Title: Chapter 25: Organic Compounds and Biochemicals
1Chapter 25 Organic Compounds and Biochemicals
- Organic chemistry is the study of the compounds
of carbon not classified as inorganic - Of the several million known compounds of carbon,
only a very few are not organic - Carbon atoms are unique because they form strong
covalent bonds with each other while at the same
time binding atoms of other nonmetals strongly
2- Isomers are compounds with identical molecular
formulas, but whose molecules have different
structures - Organic compounds are rich in isomers
3- Organic families are defined by functional groups
- Functional groups are small structural units
within a molecule at which most of the compounds
reactions occur - Condensed structures are usually used to
represent organic molecules - C-H bonds are usually understood
- Lone pairs of electrons are not shown
- These saves both time and space when writing
formulas
4Some Important Families of Organic Compounds
More general forms of both amines and amides
exist.
5- An advantage to collecting molecules into
families is that only a few kinds of reactions
must be learned - The emphasis is on the properties of the
functional group, not individual molecules - Once the center of reactivity is identified, its
characteristic reactions are generally expected
to occur
6Carbon atoms can be found in continuous sequences
(called straight chained molecules) or with
branches off the main chain (called branched
compounds).
7- Carbon can also form rings
Rings are often represented as polygons where the
corners represent carbon atoms. Heterocylic rings
contain atoms other than carbon, called
heteroatoms.
8- The functional groups and size, for example,
determine if a molecule is soluble in water - Hydrocarbons are only slightly polar and tend to
be insoluble in water - These include alkanes, alkenes, alkynes, and
aromatic compounds - Molecules with polar functional groups tend to be
soluble in water - These include alcohols, carboxylic acids, amines,
and amides
9- Large molecules, even if they contain polar
functional groups, tend to be insoluble - Alkanes are hydrocarbons that contain only single
bonds - They are called saturated compounds
- Hydrocarbons with double or triple bonds
(alkenes, alkynes, and aromatic compounds) are
called unsaturated compounds - Many hydrocarbons come from fossil fuels (coal,
petroleum, and natural gas)
10- One operation in petroleum refining is to boil
the crude oil and selectively condense the vapors
between preselected temperature ranges - The liquid collected at each range is called a
fraction and the process is called fractional
distillation - Each fraction is made almost entirely of alkanes
- For example, gasoline is the fraction collected
between about 40 and 200oC
11- All open-chain alkanes have the general formula
CnH2n2, where n is the number of carbon atoms in
the chain - Their boiling point increases with mass (see
Table 25.2) as their London forces become greater
with molecular size - The International Union of Pure and Applied
Chemistry (IUPAC) rules for organic nomenclature
are very systematic
12- IUPAC rules for naming the alkanes
- The name ending for all alkanes is ane.
- The parent chain is the longest continuous chain
of carbons in the structure. - A prefix is added to the name ending ane to
specify the number of carbon atoms in the parent
chain. The prefixes for up to ten carbons are
13- 4) The carbon atoms are number from the end that
gives the lower of the two possible numbers for
the first branch. - 5) Each branch attached to the parent is named as
an alkyl group, which is an alkane with one
hydrogen removed to allow attachment to the
parent chain. The names of alkyl groups end in
yl.
14- 6) The name of each alkyl group is attached to
the name of the parent as a prefix, each is named
and located with a number in front, separating
the number from the name by a hyphen. - 7) When two or more groups are attached the
parent, each is named and located with a number.
The names of the alkyl substituents are
assembled in alphabetical order. Use hyphens to
separate the numbers from words. - 8) When two or more substituents are identical,
multiplier prefixes are used di (for 2), tri
(for 3), trtra (4), and so forth. The location
number of every group must appear in the final
name. Separate a number from a number with a
comma.
