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Carbon Compounds in Cells Chapter 3
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Importance of Carbon Carbon permeates the world of life— from the energy-requiring activities and structural organization of cells, to physical and chemical conditions that span the globe and influence ecosystems everywhere.
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Humans and Global Warming Fossil fuels are rich in carbon Use of fossil fuels releases CO 2 into atmosphere Increased CO 2 may contribute to global warming
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Organic Compounds Hydrogen and other elements covalently bonded to carbon Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic Acids
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Carbon’s Bonding Behavior Outer shell of carbon has 4 electrons; can hold 8 Each carbon atom can form covalent bonds with up to 4 atoms
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Methane: Simplest Organic Compound Structural formula Ball-and-stick model Space-filling model HH H H C Figure 3.2 Page 36
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Bonding Arrangements Carbon atoms can form chains or rings Other atoms project from the carbon backbone Glucose (ball-and-stick model) In-text figure Page 36
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Hemoglobin Molecular Models Ball-and-stick model Space-filling model Ribbon model Figure 3.3 Page 37
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Functional Groups Atoms or clusters of atoms that are covalently bonded to carbon backbone Give organic compounds their different properties
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Examples of Functional Groups Methyl group- CH 3 Hydroxyl group - OH Amino group- NH 3 + Carboxyl group- COOH Phosphate group- PO 3 - Sulfhydryl group- SH
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Carbohydrates Monosaccharides (simple sugars) Oligosaccharides (short-chain carbohydrates) Polysaccharides (complex carbohydrates)
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Most include fatty acids –Fats –Phospholipids –Waxes Sterols and their derivatives have no fatty acids Tend to be insoluble in water Lipids
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Phospholipids Main component of cell membranes Hydrophobic head Hydrophilic tails Fig. 3.14a,b Page 43
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Sterols and Derivatives No fatty acids Rigid backbone of four fused-together carbon rings Cholesterol - most common type in animals Figure 3.15a In-text p43 Cholesterol
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Waxes Long-chain fatty acids linked to long-chain alcohols or carbon rings Firm consistency, repel water Important in water-proofing
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Protein Synthesis Peptide bond –Condensation reaction links amino group of one amino acid with carboxyl group of next Water forms as a by-product Fig. 3.18a Page 45
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Primary Structure Sequence of amino acids Unique for each protein Two linked amino acids = dipeptide Three or more = polypeptide Backbone of polypeptide has N atoms: -N-C-C-N-C-C-N-C-C-N-
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Second and Third Levels Hydrogen bonding produces helix or sheet Domain formation Secondary structure Tertiary structure Figure 3.19a Page 46
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Fourth Level Structure Some proteins are made up of more than one polypeptide chain HLA-A2 quaternary structure Figure 3.20 Page 47
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Hemoglobin alpha chain beta chainalpha chain beta chain
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Sugar At least one phosphate group Nitrogen- containing base Nucleotide Structure ATP Figure 3.23a Page 50
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Nucleotide Functions Energy carriers Coenzymes Chemical messengers Building blocks for nucleic acids
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DNA Double-stranded Sugar-phosphate backbone Covalent bonds in backbone H bonds between bases Figure 3.25 Page 51
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RNA Usually single strands Four types of nucleotides Unlike DNA, contains the base uracil in place of thymine Three types are key players in protein synthesis
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