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Chemistry of Life

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Title: Chemistry of Life


1
Chemistry of Life
2
3.1 Lifes molecular diversity is based on the
properties of carbon
  • A carbon atom forms four covalent bonds
  • It can join with other carbon atoms to make
    chains or rings

Structuralformula
Ball-and-stickmodel
Space-fillingmodel
Methane
The 4 single bonds of carbon point to the corners
of a tetrahedron.
3
  • Carbon skeletons vary in many ways

Ethane
Propane
Carbon skeletons vary in length.
Butane
Isobutane
Skeletons may be unbranched or branched.
1-Butene
2-Butene
Skeletons may have double bonds, which can vary
in location.
Cyclohexane
Benzene
Skeletons may be arranged in rings.
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5
3.3 Cells make a huge number of large molecules
from a small set of small molecules
  • Most of the large molecules in living things are
    macromolecules called polymers
  • Polymers are long chains of smaller molecular
    units called monomers
  • A huge number of different polymers can be made
    from a small number of monomers

6
  • Cells link monomers to form polymers by
    dehydration synthesis

1
2
3
Unlinked monomer
Short polymer
Removal ofwater molecule
1
2
3
4
Longer polymer
7
  • Polymers are broken down to monomers by the
    reverse process, hydrolysis

1
2
3
4
Addition ofwater molecule
1
2
3
Coating of capture strand
8
Macromolecules
  • Carbohydrates (simple sugar)
  • Lipids (fatty acids)
  • Proteins (amino acids)
  • Nucleic acids (nucleotides)

9
Carbohydrates
  • have the general formula CH2On where n is a
    number between 3 and 6
  • function in
  • short-term energy storage (such as sugar)
  • as intermediate-term energy storage (starch for
    plants and glycogen for animals) and
  • as structural components in cells (cellulose) in
    the cell walls of plants and many protists), and
    chitin in the exoskeleton of insects and other
    arthropods.

10
  • The monosaccharides glucose and fructose are
    isomers
  • They contain the same atoms but in different
    arrangements

Glucose
Fructose
11
Carbohydrates
  • Monosaccharides are single (monoone)sugars
  • ribose (C5H10O5)
  • glucose (C6H12O6)

12
Carbohydrates
  • formed when two Monosaccharides are chemically
    bonded together
  • Sucrose, a common plant disaccharide is composed
    of the monosaccharides glucose and fructose.
  • Lactose, milk sugar, is a disaccharide composed
    of glucose and the monosaccharide galactose.

13
Dehydration reaction
14
Synthesis and digestion of disaccharides
15
3.6 Connection How sweet is sweet?
  • Various types of molecules, including non-sugars,
    taste sweet because they bind to sweet
    receptors on the tongue

Table 3.6
http//www.cancer.gov/cancertopics/factsheet/Risk/
artificial-sweeteners
16
Sweets
17
Discovery
  • Charles Zuker, a neuroscientist at Howard Hughes
    Medical Institute, made a startling announcement
    All the sweet things in life are perceived by two
    receptors.
  • More than 30 receptors code for bitter taste but
    only a single receptor devoted to sweet.
  • Bitter? there are many and many are toxic
  • Sweet? all tasty and good

http//www.discover.com/issues/aug-05/departments/
chemistry-of-artificial-sweeteners/
18
G-coupled Receptor Family
19
G-coupled proteins
  • a protein family of transmembrane receptors that
    transduce an extracellular signal (ligand
    binding) into an intracellular signal (G protein
    activation).

http//upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/3/33/G-pr
otein-coupled_receptor.png
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/G-protein_coupled_rec
eptor
20
Receptor binding
  • Sucralose, for instance, fits more snugly in the
    receptor than sucrose, partly because its
    chlorine atoms carry a stronger charge than the
    oxygen atoms they replaced.

21
(Polysaccharide)
  • are large molecules composed of individual
    monosaccharide units.
  • The formation of the ester bond by condensation
  • (the removal of water from a molecule) allows the
    linking of monosaccharides into disaccharides and
    polysaccharides.

