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Molecules of Life

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Title: Molecules of Life


1
Molecules of Life
2
Molecules of Life
  • Carbohydrates
  • monosaccharides
  • energy supply
  • Proteins
  • amino acids
  • structural components
  • Lipids
  • fatty acids
  • structural components, energy, hormones
  • Nucleic acids
  • nucleotides
  • DNA-genetic material

3
Composition of Molecules of Life
  • most are carbon based
  • organic compounds
  • unique to living systems
  • with exception of CO2 carbides
  • carbon is necessary for life
  • electroneutral
  • never loses or gains electrons
  • always shares or forms covalent bonds

4
Covalent Bonding
H H--C--H H
  • carbon can form 4 covalent bonds with other
    elements or with itself
  • has 4 electrons in outermost shell
  • makes each carbon atom a connecting point from
    which another molecule can branch in four
    directions

5
Covalent Bonding
  • since carbon can bind to itself
  • has capacity to construct endless numbers of
    carbon skeletons varying in size branching
    patterns

6
Organic Compounds
  • chain of carbons in organic molecule is-carbon
    skeleton
  • branched or unbranched
  • double or single bonds
  • straight or arranged in ring form
  • each has unique 3-D shape
  • properties depend on carbon skeleton on atoms
    attached to skeleton
  • groups of atoms participating in chemical
    reactions are functional groups

H C C H
7
Functional Groups
  • OH- (hydroxyl)
  • CO (carbonyl)
  • COOH (carboxyl)
  • NH2 (amino)
  • SH-sulfhydryl group
  • PO3 (phosphate)

Phosphate group
8
Classes of Molecules Functional Groups
  • COOH NH2- amino acids
  • hydroxyl groups-alcohols
  • carboxyl groups-carboxylic acids-acetic acid
  • sugars contain both-carbonyl group several
    hydroxyl groups
  • phosphate groups-found on nucleic acids

9
Macromolecules
  • 4 main classes
  • macromolecules or polymers
  • consist of many identical or similar molecular
    units strung together
  • monomers
  • cells link monomers in anabolic reactions by
    dehydration synthesis
  • chemical reaction which removes water
  • broken down into constituent monomers by adding
    water
  • catabolic reactions-hydrolysis

10
Carbohydrates
  • composed of C, H O
  • 121 ratio
  • Formula (CH2O)n should give formula for any
    carbohydrate
  • may contain nitrogen, phosphate and/or sulfur
  • Monomers-monosaccharides
  • simple sugars
  • building blocks for all other carbohydrates
  • 2-10 monosaccharides form oligosaccharide
  • hundreds- polysaccharide.
  • hydrophilic
  • water loving
  • larger molecules are less soluble in water

Glucose
11
Monosaccharides
  • simple sugars
  • single chain or ring of 3-7 carbons
  • named for number of carbons they contain
  • 5 carbons-pentoses
  • 6 carbons-hexoses
  • glucose contains 6 carbons-hexose
  • formula-C6H1206
  • most important metabolic fuel in body
  • broken down?ATP CO2
  • fructose-6 carbon monosaccharide
  • same formula as glucose
  • fructose glucose are isomers
  • chemical compounds with same molecular formula
    but with elements arranged in different
    configurations
  • Galactose-isomer of glucose fructose

Glucose
Galactose
Fructose
12
Disaccharides
  • double sugars
  • covalent bond- between hydroxyl groups of two
    simple sugars
  • physiologically important disaccharides Sucrose
  • sugar cane sugar beets
  • Glucose fructose?sucrose H2O
  • Lactose-found in milk of mammals
  • disaccharide of galactose glucose
  • Maltose
  • major degradation product of starch
  • composed of 2 glucose monomers
  • Disaccharides-too large to pass through cell
    membranes
  • must be broken down into constituent parts by
    hydrolysis
  • Sucrose H20? glucose fructose.

13
Polysaccharides
  • complex carbohydrates
  • dehydration synthesis reactions add more
    monosaccharides? polysaccharides
  • most carbohydrates in nature are in this form
  • fairly insoluble
  • make perfect storage molecules
  • Glycogen
  • major stored carbohydrate in animal liver
    muscle cells
  • highly branched at about every 8-10 residues
  • Starch
  • major form of stored carbohydrate in plants
  • Structure-identical to glycogen-less branching at
    every 20-30 residues
  • Cellulose
  • found in plants
  • most abundant compound on earth
  • cannot be digested by humans

14
Lipids
  • contain mostly C H
  • 12 ratio
  • also contain oxygen but less than carbohydrates
  • often have N, S phosphorous
  • hydrophobic
  • do not dissolve in water
  • include neutral fats, phospholipids steroids

