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2.3 Carbon-based Molecules

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1 2.3 Carbon-based Molecules
How is carbon different from other atoms? Why is it essential to living things? 2.3 Carbon-based Molecules Key Concept: Carbon-based molecules are the basis of life.

2 Carbon atoms have unique bonding properties.
Carbon forms covalent bonds (strong bonds) with up to four other atoms, including other carbon atoms Carbon-based molecules have three general types of structures Straight chain Branched chain (3-D structures) Ring

3 Carbon atoms have unique bonding properties.
Carbon can form single, double, or triple bonds Carbon forms isomers Isomers are compounds that have the same chemical formula, but different structural formulas Example: C4H10 Only carbon has these characteristics

4 Many carbon-based molecules are made of many small subunits bonded together.
Monomers are the individual subunits. Polymers are made of many monomers.

5 Four main types of carbon-based molecules are found in living things.
Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids

6 Carbohydrates Molecule  Carbohydrates Has Carbon All of the time
Has Hydrogen All of the time  Has Oxygen Has Nitrogen  - Has Phosphorus Monomer  monosaccharide Polymer disaccharide (dimer), polysaccharide  Examples Monosaccharide:  glucose, fructose Disaccharide: sucrose (table sugar) Polysaccharide: starch & cellulose (cell wall in plants), glycogen (in animals) Unique Provide a quick source of energy

7 Lipids Molecule  Lipids Has Carbon All of the time Has Hydrogen
Has Oxygen Has Nitrogen  Some of the time Has Phosphorus Some of the time  Monomer  glycerol & fatty acids; polar heads & fatty acid tails Polymer  triglycerides; phospholipids Examples Fats, oils, cholesterol, steroids, waxes, phospholipids Unique Nonpolar Broken down to provide energy Used to make steroid hormones (control stress, estrogen, testosterone) Phospholipids make up all cell membranes   Fats and oils contain fatty acids bonded to glycerol

8 Proteins Molecule  Proteins Has Carbon All of the time Has Hydrogen
Has Oxygen Has Nitrogen Has Phosphorus Monomer Amino acid  Polymer Polypeptide (protein)  Examples Enzymes,  hemoglobin (in blood), muscle movement, collagen Unique 3D structure makes them active  Peptide bonds hold amino acids together Have a side group (R) that makes each amino acid (and therefore protein) different Sometimes may contain sulfur

9 Nucleic acids Molecule  Nucleic acids Has Carbon All of the time
Has Hydrogen All of the time  Has Oxygen Has Nitrogen Has Phosphorus Monomer  Nucleotide (5-carbon sugar, phosphate group, & base) Polymer Nucleic acid  Examples DNA & RNA  Unique  - Order of the bases makes every living thing unique DNA stores genetic information RNA builds proteins

10 Building & Using Carbon-based Molecules
Building (process): dehydration synthesis Removal of water to make a new product Using (process): hydrolysis Breaking apart using water

11 Dehydration Synthesis
Two monomers need to join One monomer loses (-OH) and one loses (-H) The two monomers join and the (-OH) and (-H) join, forming H2O A-OH + B-H  AB + HOH (H2O) Click on slide title for animation

12 Hydrolysis A polymer needs to break apart (the carbs, proteins, and lipids we ingest are too big for us to use) Water breaks apart into (-OH) and (-H) and splits the polymer into monomers The (-OH) and (-H) bond to each monomer to make them stable molecules AB + HOH (H2O)  A-OH + B-H

13 Macromolecules Gone Wild (Bio Style)
What’s in a mixture? What’s in a molecule? Macromolecules Gone Wild (Bio Style) Gangnam parody


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