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The Chemistry of Life Bio 100 Tri-County Technical College Pendleton, S. C.
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Basic Beginnings Flow chart for life Biosphere ecosystem community Population organism organ system Organ tissue cell organelle molecule atom subatomic particles who knows?
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Biochemistry n The study of the chemistry associated with living system. n Much of this chemistry involves compounds containing carbon. n Carbon can form four single bonds. n Carbon can also form double covalent bonds and triple covalent bonds
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Chapter 3; Continued n Hydrocarbon contains only carbon and hydrogen atoms (methane, ethane, etc.) n Functional group is group attached to hydrocarbon skeleton that makes it more (or less) reactive n Hydroxyl, carbonyl, carboxyl, amino, phosphate, sulfhydryl, and methyl n Review: remember polar and those highly electronegative atoms we discussed earlier
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Single Bonds n involves sharing two electrons n represented by a single line in a structural formula n methane is an example -- CH 4
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Double Bonds n involves sharing four electrons n represented by two lines in a structural formula n the carboxyl group is an example n double bond between carbon and oxygen.
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Triple Bond n involves sharing 6 electrons n represented by 3 lines in a structural formula
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What it are? n Macromolecule is giant molecule of living matter formed by the joining of smaller molecules n A monomer is an identical or similar repeating subunit n A polymer is composed of monomers n Monomer + monomer = dimer n For our course, more than 2 monomers joined together will equal a polymer (NOT entirely true…but will do)
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Synthesis and Hydrolysis n Many biologically important compounds are polymers. –composed of many monomers –for example starch is a polymer of glucose n Synthesis is the process by which individual glucose molecules are put together to form the starch.
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Synthesis n molecule of water is removed between two monomers n bonds that are left are used to make a bond between the monomers n Also called condensation reaction
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Hydrolysis n the opposite of synthesis n molecule of water added across a bond n bond is split n Learn to look for where the water is located n To right of the arrow = synthesis n To left of arrow = hydrolysis
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Biochemical Molecule Categories n Carbohydrates –monosaccharides and polysaccharides n Lipids –steroids, neutral fats, phospholipids n Proteins –dipeptides, tripeptides, polypeptides n Nucleic Acids –DNA and RNA
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Carbohydrates
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n composed of C, H, and O n monosaccharides –C 1 H 2 O 1 –ribose for example: C 5 H 10 O 5 (pentose) –hexose for example: C 6 H 12 O 6 (hexose) –Glucose is a hexose »blood sugar
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Disaccharides n composed of two monosaccharides n sucrose -- table sugar -- C 12 H 22 O 11 –water removed during synthesis –1 glucose and 1 fructose n lactose -- milk sugar –1 glucose and 1 galactose n maltose -- malt sugar –two glucose molecules
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Polysaccharides n composed of many monosaccharides n examples –starch –glycogen –cellulose n all three composed of glucose n different ways of putting the glucose together
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Lipids
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Triglycerides n composed of one glycerol molecule and three fatty acids n also called neutral fats n circulate in bloodstream n fatty acids are long chains of carbon with a carboxyl group at one end
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Saturated vs. Unsaturated n Saturated fats –contain fatty acids saturated with hydrogen atoms –no double bonds in the fatty acids n Unsaturated fats –contains fatty acids not saturated with hydrogen atoms –have double bonds in the fatty acids
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Phospholipids n one fatty acid in a triglyceride is replaced by a phosphate group. n one end is soluble in water –hydrophilic end n other end is insoluble in water –hydrophobic end n major component of cell membranes
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Steroids n Cholesterol and the other steroids made from it n Basic steroid ring structure n Steroid hormones –produced by the adrenal and other glands
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Proteins Building blocks are amino acids.
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Amino acids n There are 20 amino acids that the human body has to have. n All of them –amino group –carboxyl group –R-group n The R-group makes each one unique.
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Peptide Bonds n Bonds between the amino acids in a protein. n Formed between an amino group and a carboxyl group n A molecule of water is removed each time a peptide bond is formed n dipeptides, tripeptides, and polypeptides
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Other proteins? n Two primary categories of proteins –structural –functional n Enzymes are functional proteins n Structural protein examples –muscle protein –tendon protein, etc.
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Nucleic Acids DNA and RNA
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Nucleotides n Building blocks of DNA and RNA n composed of sugar, phosphate and a base n The sugar and the bases of DNA are different from those of RNA. n The phosphate group is the same in both.
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DNA-nucleotides n Sugar –deoxyribose –one less oxygen than ribose n DNA bases –adenine –thymine –guanine –cytosine
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RNA-nucleotides n Sugar –ribose n Bases –adenine –uracil –guanine –cytosine
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What do they do? n DNA –contains the blueprint for making all the proteins of a cell –makes up genes and chromosomes n RNA –takes the blueprint from DNA and translates it into proteins
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Believe me, it matters n Hydrophilic means water loving n Hydrophobic means water fearing (hating) n Life as we know it depends on interplay between hydrophobic and hydrophilic parts of phospholipids (and others) n Review: polar and nonpolar and water as a polar molecule n Polar = hydrophilic
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