15
Lipid Functions
  • physiologically important lipids have 4 major
    functions
  • structural components of biological membranes
  • cholesterol, phospholipids and glycolipids help
    form and maintain intracellular structures
  • energy reserves
  • provide 2X as much energy as carbohydrates
  • hormones vitamins are a type of lipid-steroids
  • lipophilic bile acids
  • important for lipid solubilization

16
Lipids
  • composed of fatty acids glycerol (an alcohol)
  • fatty acids-long-chain hydrocarbon molecules
  • hydrocarbon chains make lipids nonpolar and
    therefore insoluble in water
  • fat synthesis involves attaching 3 fatty acid
    chains to one glycerol by dehydration
    synthesis-producing triglycerides
  • glycerol is always the same fatty acid
    composition varies
  • length of neutral fats fatty acid chains
    degree of saturation determine how solid a fat is
    at room temperature
  • saturated
  • fatty acids with no carbon to carbon double bonds
  • unsaturated
  • have double bonds
  • monounsaturated fats have one unsaturated bond
  • polyunsaturated fats have multiple unsaturated
    bonds
  • double bonds make for lower melting points
  • presence of unsaturated fatty acids makes fat
    liquid at room temperature

17
Hydrolysis of Triglycerides
  • Hydrolysis breaks triglycerides?
  • fatty acid glycerol

18
Steroids
  • large lipid molecules with carbon skeleton bent
    into 4 rings
  • most important one-cholesterol
  • obtained by absorption from animal products in
    diet
  • meat, cream egg yolks
  • can also be made by the body
  • absolutely essential for life
  • component of cell membranes
  • raw material for Vitamin D, steroid hormones and
    bile salt synthesis
  • without cholesterol there would be no steroid
    hormones such as estrogen and testosterone and
    therefore no reproduction
  • without corticosteroids we would die

19
Proteins
  • C, H, O, N small amounts of S sometimes
    phosphorous
  • monomer-amino acids
  • 1-7 amino acids form peptide
  • up to 100 form polypeptide
  • more than 100 comprise a protein

20
Proteins
  • most abundant organic compounds in human body
  • provide support for cells, tissues organs and
    create a 3-D framework for body
  • contractile proteins allow for movement via
    muscle contractions
  • transport proteins carry insoluble lipids,
    respiratory gases minerals in blood
  • serve as buffers help to prevent dangerous pH
    changes
  • enzymes are proteins important in metabolic
    regulation
  • needed to speed rate of chemical reactions
  • protein hormones coordinate, control influence
    metabolic activities of nearly every cell
  • important for defense
  • skin, hair, nails protect underlying tissues
    from environment
  • antibodies protect us from disease
  • clotting proteins protect from us from bleeding
    out

21
Amino Acids
  • 20 amino acids
  • (excluding proline) contain carboxylic acid-COOH
    amino-NH2 or amine group
  • functional groups are attached to same carbon
    atom
  • R group attaches to same carbon
  • amino acid is distinguished by its particular
    R-group
  • 2 broad classes based upon whether R-group is
    hydrophobic or hydrophilic
  • hydrophobic repel aqueous environments
  • reside predominantly in interior of proteins
  • hydrophilic amino acids interact with aqueous
    environments often form H-bonds
  • found predominantly on exterior of proteins

22
Protein Structure
  • each protein contains unique sequence of amino
    acids
  • four levels of protein structure
  • Primary
  • Secondary
  • Tertiary
  • Quaternary

23
Structure Function
  • structure determines function
  • shape of protein allows it to carry out specific
    duties
  • proteins whose job is to fill in a space (active
    site) on another molecule are globular in shape
  • those that make up something like muscles or
    tendons are fibrous
  • shapes depend on environmental characteristics
  • ionic composition, pH temperature
  • non homeostatic change in any of these will
    denature protein
  • denaturation causes protein to lose shape
  • loss of shape?cannot function properly

24
Nucleic Acids
  • largest, organic molecules in body
  • C, H, O, N, phosphorous
  • consists of long stretches of nucleotides
  • monomer for nucleic acids
  • provide directions for building proteins
  • 2 main types
  • RNA
  • translates DNA code
  • DNA
  • contains genetic information that is inherited
    from our parents

25
Nucleic Acids
  • RNA
  • single polynucleotide chain
  • DNA
  • double helix form
  • two polynucleotide chains wrapped around one
    another

26
Nucleic Acids
  • exist in mono-, di-, tri-phosphorylated forms
  • often abbreviated to AMP
  • Mono, Di- tri-phosphorylated forms of adenosine
    are abbreviated AMP, ADP ATP
  • phosphate bonds are high energy bonds
  • meaning they contain energy
  • When broken they yield 7kcals
  • ATP ?ADP Pi energy
  • ATP is energy currency of all cells
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