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The Chemicals of Life 1.2
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Why study Carbon? All living things are made of cells Cells –~72% H 2 O –~3% salts (Na, Cl, K…) –~25% carbon compounds –carbohydrates –lipids –proteins –nucleic acids
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Chemistry of Life Organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds (in living things) C atoms are versatile building blocks –bonding properties –4 stable covalent bonds
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Hydrocarbons Simplest C molecules = hydrocarbons –combinations of C & H Simplest HC molecule = methane –1 carbon bound to 4 H atoms –non-polar –not soluble in H 2 O –hydrophobic –stable –very little attraction between molecules –a gas at room temperature
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Hydrocarbons can grow adding C-C bonds –straight line ethane hexane –branching isohexane –ring cyclohexane ethane hexane cyclohexane isohexane methane
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Diversity of organic molecules
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Isomers Molecules with same molecular formula but different structures –different chemical properties
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Structural isomers Molecules differ in structural arrangement of atoms
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Geometric isomers Molecules differ in arrangement around C=C double bond –same covalent partnerships
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Enantiomer (stereo) isomers Molecules which are mirror images of each other –C bonded to 4 different atoms or groups assymetric –left-handed & right-handed versions “L” versions are biologically active
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Form affects function Structural differences create important functional significance –amino acid alanine L-alanine used in proteins but not D-alanine –medicines L-version active but not D-version –sometimes with tragic results…
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Form affects function Thalidomide –prescribed to pregnant women in 50’s & 60’s –reduced morning sickness, but… –stereoisomer caused severe birth defects
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Diversity of molecules Substitute other atoms or groups around the C –ethane vs. ethanol H replaced by an hydroxyl group (–OH) nonpolar vs. polar gas vs. liquid ethanol ethane
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Functional groups Components of organic molecules that are involved in chemical reactions –give organic molecules distinctive properties –ex: male & female hormones…
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Viva la difference! Basic structure of male & female hormones is identical –identical C skeleton –attachment of different functional groups –interact with different targets in the body
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Types of functional groups 6 functional groups most important to chemistry of life: (p.25) –hydroxyl u amino –carbonyl u sulfhydryl –carboxyl u phosphate Affect reactivity –hydrophilic –increase solubility in water
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Hydroxyl –OH (do not confuse this with (OH) - !!) –organic compounds with OH = alcohols –names typically end in -ol ethanol
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Carbonyl C=O –O double bonded to C if C=O at end molecule = aldelhyde if C=O in middle of molecule = ketone
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Carboxyl –COOH –C double bonded to O & single bonded to OH group compounds with COOH = acids (e.g., acetic acid) –fatty acids –amino acids
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Amino -NH 2 –N attached to 2 H compounds with NH 2 = amines –amino acids NH 2 acts as base –ammonia picks up H + from solution
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Sulfhydryl –SH –S bonded to H compounds with SH = thiols SH groups stabilize the structure of proteins
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Phosphate –PO 4 –P bound to 4 O connects to C through an O PO 4 are anions with 2 negative charges function of PO 4 is to transfer energy between organic molecules (ATP)
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Why study Functional Groups? These are the building blocks for biological molecules …and that comes next! p.27 Q 1
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Macromolecules Smaller organic molecules join together to form larger molecules –macromolecules 4 major classes of macromolecules: –carbohydrates –lipids –proteins –nucleic acids
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Polymers Long molecules built by linking chain of repeating smaller units –polymers –monomers = repeated small units –covalent bonds
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How to build a polymer Condensation reaction –Aka dehydration synthesis –joins monomers by “taking” H 2 O out 1 monomer provides OH the other monomer provides H together these form H 2 O –requires energy & enzymes
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How to break down a polymer Hydrolysis –use H 2 O to break apart monomers reverse of condensation reaction H 2 O is split into H and OH H & OH group attach where the covalent bond used to be This process releases energy –ex: digestion is hydrolysis
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Carbohydrates
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Carbohydrates are composed of C, H, O carbo - hydr - ate CH 2 O (empirical formula) (CH 2 O) x C 6 H 12 O 6 Function: –energy u energy storage –raw materials u structural materials Monomer: simple sugars (e.g., glucose) ex: sugars & starches
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Sugars All monosaccharides can be distinguished by the carbonyl group they possess (aldehyde or ketone) along with the # of C in the backbone –6C = hexose (glucose) –5C = pentose (fructose, ribose) –3C = triose (glyceraldehyde)
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What functional groups? carbonyl ketone aldehyde hydroxyl
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Sugar structure 5C & 6C sugars form rings in aqueous solutions –in cells! Carbons are numbered
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Sugar Structure cont’d When glucose becomes aqueous, there is a 50% chance that the –OH group at C1 will end up below the plane of the ring. If so, it is called α- glucose. If the –OH group at C1 ends up above the plane of the ring, then it becomes β-glucose.
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Numbered carbons C CC C C C 1' 2'3' 4' 5' 6' O
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Simple & complex sugars Monosaccharides –simple 1 monomer sugars –glucose Disaccharides –2 monomers –sucrose Polysaccharides –large polymers –starch
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Complex Sugars All sugars are made up of monosaccharides held together by glycosidic linkages. Glycosidic linkages are the covalent bonds that hold 2 monosaccharides together and are formed by condensation reactions in which the H atom of the hydroxyl group comes from one sugar and the –OH group comes from the hydroxyl group of the other.
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Building sugars Dehydration synthesis | glucose | glucose glycosidic linkage monosaccharidesdisaccharide | maltose
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Building sugars Dehydration synthesis | fructose | glucose glycosidic linkage monosaccharidesdisaccharide | sucrose structural isomers
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Polysaccharides Polymers of sugars –costs little energy to build –easily reversible = release energy Function: –energy storage starch (plants) glycogen (animals) –building materials = structural support cellulose (plants) chitin (arthropods & fungi) Humans and other organisms use plants’ stockpile of energy as a food source for themselves.
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Branched vs linear polysaccharides
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Polysaccharide diversity Molecular structure determines function –isomers of glucose –How does structure influence function…
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Digesting starch vs. cellulose
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Cow can digest cellulose well; no need to eat supplemental sugars. Have symbiotic bacteria that produce enzymes. Gorilla can’t digest cellulose well; must supplement with sugar source, like fruit
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Cellulose Most abundant organic compound on Earth (polymer of β- glucose) Used by plants to create the cell wall Humans are not able to break the glycosidic linkages in cellulose and therefore we cannot digest it.
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Practice p.34 Q 2-8, 10
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