15- 9) When identical groups are on the same atom,
the number of this position is repeated in the
name. - Alkanes are generally stable at room temperature
- They burn in air to given carbon dioxide
16- When heated at high temperature they crack,
meaning they break up into smaller molecules - Hydrocarbons with one or more double bonds are
members of the alkene family - Open chain alkenes have the general formula C2H2n
17- Hydrocarbons with one or more triple bonds are
members of the alkyne family - Open chain alkynes have the general formula
CnH2n-2 - Like all hydrocarbons, alkenes and alkynes are
insoluble in water and flammable - IUPAC rules for alkenes are adaptations of those
for alkanes - The parent must include the double bond
- The parent chain is number from the end that
gives the first carbon of the double bond the
lower of two possible numbers
18- Some alkenes have two double bonds and are called
dienes, some have three double bonds and are
called trienes, and so forth - Each double bond has to be located by a number
- Example CH2CHCHCHCH3 is 1,3-pentadiene
- There is no free rotation about the carbon-carbon
double bond - Thus, many alkenes exhibit geometric isomerism
19- Alkenes undergo addition reactions, reactions
which eliminate the pi-bond
20- CH2CH2 HCl(g) ? Cl- CH2-CH3
- Other inorganic compounds that undergo addition
reactions with alkenes include water, chlorine,
bromine, iodine, and hydrogen - Ozone reacts with anything that has a
carbon-carbon double or triple bond, forming a
variety of products - This high reactivity makes it dangerous because
may important compounds in living systems contain
double bonds - Aromatic compounds undergo substitution reactions
instead of addition reactions because of the
resonance energy of the ring - Example C6H6Cl2?C6H5ClHCl
21- When an alkyl group replaces a hydrogen in water,
an alcohol results - IUPAC names for alcohols The name ending for
alcohols is ol. The parent chain must include
the carbon containing the OH group - Examples CH3OH is methanol and CH3CH2CH2OH is
1-propanol - Ethers result when both hydrogens in water are
replaced with alkyl groups - Some common names CH3OCH3 is dimethyl ether,
CH3CH2OCH3 is ethyl methyl ether, and
CH3CH2OCH2CH3 is diethyl ether
22- Ethers are almost as chemically inert as alkanes
they burn and are split apart when boiled in
concentrated acid - Alcohols undergo a number of reactions
- Oxidation of alcohols if the alcohol carbon atom
holds at least one H atom, it can be replaced
with bonds to oxygen
23- Dehydration of alcohols this is the reverse
the the addition of water to an alkene. It is an
example of an elimination reaction - Substitution reactions of alcohols under acidic
conditions, the OH group can be replaced by a
halogen atom
24- Amines are derivatives of ammonia where one or
more hydrogens have been replaced with alkyl
groups - Some common names and boiling points (bp) NH3 is
ammonia (bp 33.4oC), CH3NH2 is methylamine (bp
8oC), (CH3)2NH is dimethylamine (bp 8oC), and
(CH3)3N is trimethylamine (bp 3oC). - Amines are bases, and react with strong proton
donors to form ammonium ion-like structures - This can greatly increase their solubility in
water
25- Protonated amines (like protonated ammonia) are
weak acids that can react with base - The carbonyl group, CO, occurs in several
organic families - What is attached to the CO determines the
specific family
26- Aldehydes and ketones
- The IUPAC name ending for an aldehyde is al. The
parent chain is the longest chain that includes
the aldehyde group.
27- The IUPAC ending for ketones is one. The parent
chain must include the carbonyl group - Aldehydes and ketones can be hydrogenated to give
alcohols
28- Aldehydes undergo oxidation to form carboxylic
acids, while ketones strongly resist oxidation - The IUPAC name ending for carboxylic acids is
oic acid. The parent chain must include the
carbonyl carbon, which is numbered as position 1
29- Carboxylic acids are used to synthesize two
important derivatives of the acids, esters and
amides - In esters, the OH of the carboxyl group is
replaced by OR - The IUPAC names for esters begins with the name
of the alkyl group attached to the O atom
followed by a separate word generated from the
name of the parent acid by changing oic acid to
-ate
30- Esters can be prepared by heating the parent acid
with an alcohol in the presence of an acid
catalyst
31- The reaction is reversible
- Carboxylic acids and alcohols can be obtained by
heating esters with acid in a large excess of
water - Esters are split apart by the action of base in a
reaction called saponification
32- Carboxylic acids can also be converted into
amides, a functional group found in proteins - Simple amides are those in which the nitrogen
bears no alkyl groups, only hydrogens - The IUPAC names of simple amides are generated by
replacing the oic acid of the parent carboxylic
acid with -amide
33- One way to prepare simple amides is by heating a
carboxylic acid in excess ammonia
34- Amides, like esters, can be hydrolyzed
- Amides are not bases
- The O on the carbonyl draws electron density to
itself and tightens the unshared electrons on
N, preventing their donation
35- Biochemistry is the systematic study of the
chemicals of living things - Living things are composed mostly of organic
compounds - Living systems require materials, energy, and
information or blueprints - This brief survey of biochemistry concentrates
mostly on the structures of selected biochemical
materials
36- A variety of compounds are required for cells to
work - Lipids include fats and oils. They are a major
component of the membranes that surround the
cells and a source of chemical energy. - Carbohydrates include starch, table sugar, and
cotton. They are a major source of chemical
energy. - Proteins are found, for example, in meat and
eggs. Enzymes (chemical catalysts) and many
hormones are proteins.
37- Nucleic acids, as genetic code, store the
information required to operate a living system.