22
Carbohydrates (Polysaccharide)
23
  • Starch and glycogen are polysaccharides that
    store sugar for later use
  • Cellulose is a polysaccharide in plant cell walls

Starch granules in potato tuber cells
Glucosemonomer
STARCH
Glycogen granules in muscle tissue
GLYCOGEN
Cellulose fibrils ina plant cell wall
CELLULOSE
Cellulosemolecules
Figure 3.7
24
Starch
  • starch is a combination of two polymeric
    carbohydrates (polysaccharides) called amylose
    and amylopectin. They differ in the glycosidic
    bonds they make in between glucose molecules.
  • Can humans digest starch?
  • What enzyme is used to digest starch?

25
Glycogen
  • Glycogen is a polysaccharide that is the
    principal storage form of glucose (Glc) in animal
    and human cells.
  • Glycogen is found in the form of granules in the
    cytosol in many cell types.

26
Glycogen
  • Hepatocytes (liver cells) have the highest
    concentration of it - up to 8
  • In the muscles, glycogen is found in a much
    lower concentration (1 of the muscle mass), but
    the total amount exceeds that in liver.
  • Glycogen plays an important role in the glucose
    cycle.

27
Glucose cycle
  • When glucose enters a cell it is rapidly
    converted to glucose 6-phosphate, by hexokinase.
    The glucose cycle can occur in liver cells due to
    a liver specific enzyme glucose-6-phosphatase,
    which catalyse the dephosphorylation of glucose
    6-phosphate back to glucose.

28
Insulin
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Insulin

29
Glucagon
  • http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glucagon

30
Cellulose
  • Plants make it except tunicates (animals)
  • Cellulose is synthesized in higher plants by
    enzyme complexes localized at the cell membrane
    called cellulose synthase

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cellulose
31
Lipid
  • involved mainly with long-term energy storage
  • They are generally insoluble in polar substances
    such as water.
  • Secondary functions of lipids are as structural
    components (as in the case of phospholipids that
    are the major building block in cell membranes)
    and as "messengers" (hormones) that play roles in
    communications within and between cells.

32
Lipid
  • Lipids are composed of three fatty acids
    (usually) covalently bonded to a 3-carbon
    glycerol.The fatty acids are composed of CH2
    units, and are hydrophobic/not water soluble.

33
  • Fats are lipids whose main function is energy
    storage
  • They are also called triglycerides
  • A triglyceride molecule consists of one glycerol
    molecule linked to three fatty acids

Fatty acid
Figure 3.8B
34
Structure of Fatty Acids
35
Saturated and unsaturated fatty acids
36
  • The fatty acids of unsaturated fats (plant oils)
    contain double bonds
  • These prevent them from solidifying at room
    temperature
  • Saturated fats (lard) lack double bonds
  • They are solid at room temperature

Figure 3.8C
37
Structure of Triacylglycerols (Fats)
38
Synthesis of fat
39
Phospholipids
40
Structure of Phospholipids
41
Phosphatidylcholine
  • Major component of lecithin, protective sheats of
    the brain

42
Phosphatidylethanolamine
  • Major component of cephalin it is found
    particularly in nervous tissue such as the white
    matter of brain, nerves, neural tissue, and in
    spinal cord.
  • Major phospholipid of bacteria

43
Structure of Phospholipids
44
Sphingomyelin
  • sphingomyelin is a major component of myelin, the
    fatty insulation wrapped around nerve cells by
    Schwann cells or oligodendrocytes.
  • Multiple Sclerosis is a disease characterized by
    deterioration of the myelin sheath, leading to
    impairment of nervous conduction.

45
Structure of Glycolipids
46
Glycolipids
  • Glycolipids are carbohydrate-attached lipids.
    Their role is to provide energy and also serve as
    markers for cellular recognition.
  • Ganglioside is a compound composed of a
    glycosphingolipid (ceramide and oligosaccharide)
    with one or more sialic acids (AKA
    n-acetylneuraminic acid) linked on the sugar
    chain. It is a component the cell plasma membrane
    which modulates cell signal transduction events.
    They have recently been found to be highly
    important in immunology. Natural and
    semisynthetic gangliosides are considered
    possible therapeutics for neurodegenerative
    disorders.

