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Published byGeraldine Hunter Modified over 8 years ago
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MACROMOLECULES
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Four Types of Macromolecules 1. Carbohydrates 2. Lipids 3. Proteins 4. Nucleic Acids
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Carbohydrates commonly found in foods: sugars and starches these compounds always contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen in a 1:2:1 ratio or CH 2 O provide short or longer term energy storage for living organisms provide structural support
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Types of Carbohydrates 1. Monosaccharides 2. Disaccharides 3. Polysaccharides
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1. Monosaccharides simple sugar containing 3 to 7 carbons examples: glucose, fructose, galactose (isomers – same chemical formula C 6 H 12 O 6 but different 3D structure provides instant energy energy
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Monosaccharides become ring shaped when in the presence of water. ring
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2. Disaccharides made up of two monosaccharides common examples: glucose + glucose = maltose glucose + glucose = maltose glucose + galactose = lactose glucose + galactose = lactose glucose + fructose = sucrose glucose + fructose = sucrose
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Disaccharides… cont’d formed by a condensation reaction (dehydration synthesis) for maltose – a link forms between carbon 1 on one glucose and carbon 4 of the other. this creates a 1-4 glycosidic linkage water is released
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Sucrose contains a 1-2 glycosidic link.
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Making & Breaking Carbohydrates Condensation (dehydration) synthesis Hydrolysis Two important biochemical reactions monosaccharide + disaccharide (di = two)
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Carbohydrates – Complex (Polysaccharides) Starch Granules (purple) in Potato Cells Starch = energy storage in plants Main Function: quick and short-term energy storage Contain many units of glucose in long chains Examples: Starch, glycogen, cellulose
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Starch made up of amylose (straight chain glucose polymer) and amylopectin (branched glucose polymer). large insoluble molecule found in specialized storage plant structures (tubers in potatoes, fruit of corn, wheat, rice…) how plant stores extra glucose made during photosynthesis
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Glycogen = energy storage in animals Glycogen (red) in Hepatocytes (liver cells) Glucose (monomer) Glycogen (polymer) Carbohydrates – Complex (Polysaccharides) liver muscle
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Carbohydrates – Complex (Polysaccharides) Cellulose = polysaccharide found in plant cell walls Cellulose fibers Macrofibril Microfibril Chains of cellulose
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Cellulose straight chain glucose polymer chains packed into bundles called microfibrils provide support in cell wall main structural component of plants Makes starch (can digest) Makes cellulose (can’t digest)
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Chitin exoskeleton of insects and crustaceans (provides protection) straight chain glucose polymer with nitrogen group at carbon 2
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