Defects in the code are responsible for diseases
like cystic fibrosis and sickle-cell anemia - Carbohydrates are naturally occurring
polyhydroxyaldehydes or polyhydroxyketones, or
else compounds that react with water to give
these - Monosaccharides are carbohydrates that do not
react with water
38- The most common monosaccharide is glucose
(pentahydroxyaldehyde) - Glucose is the chief carbohydrate in blood, and
provides a building units for polysaccharides
like cellulose and starch - Disaccharides are carbohydrates that split into
two monosaccharide molecules by reacting with
water - Example sucrose (table sugar, cane sugar, or
beet sugar) which gives glucose and fructose upon
hydrolysis
39- Polysaccharides are naturally occurring polymers
whose molecules involve thousands of
monosaccharide units linked to each other by
oxygen bridges - They include starch, glycogen, and cellulose all
of which give only glucose upon hydrolysis - Plants store energy as starch
- The hydrolysis of amylose (the simplest starch)
can be represented as
40- Animals store glucose for energy as glycogen
- Excess glucose is converted to glycogen by liver
and muscle cells and stored for later use - Cellulose, a chief component of plant cell walls,
is a polymer of glucose that requires a special
enzyme to hydrolyze - Humans lack this enzyme and so are unable to use
cellulose for food. Cellulose is the fiber
found in foods like lettuce
41- Lipids are natural products that are nonpolar, so
they do not dissolve in water - The lipid family is very large
- Triacylglycerols are esters between glycerol and
include edible fats and oils like olive oil,
butterfat, and lard - They are called vegetable oils when derived from
plants and animal fats when derived from animals,
and are made from fatty acids - The vegetable oils tend to have more alkene
double bonds per molecule than animal fats and
are said to be polyunsaturated
42- The lipids involved in animal cell membrane are
called glycerophospholipids
The lipid molecules of animal cell membranes are
organized as a bilayer.
43- The purely hydrocarbon-like portions (the long R
groups contributed by the fatty acids) avoid
water and are called hydrophobic or water
fearing - The polar heads are hydrophilic or water loving
- If a pin were stuck into the lipid bilayer and
withdrawn, it would automatically close up - Proteins are a huge family of substances that
make up about half of a humans dry weight
44- The dominant structural units of proteins are
macromolecules called polypeptides - Polypeptides are made from a set of about 20
monomers called amino acids - Polypeptides are copolymers of the amino acids
Some proteins consist exclusively of polypeptide
molecules, but most also have nonpolypeptide
units such as small organic molecules, metal
ions, or both.
45- The final shape of a protein, called its native
form, is critical to its ability to function - Physical agents such as heat, poisons, and
certain solvents can alter a proteins native form - When this happened the protein is said to have
been denatured - Enzymes are the catalysts in living cells
- Virtually all enzymes are proteins
- Some of the most deadly poisons work by
deactivating enzymes
46Deoxyribonucleic acid, or DNA, is a nucleic acid
and carries genetic information. It is found as a
double helix in cells. (a) A schematic drawing in
which the hydrogen bonds between the two strands
are indicated by dotted lines. (a) A model of a
short section of DNA. The backbones are in blue.
47- The best hydrogen bonds are formed when the base
pairs that makeup the backbone match - Adenine (A) pairs with thymine (T), cytosine (C)
pairs with guanine (G), etc - DNA replicates itself by splitting the parent
DNA double helix and assembling the matching base
pairs on each strand - The result is two daughter DNA double helixes
48- A single human gene has between 1000 and 3000
bases - The bases do not occur continuously on a DNA
molecule - The separated segments of a DNA chain that make
up a gene are called exons because that unit
helps to express a message - The sections of DNA between the exons are called
introns because they are units that interrupt the
gene
49- Each polypeptide in a cell is made under the
direction of its own gene - The production of a polypeptide can be
represented as - Transcription the genetic message is read off in
the cell nucleus and transferred to ribonucleic
acid (RNA) - Translation the genetic message, now on RNA
outside the nucleus, is used to direct the
synthesis of a polypeptide
50- Four types of RNA are involved in the connection
of the gene to the polypeptide - Ribosomal RNA or rRNA is packed together with
enzymes in ribosomes. Ribosomes are manufacturing
stations for polypeptides. - Messenger RNA or mRNA brings the blueprints for
particular polypeptide to the manufacturing
station (ribosome) - Heterogeneous nuclear RNA or hnRNA has
responsibility for picking up the prefabricated
parts (amino acids) and getting them to the
ribosome.
51- About 2000 diseases are attributed to various
kinds of defects in the genetic machinery of
cells - If a single base is wrong in a gene, it could
result in a completely different polypeptide
being produced, possibly with fatal consequences - Atomic radiation and chemical agents can also
cause defects, possibly causing cancer
52- Viruses are packages of chemicals usually
consisting of nucleic acid and protein - Their nucleic acid is capable of taking over the
genetic machinery in certain cells of the host
tissues causing them to manufacture more virus
particles - The host cell bursts, releasing the newly
manufactured viruses, which can infect more cells
53- In genetic engineering, the genetic machinery of
a microorganism is taken over - The idea is to get it to make a useful molecule,
such as human insulin which is needed by
diabetics - Certain strains of bacteria can be modified to
introduce genes that the bacteria normally do not
have - Bacteria carry DNA in large, circular,
supercoiled DNA molecules called plasmids
54- Each plasmid carries just a few genes
- Plasmids can be removed, modified, and
re-inserted into the bacteria - The changed plasmid DNA is called recombinant DNA
- When these bacteria reproduce, they produce more
of the altered plasmids - The bacteria then manufacture the proteins
specified by the recombinant DNA
55- Genetic engineering has considerable promise
- In the future it may be possible to correct
genetic defects by introducing altered viruses
that contribute the information needed to
correct the defect