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Organic Compounds Compounds that contain CARBON are called organic
Macromolecules are large organic molecules.
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Carbon (C) Carbon has 4 electrons in outer shell.
Carbon can form covalent bonds with as many as 4 other atoms (elements). Usually with: C, H, O or N.
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Macromolecules Large organic molecules. Also called POLYMERS.
Made up of smaller “building blocks”: MONOMERS.
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Four Major Types of Biological Macromolecules
Type of Polymer Monomers making up Polymer Example I. Carbohydrates (Polysaccharides) Monosaccharides Sugars, Starch, Cellulose II. Lipids (not true polymers) Fats, steroids, cholesterol III. Proteins Amino acids Enzymes, structural components IV. Nucleic Acids Nucleotides DNA, RNA
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I. Carbohydrates Made from monomers called monosaccharides (simple sugars) Short term energy Glucose: most common, used directly in cellular respiration to make ATP (energy)
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Figure 5.3 The structure and classification of some monosaccharides
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Disaccharides
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Polysaccharides: Complex Carbohydrates
3 major types made from monomers of glucose: Starch: energy storage in plants Glycogen: energy storage in animals Cellulose: structural molecules in plants
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Figure 5.6 Storage polysaccharides
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Figure 5.7a Starch and cellulose structures
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Figure 5.7b,c Starch and cellulose structures
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Figure 5.8 The arrangement of cellulose in plant cell walls
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II. Lipids Not true polymers
Composed of mostly glycerol and fatty acids Includes Fats: energy storage Phospholipids: membranes Steroids: hormones, cholesterol
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Fats are made of one glycerol and three fatty acids
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Double bonds, fewer H atoms No Double bonds, maximum H atoms
Double bonds between carbons cause kinks in hydrocarbons. H2C CH2 H2C CH2 H2C CH Kink CH H2C Figure: 4.8b Caption: (b) The double bond(s) found in an unsaturated hydrocarbon produce a “kink” (shown exaggerated) in an otherwise straight chain. The icon on the right indicates that one of the hydrocarbon tails in a phospholipid is unsaturated. Exercise Draw figures analogous to those in part (b) for a hydrocarbon chain containing two double bonds. (Hydrocarbon chains like these are called polyunsaturates because poly means “many.”) CH2 H2C Unsaturated fatty acid Saturated fatty acid CH2 H2C Double bonds, fewer H atoms No Double bonds, maximum H atoms
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Figure 5.11 Examples of saturated and unsaturated fats and fatty acids
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Phospholipids are made of one phosphate group and 2 fatty acids
Phospholipids are amphipathic
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Figure 5.13 Two structures formed by self-assembly of phospholipids in aqueous environments
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Figure 5.14 Cholesterol, a steroid
Steroids consist of a complex carbon ring structure Figure Cholesterol, a steroid
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Figure 4.8 A comparison of functional groups of female (estradiol) and male (testosterone) sex hormones
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III. Proteins H2N C R H O OH Made from monomers called amino acids
Very different structures, very different functions H2N Amino group C Side chain R H O OH Carboxyl
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The R groups of an amino acid may be hydrophobic or hydrophilic
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Amino acids are joined together by a dehydration reaction
H2N H C O OH Carboxyl group N CH3 Peptide bond Amino H2O +
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Many amino acids joined together = Polypeptide chain
N-terminus C-terminus H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H H O H N C C N C C N C C N C C N C C N C C N C C N C C OH H CH3 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH CH2 CH2 OH C OH H3C CH3 SH O Figure: 3.9b Caption: (b) Amino acids can be linked into long chains by peptide bonds. OH
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The sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide chain = the primary structure of a protein
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Hydrogen bonds between amino acids leads to the secondary structure of a protein
Two common secondary structures are the -helix and -pleated sheet
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Further folding of the polypeptide chain contributes to the tertiary structure of a protein
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The joining of more than one polypeptide chain leads to the quaternary structure of proteins
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Heat (energy) can break up the structure of a protein
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Table 5.1 An Overview of Protein Functions
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IV. Nucleic Acids Nucleic acids (DNA and RNA) are made of monomers called nucleotides Nitrogenous base Nitrogenous base Phosphate group Phosphate group Sugar Sugar
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Figure 5.29 The components of nucleic acids
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Space-filling model of
Figure 3.17b 5´ 3´ 5´ 3´ 5´ 3´ T A T DNA is a double helix. A G C G C C G C G T A A T T A A T C G C G G C G A T A T T A T A C G C G Figure: 3.17b Caption: (b) Complementary base pairing twists DNA into a double helix. T A T A G C T A A T G C C G T A A T 5´ 3´ 5´ 3´ 5´ 3´ Cartoon of base pairing Cartoon of double helix Space-filling model of double helix
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Nucleic acids store the information to make proteins
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Figure 5.30 The DNA double helix and its replication
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