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MACROMOLECULES SBI 3C: SEPTEMBER 2012
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MACROMOLECULES Macromolecules: Very large molecules containing many carbon atoms 4 major groups of macromolecules: 1. Carbohydrates 2. Lipids 3. Proteins 4. Nucleic acids
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WHAT IS A CARBOHYDRATE? Molecules that contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen Used mainly by living organisms for energy Produced by plants by photosynthesis
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WHAT DOES A SIMPLE CARBOHYDRATE LOOK LIKE? Glucose: Formula: C 6 H 12 O 6 Hydroxyl group (OH)
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WHAT DOES A SIMPLE CARBOHYDRATE LOOK LIKE? Fructose Formula: C 6 H 12 O 6 Hydroxyl group (OH)
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MONOSACCHARIDES: Also known as simple sugars What are they? Carbohydrates that contain 6 carbon atoms and hydroxyl groups Examples and Information: Glucose (C 6 H 12 O 6 ) Fructose (C 6 H 12 O 6 ) Both are water soluble
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DISACCHARIDES Also known as double sugars What are they? 2 monosaccharides linked together Examples and information: Sucrose is glucose + fructose Formed by bonding two sugars together Occurs when hydroxyl groups react with each other Sucrose is water soluble
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MAKING SUCROSE + H2OH2O
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POLYSACCHARIDES Also known as complex carbohydrates What are they? Sugars attached together in a chain Examples and information: Insoluble in water Polymer: Molecule composed of many linked subunits Monomer: Individual subunits of a polymer
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EXAMPLES OF POLYSACCHARIDES Starch (polymer of glucose) Used by plants for energy Glycogen (polymer of glucose) Used by animals for energy Cellulose (polymer of glucose) Makes up plant cell walls Humans cannot digest Chitin (polymer of type of glucose) Hard exterior of insects, fungi and crustaceans
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MACROMOLECULES - LIPIDS What is a lipid? A molecule made up of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen Used by animals as energy storage molecules Soluble (dissolves) in oils and other non-polar solvents Insoluble (does not dissolve) in H 2 O
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TRIGLYCERIDES Also known as oils and fats What are they? Lipids consisting of 4 parts (glycerol and 3 fatty acids) Examples and Information Butter, oil glycerol 3 fatty acids
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TRIGLYCERIDE STRUCTURE Glycerol is a 3 carbon molecule with a hydroxyl group attached to each carbon atom Fatty acid is a long chain of carbon and hydrogen atoms with a carboxyl group at the end Hydroxyl groups (OH) Carboxyl group (COOH)
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TYPES OF LIPIDS Waxes: Used by plants and some animals as waterproof-coating Steroids Composed of 4 carbon rings Ex. Testosterone and cholesterol Phospholipids Similar to triglyceride with additional phosphate group Found in cell membrane
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SATURATED FATTY ACIDS Saturated Triglycerides: Single bonds between the carbon atoms Animal fats Causes clogging of arteries
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UNSATURATED FATTY ACIDS Unsaturated Triglycerides: Double bonds between some carbon atoms more than one double bond = polyunsaturated Low melting points, liquids at room temperature Ex. Plant oils – olive oil, canola oil
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MACROMOLECULES: PROTEINS What is a protein? Unbranched chain of amino acids Most diverse and important molecule in living organisms Produced by protein synthesis
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AMINO ACIDS: How many are there? 20 Common examples: Leucine, serine, cytsteine, phenylalanine Other facts: Small molecules that contain a central carbon atom attached to an amino group, a carboxyl group, a hydrogen, and a side chain (R group) R groups distinguish the amino acid 20 amino acids are in food we eat, 8 are essential because our body cannot make them
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POLYPEPTIDE What is it? Chain of amino acids Formed by a reaction between the amino group and carboxyl group on adjacent amino acids Forms bond called peptide bond Polypeptides can fold up into different shapes. For example: fold into a sheet or wrap into coils
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DENATURING What is it? When proteins lose their shape due to high temperatures, high salt or pH What happens? Changes the 3D shape of the protein What happens to a protein if it is done? Can’t carry out its function Will return to normal if no bonds are broken Examples: Fever can denature enzymes in the brain Curing meats with salt denatures enzymes, preserving meat Heat denatures protein in the hair making it straight
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MACROMOLECULES: NUCLEIC ACIDS What is a nucleic acid? Where organisms store information about the structures of their proteins Polymers of nucleotides Each nucleotide is made up of: A five-carbon sugar (ribose in RNA; deoxyribose in DNA) A phosphate group An nitrogen containing component (nitrogenous base)
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DNA Stands for: Deoxyribonucleic acid Looks like: Double helix Helix held together by hydrogen bonds Contains which base pairs? A – T C – G A – adenine, T – thymine C – cytosine, G – guanine
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RNA Stands for: Ribonucleic acid Looks like: Single stand Contains which base pairs? A – U (uracil) C – G Types of RNA… mRNA – carries info to ribosomes tRNA – transfers amino acid to mRNA
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DIFFERENCES BETWEEN DNA AND RNA RNADNA Single strandedDouble stranded Has uracilHas thymine Decodes hereditary infoStores hereditary info Sugar is a riboseSugar is deoxyribose
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DNA DETAILS What does the code in DNA specify? The order of amino acids in proteins What is a gene? Instructions to code a protein How many genes are in the human genome? 30,000 – 35,000 How many base pairs are in the human genome? 3 billion
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