Cholesterol – basic molecule used in cell membrane; also used to make other steroids (estrogen and testosterone) Lipids: Steroids • Sex hormones: • Testosterone; male • Estrogen; female Lipids: Steroids • Anabolic steroids = artificially created testosterone • Mimics male hormone • Increased muscle mass • Decreased sex drive, infertility • Heart, liver problems Lipids - Steroids • Anabolic steroids – synthetic variations of testosterone • Builds muscle and bone mass during puberty; maintains male characteristics • Used in 1950’s to treat anemia and muscle diseases • Abused by athletes; linked to liver damage, cardiovascular, mood swings Steroids • Insoluble in water (nonpolar) • Very different from other lipids in structure • 4 fused carbon rings with various FUNCTIONAL GROUPS Proteins • Composed of AMINO ACIDS (monomers) • 20 different amino acids • Differences between the 20 amino acids are caused by different R (side) groups Different amino acids caused by different side groups Amino Acids • Amino acids are linked together by dehydration synthesis • Bonds formed between amino acids are BONDS • Long chain of peptides = polypeptide PEPTIDE • Amino acids are linked together in a specific sequence • Conformational shape specific 3d shape of a protein • If the sequence gets messed up, the protein may not function. May be fatal or only cause health problems • Denaturation – change in the conformational shape keeping the protein from functioning Conformational Shape • H bonding helps determine shape • Breaking the H bond changes the shape of the protein – (denaturation) – Heat - cooking changes the shape of proteins; turn brown; eggs turn white – Poisons – chemicals change shape by interrupting bonds (acids, bases, acetone) Proteins - Functions 1. Structure – feathers, hair, muscle, nail, horn 2. Enzymes – speed up reactions 3. Hormones – chemical messengers 4. Carriers – hemoglobin carries oxygen to cells Enzymes • Speed up chemical reactions without being changed • Reduce activation energy Nucleic Acids • Monomers – NUCLEOTIDES • Nucleotides: – A simple sugar – A phosphate group – A NITROGENOUS BASE H bonding Adenine always bonds with Thymine Cytosine always bonds with guanine A-T C-G ATTC C G CATG G GTCTTTT TAA G G C G TA C C CA G AAAA DNA sequence = “genetic code” TACCATACTTTCGGCTACTTTTGGG ATGGTATGATATCCGATGATAACCC TACCATACTATAGGCTACTATTGGG If A-T and C-G, what is the complimentary strand? Similarities in DNA sequences indicates close evolutionary relationship