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Chapter 5 The Structure and Function of Macromolecules 3 themes are emphasized Hierarchy of structural levels Emergent properties Form fits function Polymers Monomers- units that comprise a polymer Polymer- long molecule consisting of many similar or identical building blocks linked by covalent bonds Polymer formation Condensation reaction- linking of monomers through the loss of a water molecule (dehydration reaction) Polymer formation One molecules provides the hydroxyl group (-OH) and the other the hydrogen (-H). Requires energy and enzymes Polymer disassembly Hydrolysis- dissemble polymers Water is added to break a bond Ex: digestion- food polymers broken down by enzymes Classes of Polymers Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic Acids Other Carbohydrates Monomers called monosaccharides Cellular use: energy, energy storage, structure (C, 2H, O)n Monosaccharides, disaccharides, and polysaccharides Monosaccharides Glucose Aldehydes and ketones Linear and ring forms Disaccharides 2 monosaccharides, sucrose = glucose+fructose Joined by a condensation synthesis called a glycosidic linkage. Polysaccharides Several hundred or more monosaccharides Energy storage: starch and glycogen Structural: cellulose and chitin Starch Storage of polysaccaharides in plants, made up glucose monomers Provides a way to store surplus glucose, energy can be withdrawn by hydrolysis Humans have enzymes that can hydrolyze plant starch. High sources of starch found in potatoes, grains (wheat, corn, rice). Glycogen Used by animals to store glucose. More extensively branched than plant starch. Stored mainly in liver and muscle cells. Humans can only store enough energy for about a day. Cellulose Polysaccharide used by plants from structure. Similar to starch except in the location of the glucose bond: Starch- alpha linkage, helical shape Cellulose- beta linkage, straight shape Opposing hydroxyl groups bond with other strands, creating strong fibers. Why don’t humans eat grass? Chitin structural polysaccharide used by arthropods (insects, spiders, crustaceans) to build their exoskeleton Also used by fungi rather than cellulose for their cell walls. Similar to cellulose except has a nitrogen appendage to the glucose. Lipids Fats Not polymers but Large molecules, composed of smaller molecules, assembled by dehydration reactions Not soluble in water. C-H bonds are non polar Triglycerides Fat molecule = Triacylglycerol (or triglyceride) Triacyglycerol= Glycerol + 3 fatty acids Linked by ester linkage (condensation reaction) Oils and fats Animal fat vs. Plant and Fish fat Saturated fat vs unsaturated fat Animal fat- usually saturated- solid at room temperature Plant and fish fatusually unsaturatedliquid at room temperature Fat- what is it good for? Fat- stores energy 1 gram of fat stores 2x energy as starch Stored in adipose cells Cushions vital organs Provide insulation Phospholipids 2 fatty acids + phosphate group + glycerol Phospholipids Various molecules attach to the phosphate group Tails are hydrophobic Heads are hydrophilic What do they do in water? Phospholipids When added to water- they self assemble so that they shield their hydrophobic tails Micelle- phospholipid droplet, phosphate heads on the outside, tails are restricted to the water-free interior Phospholipid bilayer- major component of cell membranes Steroids Four interlocking carbon rings Regulatory moleculessex hormones Cholesterol-precursor of many steroids Cholesterol is a component of cell membranes Cholesterol can contribute to atherosclerosis Proteins • • • • • • • Monomers called amino acids 20 different amino acids Joined by peptide linkage Chains of amino acids- polypeptide Function as support, storage, transport, signaling, defense, movement, and catalysts C, H, O, N, S Make up 50% of cellular DRY weight Tens of thousands different types in humans Enzymes- regulate metabolism, accelerate chemical reactions Amino Acid Structure Contains 3 functional groups Amino, carboxyl and R groups Polar, nonpolar, charged and uncharged Amino acid linkage Peptide bond- covalent bond catalyzed by a dehydration reaction Amino end: N-terminus Carboxyl end: C-terminus “Polypeptide” vs “Protein” Protein- one or more polypeptides twisted, folded, and coiled. Four Levels of Protein Organization Primary- sequence of amino acids Sequence determines function 20 different amino acids Lysozyme- protein that helps fight bacteria 129 amino acids long 20129 possible combinations Sickle cell disease is caused by one protein substitution in the structure of hemoglobin. Four Levels of Protein Organization Primary- sequence of amino acids Secondary- coils or folds Secondary- coils and folds Result from hydrogen bonding on the backbone of the chain (not the R groups) Oxygen and nitrogen are electronegative with partial negative charges. Hydrogen molecules attached to Nitrogen have partial positive charges. Secondary coil Alpha helixdelicate coil held together by hydrogen bonding between every fourth amino acid Secondary Fold Beta pleated sheet- two or more parallel chains. Held together by hydrogen bonds of the backbone. Four Levels of Protein Organization Primary- sequence of amino acids Secondary- coils or folds Tertiary- R group interaction Tertiary structure R groups interact Hydrophobic interaction Hydrophobic (nonpolar) R groups cluster at the core Held together by van der Waals interactions Tertiary structure Disulfide bridgesTwo sulfhyryl groups (-SH) form covalent bond Four Levels of Protein Organization Primary- sequence of amino acids Secondary- coils or folds Tertiary- R group interaction Quaternary Quaternary Structure Overall shape of the proteindetermines its function. Denaturationunraveling of a protein Reversable? Protein Research 100,000 – amino acid sequence is known 10,000- 3D shape is known X-Ray crystallography Chaperonins(chaperone proteins) Help proteins fold correctly Keeps them away from bad influences Nucleic Acids Monomers are nucleotides Polymers are 2 types: RNA and DNA Function: 1) control heredity 2) control cell functions DNA -> RNA -> Protein Purines and Pyrimidines Purines: 1) adenine and guanine 2) double ring structure Pyrimidines: 1) thymine, uracil, and cytosine 2) single ring Deoxyriboselacks an oxygen atom on its number 2 carbon Ribose Phosphodiester linkages- links between phosphate of one nucleotide to the sugar of the next DNA and RNA shape DNA- double stranded, double helix Shaped discovered by James Watson and Francis Crick in 1953 RNA- single stranded Nucleotides 3 parts: 5-C sugar, phosphate and nitrogenous base 2 types of sugars: ribose and deoxyribose 2 types of nitrogenous bases: purines and pyrimidines Evolutionary relationships Taxonomy- based on characteristics DNA sequencing- allows for taxonomy based on genetic closeness