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Published byNorman Percival Carroll Modified over 9 years ago
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Everyone’s favorite- BIOCHEMISTRY/ORGANIC CHEM! Its what you all took this course for, right???
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Chemistry in nature is very different from the chemistry of living organisms Nature- small molecules react, and only react when they have the activation energy, or the necessary amount of energy to cause the molecules to begin the reaction Organisms- large molecules are built, broken down, and reconstructed into other large molecules with very little energy needed. WHY??? Why are you doing this to me?
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Naturally existing molecules that are important (existed on Earth WELL before life originated Water, oxygen, carbon dioxide Acids/bases Small, but necessary-
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Living organisms able to go through complex reactions that take these small molecules and construct MUCH larger molecules Example- PHOTOSYNTHESIS 6 CO2 + 6H2O C6H12O6 + 6O2 In other words, plants take 6 waters and 6 carbon dioxides to make ONE glucose molecule (and are left with some extra oxygen that they excrete) Chemistry of Life
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4 classes of organic molecules Organic = large, built by living things Contain C, H, AND O (none of this is possible without C!) 1.Carbohydrates 2.Proteins 3.Lipids 4.Nucleic Acids So what kind of stuff are we talking about?
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Simple and complex carbohydrates **Serve as SHORT TERM energy storage Simple = sugars (single ring molecules) Glucose, fructose, galactose Complex = many single rings strung together starch, glycogen Come from fruits, wheats Bonds of simple sugars broken down to release chemical energy Carbohydrates
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MANY different functions (coat skin, hair nails, act as chemical messengers, receive signals on cells, mark cells as important, lower activation energy of reactions Constructed of different combinations of amino acids that bind together in a specific order and shape (amino acid order shape function) Found in meats, cheese Proteins
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Enzymes Specialized, often fragile, proteins with a special shape that allows them to assist in a chemical reaction Act by working with substrate(s) to build or break them into product(s) **shape can be changed by changes in temperature or pH Gives body fine control over chemical reactions This is why a stabile body temperature is so important Special proteins
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Fats, oils, and waxes Serve as LONG-TERM storage of energy Often act as cell coverings Lipids
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Built from combinations of 4 nucleotide bases (Adenine, Cytosine, Guanine, Thymine, OR A, C, T, G) Make up genetic code Indirectly give ribosome instructions on how to built proteins (this will be covered later) Nucleic Acids
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