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Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life

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Title: AP Biology Notes Author: PCA Last modified by: Amanda Dyer Created Date: 8/29/2001 2:52:51 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show (4:3) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life


1
Carbon and the Molecular Diversity of Life
  • Chapter 4
  • Biology Campbell Reece

2
Importance of Carbon
  • Organic chemistry the study of carbon compounds
  • Most versatile building blocks of molecules
  • It has 4 valence electrons
  • Shares them in covalent bonds (not likely to form
    ionic)
  • It makes large complex molecules possible.
  • It determines an organic molecules three
    dimensional shape

3
Importance of Carbon
  • Variation in carbon skeletons contributes to the
    diversity of organic molecules
  • Length
  • Shape (straight, branched, ring)
  • Number and location of double bonds
  • Other elements covalently bonded to available
    sites

4
Hydrocarbons
  • Contain only carbon and hydrogen
  • Have a diversity of carbon skeletons which
    produce molecules of various lengths and shapes
  • Are hydrophobic because the C-C and C-H bonds are
    nonpolar
  • Biologically important molecules (fats)

5
Structure of hydrocarbons
6
Isomers
  • Compounds with the same molecular formula but
    with different structures and different
    properties
  • Structural isomers differ in the covalent
    arrangement of their atoms (and location of
    double bonds)
  • Geometric isomers share the same covalent
    partnerships, but differ in spatial arrangements.
  • cis isomer on the same side of the double bond
  • trans isomer on opposite sides

7
Isomers
  • Enantiomers isomers that are mirror images of
    each other
  • Can occur when four different atoms or groups of
    atoms are bonded to the same carbon.
  • Two different spatial arrangements
  • Usually, one form is biologically active and the
    other is not

8
Isomers
9
Functional Groups
  • Contribute to the molecular diversity of life
  • Have specific chemical and physical properties
  • Are chemically active regions of organic
    molecules
  • Behave consistently from one organic molecule to
    another
  • Determine unique chemical properties of the
    molecules in which they occur

10
Hydroxyl Group
11
Carbonyl Group
12
Carboxyl Group
13
Amino Group
14
Sulfhydryl Group
15
Phosphate Group
16
Methyl Group
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