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Published byAustin Fletcher Modified over 9 years ago
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BIOCHEMISTRY Carbs, lipids, proteins, nucleic acids
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Carbohydrates Primary source of energy Made of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen 1:2:1 Ratio of C:H:O
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Carbohydrates The building blocks (monomers) of carbs are called monosaccharides Monosaccharides are the most simple sugars. The include Glucose “blood sugar” Galactose “milk sugar” Fructose “fruit sugar”
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Carbohydrates Joining two monosaccharides forms a disaccharide Example: Sucrose “table sugar”
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Carbohydrates Another disaccharide is lactose Some people are lactose intolerant - lack the enzyme to break lactose into glucose and galactose
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Carbohydrates Long chains of monosaccharides are called polysaccharides Example: Starch- many glucoses!! Function: Energy Storage
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Carbohydrates More polysaccharides Example: Cellulose - glucose that we cannot digest Function: Strength & Rigidity
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Carbohydrates More Polysacharides: Cellulose- Also called “fiber” You can’t digest it Ends up as feces Cleans the colon
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Carbohydrates More Polysaccharides: Glycogen “animal starch”- highly branched glucose Function: Energy storage
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Carbohydrates More Polysaccharides Example: Chitin Function: forms exoskeletons and fungi cell walls
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Lipids Examples: Fats, Steroids, and Phospholipids Non-polar Insoluble in water Functions Long term energy storage Insulation & cushion Cell membranes Hormones
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Lipids Solid @ room temp No double bonds @ least one double bon Liquid @ room temp BAD fats! “GOOD” fats
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Lipids Triglycerides AKA “body fat” Made of 3 fatty acid chains + glycerol molecule Function: Energy storage, insulation
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Lipids Ringed carbon structures Often hormones Included as lipids b/c they are insoluble in water Steroids
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Lipids Steroid Examples: Chlorophyll Light absorbing pigment Ringed structure Lipid b/c of insolubility
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Lipids Phospholipids Main component of cell membranes (Phospholipid bilayer) Hydrophilic heads hydrophobic lipid tails
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Proteins Monomer (building block) is the amino acid 20 different amino acids Peptide bonds- Hold amino acids together Polypeptide- Long chain of amino acids
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Proteins Example: Hemoglobin: iron containing protein - transports oxygen through the blood
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Proteins Example: Collagen Structural Protein found in skin, ligaments, tendons, and bones
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Protein Example: Contractile proteins Make up muscles Allow for movement
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Proteins Example: Enzymes- Speed up rate of chemical reactions Lower activation energy
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Proteins Enzymes: end in “ase” Enzymes are never used up, just recycled! Denatured enzymes – have lost their shape This happens due to: Temperature Too much salt pH
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Proteins ENZYME EXAMPLE: At what temperature does the enzyme represented in this graph work best? What is the independent variable? What is the dependent variable?
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Nucleic Acids DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid (double strand) RNA Ribonucleic acid (single strand) Hereditary molecules
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Nucleic Acid Monomers (building blocks) of Nucleic acids are called: Nucleotides They’re made of: Sugar (either deoxyribose or ribose) Phosphate group nitrogen base
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Nucleic Acid ATP aka Adenosine Triphosphate Special nucleotide for energy storage and release
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