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Molecules of Life Chapter 3
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3.1 Molecules of Life Molecules of life are synthesized by living cells Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic acids
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Structure to Function Molecules of life differ in three-dimensional structure and function Carbon backbone = organic molecules Consist primarily of carbon and hydrogen atoms Carbon atoms bond covalently with up to four other atoms, often in long chains or rings Attached chemical (functional) groups confer properties to biological molecules Structures give clues to how they function
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Functional Groups Hydroxyl (-OH) Carboxyl (-COOH) Amino (-NH 2 ) Phosphate (-PO 4 )
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Functional Groups: The Importance of Position
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Processes of Metabolism Metabolism = the sum of all chemical reactions in a cell Synthesis reactions = condensation reactions Decomposition reactions = hydrolysis Cells use energy to grow and maintain themselves Enzyme-driven reactions build, rearrange, and split organic molecules Enzymes are catalysts that increase the rate of both synthesis and decomposition reactions
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Building Organic Compounds Cells form complex organic molecules Simple sugars → carbohydrates Fatty acids → lipids Amino acids → proteins Nucleotides → nucleic acids Condensation (dehydration synthesis) reactions combine monomers (subunits) to form polymers Animation: http://www.tvdsb.on.ca/westmin/science/sbioac/biochem/condense.htm http://www.tvdsb.on.ca/westmin/science/sbioac/biochem/condense.htm
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Condensation and Hydrolysis
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3.2 Carbohydrates – The Most Abundant Ones Three main types of carbohydrates Monosaccharides (simple sugars) Oligosaccharides (short chains) Polysaccharides (complex carbohydrates) Carbohydrate functions Instant energy sources Structural materials
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Oligosaccharides: Sucrose
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glucosefructose sucrose Fig. 3.6, p. 38 c Formation of a sucrose molecule
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Complex Carbohydrates: Starch, Cellulose, and Glycogen
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Fig. 3.8, p. 39 c Glycogen. In animals, this polysaccharide is a storage form for excess glucose. It is especially abundant in the liver and muscles of highly active animals, including fishes and people. Structure of cellulose
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Complex Carbohydrates: Chitin
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3.3 Greasy, Oily – Must Be Lipids Lipids Fats, phospholipids, waxes, and sterols Don’t dissolve in water Dissolve in nonpolar substances (other lipids) Lipid functions Major sources of energy Structural materials Used in cell membranes Chemical messengers (hormones) Many lipids are composed of glycerol and fatty acid tails
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Triglyceride Formation Animation: http://www.tvdsb.on.ca/westmin/science/sbioac/biochem/triglyc.htm http://www.tvdsb.on.ca/westmin/science/sbioac/biochem/triglyc.htm
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Phospholipids Main component of cell membranes Hydrophilic head, hydrophobic tails
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Waxes Firm, pliable, water repelling, lubricating
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Sterols: Cholesterol Membrane components; precursors of other molecules (steroid hormones)
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3.4 Proteins – Diversity in Structure and Function Proteins have many functions Structures Nutrition Enzymes (catalysts) Transportation Communication Defense
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Protein Structure Built from 20 kinds of amino acids
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Protein Synthesis
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Levels of Protein Structure 1.Primary structure 1.Is the sequence of Amino acids joined by peptide bonds to form a linear polypeptide chain 1.Is what ultimately determines the 3-D structure of a protein molecule Some proteins have sugar or lipids attached to the polypeptide - Glycoproteins Lipoproteins
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Levels of Protein Structure
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More about protein structure - Some proteins are made up of only 1 polypeptide that twists and turns to form a 3-D structure Other proteins are made up of 2 or more polypeptides that are held together by chemical bonds Insulin is composed of 2 polypeptides http://dolly.biochem.arizona.edu/Bioc462b_Honors_Spring_2009/abhik/Images/Insulin.jpg
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3.5 Why is Protein Structure So Important? Protein structure dictates function Sometimes a mutation in DNA results in an amino acid substitution that alters a protein’s structure and compromises its function Example: Hemoglobin and sickle-cell anemia
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Normal Hemoglobin Structure
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Sickle-Cell Mutation
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Fig. 3.19, p. 45 VALINEHISTIDINELEUCINEGLUTAMATEVALINETHREONINEPROLINE sickle cell normal cell b One amino acid substitution results in the abnormal beta chain in HbS molecules. Instead of glutamate, valine was added at the sixth position of the polypeptide chain. c Glutamate has an overall negative charge; valine has no net charge. At low oxygen levels, this difference gives rise to a water-repellent, sticky patch on HbS molecules. They stick together because of that patch, forming rodshaped clumps that distort normally rounded red blood cells into sickle shapes. (A sickle is a farm tool that has a crescent-shaped blade.)
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Clumping of cells in bloodstream Circulatory problems, damage to brain, lungs, heart, skeletal muscles, gut, and kidneys Heart failure, paralysis, pneumonia, rheumatism, gut pain, kidney failure Spleen concentrates sickle cells Spleen enlargement Immune system compromised Rapid destruction of sickle cells Anemia, causing weakness,fatigue, impaired development,heart chamber dilation Impaired brain function, heart failure Fig. 3.19, p. 45 d Melba Moore, celebrity spokes- person for sickle-cell anemia organizations. Right, range of symptoms for a person with two mutated genes for hemoglobin’s beta chain.
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Denatured Proteins If a protein unfolds and loses its three- dimensional shape (denatures), it also loses its function Denaturation is caused by shifts in pH, temperature, or salt concentrations Disrupts hydrogen bonds and other molecular interactions responsible for protein’s shape Animation: http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/proteinstructure.html http://www.sumanasinc.com/webcontent/animations/content/proteinstructure.html
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3.6 Nucleotides, DNA, and RNAs Nucleotide structure, 3 parts: Sugar Phosphate group Nitrogen-containing base
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Nucleotide Functions: Reproduction, Metabolism, and Survival DNA and RNAs are nucleic acids, each composed of four kinds of nucleotide subunits ATP energizes many kinds of molecules by phosphate-group transfers Image from: http://www.uic.edu/classes/bios/bios100/mike/spring2003/atp.jpg
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Nucleotides of DNA
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The DNA Double-Helix
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DNA, RNAs, and Protein Synthesis DNA (double-stranded) Encodes information about the primary structure of all cell proteins in its nucleotide sequence Nitrogen-bases include thymine, cytosine, guanine, and adenine Nucleotides contain the sugar deoxyribose RNA molecules (usually single stranded) Different kinds of RNA molecules interact with one another during protein synthesis Nitrogen-bases include uracil, cytosine, guanine, and adenine Nucleotides contain the sugar ribose
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DNA vs RNA Structure http://images2.clinicaltools.com/images/gene/rna2.jpg http://images2.clinicaltools.com/images/gene/rna2.jpg
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