Composition of matter and how it changes As living things, we require 20 elements › Most of which...
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Transcript of Composition of matter and how it changes As living things, we require 20 elements › Most of which...
Energy and BiochemistryUnit 4 cont.
Chemistry
Composition of matter and how it changes
As living things, we require 20 elements› Most of which are oxygen, carbon, nitrogen,
and hydrogen
Biochemistry: study of chemical processes related to living things
A little chemistry
Atom: individual unit of an element that still has the element’s properties› Atoms of different elements are different
from one another› Protons (+), neutrons, electrons (-)
Bonds: attractions between atoms; due to sharing or donating of electrons› Covalent: shared electrons› Ionic: transfer of electrons
Covalent vs. Ionic
A little chemistry
Molecules: more than one atom Compounds: more than one type of
atom
Examples:› Na› O2
› H2O
Macromolecules
Macromolecules: large molecules made of repeating subunits (AKA polymers)
Made of monomers (smaller molecules, repeating subunits)
There are different monomers depending on which atoms are arranged and how they are arranged
Digestion
We consume the macromolecule, but it is later broken down into these smaller monomers to be used in our body.
Carbohydrates
Elements: C, H, O in 1:2:1 ratio
Monomer: monosaccharides
Build a glucose molecule with the molymods!
Polymers
Disaccharides (2 mono’s)
Polysaccharides (3/more mono’s)
Carbohydrates
Examples: glucose, fructose, galactose, maltose, starch
Functions: energy storage, structural support in plants
Foods: sugars, syrups, pasta, candy cane, candy corn, fruits, vegetables, bread
Bozeman - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_zm_DyD6FJ0Sulfuric acid and sugar - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZOedJgqTT9E
Lipids (fats)
Elements: C, H, O, sometimes P
Monomer: fatty acids, glycerol
Lipids cont. Examples: triglycerides, phospholipids,
steroids (cholesterol, hormones)
Functions: energy storage (2x as much as carbs), insulation, shock absorber, cell membranes
Foods: oils, butter, cheese, meat
Fats
Unsaturated: has double bonds› Liquid at room temperature
Saturated: no double bonds, completely saturated with Hydrogen› Solid at room temperature
Which of these is healthier?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=endscreen&NR=1&v=HgH6C1itI08 – supersize me
Proteins
Elements: C, H, O and N Monomer: amino acids (20 types) Functions: energy, enzymes, cell
transport, muscular structure, receptors, antibodies
Foods: meat, fish, grains, nuts
Dehydration Synthesis
Dehydration synthesis: building a bigger molecule; water is removed
Organic Molecules
Contain chains or rings of carbon
Everything we’ve discussed› Carbs› Lipids› Proteins› Nucleic Acids (DNA, RNA)
Amino acids
Structure: central carbon amino group carboxyl group (acid) R group (side chain)
variable group unique chemical properties of the amino acid
Proteins
Amino acids are joined by a peptide bond
Protein Folding
The structure/folding of a protein determines its function.
Primary Protein Structure
Amino acid linear sequence› “Beads on a string”
Secondary Protein Structure
First stage of folding
› Alpha Helix
› Beta pleated sheet
Tertiary Protein Structure
More folding› Protein folds in on itself
Quaternary Protein Structure
2 or more units folded together
Protein folding
- Randomly put 15 pins on the tuber (primary -1)
- Arrange your protein chain into an alpha helix or beta sheet
(secondary -2)- Touch red pins with the blue pins
and white pins with the yellow pins (tertiary - 3)- tertiary structures bind with one
another (quaternary- 4)