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Lipids Long Term Energy Storage. Lipids Excess Carbohydrates are converted to Lipids by the body Store house for Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen Building.

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Presentation on theme: "Lipids Long Term Energy Storage. Lipids Excess Carbohydrates are converted to Lipids by the body Store house for Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen Building."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lipids Long Term Energy Storage

2 Lipids Excess Carbohydrates are converted to Lipids by the body Store house for Carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen Building Blocks of Cell Membranes Essential for forming Hormones Energy Storage Units (Fats)

3 Forms of Lipids Fats and Oils ( often referred to as the Neutral Fats) Store Energy Phospholipids Make Up Cell Membranes Steroids Regulate Body Processes

4 Simple Fats / Oils are Triglycerides 2 Basic Molecules in any FAT/OIL GLYCEROL + FATTY ACIDS

5 Triglyceride Fatty Acid G l c y e r o l

6 What is Glycerol? C C C H H HHH OHOH OH

7 Fatty Acid C CCCCC H H HHH HHHHH H O HO a hydrocarbon chain with COOH attached (COOH is called the carboxyl group)

8 Formation of a Triglyceride Simple lipids are fats or triglycerides – contain an alcohol called glycerol and at least one fatty acid.

9 C CCCCC H H HHH HHHHH H O C CCCCC H H HHH HHHHH H O H H HHH C C C O O O Dehydration Synthesis 1 Glycerol + 3 FA’s = 1 Triglyceride + 3 H 2 O

10 FATTY ACID COMES IN 2 FLAVOURS SATURATED AND UNSATURATED contain only C, H and O Fatty Acids are generally 16 – 18 carbons long Saturated fats have saturated fatty acids Ex. The animal fats Ex. Bacon fat, butter Solid at room temperature have single bonded hydrogens at every position along the carbon chain no double bonds – not good

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12 FATTY ACIDS … unsaturated fats have unsaturated fatty acids plant oils  liquid at room temperature Canola oil Safflower oil Olive oil have one or more double bonds

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14 Fat cells -- note nucleus and rim of cytoplasm pushed to one side by the accumulation of fat. Fat is formed when a molecule of glycerol combines with Fatty Acid Molecules

15 Phospholipid = Complex Lipids Fatty Acid G l c y e r o l Phosphate

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17 PHOSPHOLIPIDS polar heads –negatively charged because of phosphate / nitrogen groups –These are water friendly or “hydrophilic” and are soluble in water nonpolar tails – “hydrophobic” and tend to turn away from water whenever possible similar to triglycerides except that a phosphate group replaces one of the fatty acids thus elements present are = C, H, O, P

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19 Phospholipids & Membranes PL’s make the backbone of cell membranes Polar head faces out Non-polar tails face in This creates a membrane Helps to create the lipid bi-layer we see in cells

20 Emulsification has occurred – soaps, detergents, bile salts from the gall bladder do this

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22 Polar End Toward Water / Nonpolar End on Inside

23 Phospholipids are great in SOAPS emulsifiers –emulsification = to break up into smaller globules not lipids but help to emulsify lipids bile emulsifies fats in the digestive tract

24 Emulsification has occurred – soaps, detergents, bile salts from the gall bladder do this

25 Steroids Backbone of 4 fused carbon rings

26 Steroids 1.Usually 4 carbon rings fused together. 2.Lipids that have no fatty acids. 3.Different functional groups attached CHOLESTEROL is the basic building block for several steroids like TESTOSTERONE and ESTROGEN

27 Important Steroids Cholesterol Vitamin D Estrogen Testosterone

28 Anabolic-androgenic steroids are man- made substances related to male sex hormones. Can be taken orally or injected, typically in cycles of weeks or months.

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31 Atherosclerosis Atherosclerosis (ath"er-o-skleh-RO'sis) comes from the Greek words athero (meaning gruel or paste) and sclerosis (hardness). It's the name of the process in which deposits of fatty substances, cholesterol, cellular waste products, calcium and other substances build up in the inner lining of an artery. This buildup is called plaque. It usually affects large and medium- sized arteries.

32 Atherosclerosis

33 1 is the Lumen Opening 2 is Plaque (Fat) 3 is Artery Wall Nearly 5 million Americans are living with heart failure, and 550,000 new cases are diagnosed each year.

34 Picture A shows atherosclerotic deposits in coronary arteries, which reduce blood flow and impair oxygen and nutrient supply to millions of heart muscle cells. The coronary arteries of patients with angina pectoris typically look like this. Picture B shows the coronary arteries of a patient who died from a heart attack. On top of the atherosclerotic deposits, a blood clot formed which completely interrupted the blood flow through this artery. This is called a heart attack. Millions of heart muscle cells die off, leaving the heart muscle permanently impaired or leading to the death of the patient.

35 Brown Fat Fat cells that appear darker because of more mitochondria.

36 Brown Fat in a Human Baby Brown fat deposits are found in newborn and hibernating mammals, and can produce heat to warm the body.

37 Leading Cause of Atherosclerosis?


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