47
3.9 Phospholipids, waxes, and steroids are
lipids with a variety of functions
  • Phospholipids are a major component of cell
    membranes
  • Waxes form waterproof coatings
  • Steroids are often hormones

Figure 3.9
48
Cholesterol in the membrane
49
Cholesterol
  • Cholesterol is a sterol (a combination steroid
    and alcohol) and a lipid found in the cell
    membranes of all body tissues, and transported in
    the blood plasma of all animals.

50
LDL and HDL
  • When doctors talk to their patients about the
    health concerns of cholesterol, they are often
    referring to "bad cholesterol", or low-density
    lipoprotein (LDL). "Good cholesterol" is
    high-density lipoprotein (HDL) this denotes the
    way cholesterol is bound in lipoproteins, the
    natural carrier molecules of the body.

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Low-density_lipoprote
in
51
HDL and LDL
  • High-density lipoproteins (HDL) form a class of
    lipoproteins, varying somewhat in their size
    (8-11 nm in diameter) and contents, that carry
    cholesterol from the body's tissues to the liver.
  • Generally, LDL transports cholesterol and
    triglycerides away from cells and tissues that
    produce more than they use, towards cells and
    tissues which are taking up cholesterol and
    triglycerides.

52
Nucleic Acids
  • composed of monomer units known as nucleotides.
  • The main functions of nucleotides are information
    storage (DNA), protein synthesis (RNA), energy
    transfers (ATP and NAD), and signaling molecules
    (cAMP)
  • Nucleotides consist of a sugar, a nitrogenous
    base, and a phosphate.

53
A nucleotide
54
  • The monomers of nucleic acids are nucleotides
  • Each nucleotide is composed of a sugar,
    phosphate, and nitrogenous base

Nitrogenousbase (A)
Phosphategroup
Sugar
Figure 3.20A
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DNA
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58
Polymerization of Nucleotides (Phosphodiester
bond)
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60
RNA
61
Proteins
  • They are very important in biological systems as
    control and structural elements.
  • The building block of any protein is the amino
    acid, which has an amino end (NH2) and a carboxyl
    end (COOH).
  • The R indicates the variable component (R-group)
    of each amino acid.

62
  • Each amino acid contains
  • an amino group
  • a carboxyl group
  • an R group, which distinguishes each of the 20
    different amino acids

Aminogroup
Carboxyl (acid)group
Figure 3.12A
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  • Each amino acid has specific properties

Leucine (Leu)
Serine (Ser)
Cysteine (Cys)
HYDROPHOBIC
HYDROPHILIC
Figure 3.12B
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67
3.13 Amino acids can be linked by peptide bonds
  • Cells link amino acids together by dehydration
    synthesis
  • The bonds between amino acid monomers are called
    peptide bonds

Carboxylgroup
Aminogroup
PEPTIDEBOND
Dehydrationsynthesis
Amino acid
Amino acid
Dipeptide
Figure 3.13
68
Amino acids are linked together by joining the
amino end of one molecule to the carboxyl end of
another. Removal of water allows formation of a
type of covalent bond known as a peptide bond.
Formation of a peptide bond between two amino
acids by the condensation (dehydration) of the
amino end of one amino acid and the acid end of
the other amino acid.
69
Protein Structure
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary
  • Quaternary

70
Primary structure
  • The primary structure of a protein is the
    sequence of amino acids, which is directly
    related to the sequence of information in the RNA
    molecule.
  • The primary structure is the sequence of amino
    acids in a polypeptide.

71
Secondary Structure
  • It is the tendency of the polypeptide to coil or
    due to H-bonding between R-groups

72
Tertiary Structure
  • It occurs due to bonding (or in some cases
    repulsion) between R-groups.

73
Quaternary structure
  • formed from one or more polypeptides.

74
3.15 A proteins primary structure is its amino
acid sequence
Primarystructure
Amino acid
Hydrogen bond
Secondarystructure
Pleated sheet
Alpha helix
Figure 3.15, 16
75
3.17 Tertiary structure is the overall shape of
a polypeptide
Tertiarystructure
Polypeptide(single subunitof transthyretin)
Quaternarystructure
Transthyretin, with fouridentical polypeptide
subunits
Figure 3.17, 18
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