Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

52
Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life

Transcript of Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Page 1: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Biological MoleculesThe Building Blocks of Life

Page 2: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Atoms to Molecules

Page 3: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

In our model of scale, remember that the marble represented a small monomer, such as

glucose.

Page 4: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Functional GroupsFunctional

groups determine how a

molecule will interact with

other molecules.

Why does sugar dissolve in water?

Page 5: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.
Page 6: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

One glucose molecule alone is a monomer.

Two or more glucose

molecules linked together

can make a polymer.

Page 7: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Dehydration Synthesis

Two glucose molecules

(monomers)...

...can bond together to make maltose (dimer).

Page 8: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Hydrolysis

A dimer such as maltose, or any other polymer...

...can be broken apart into its constituent monomers.

Page 9: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Making/Breaking Molecules

Monomers or Polymers?

Monomer or Polymer?

The process occurring

between A and C is:

The process occurring

between C and A is:

What is given off

here?

What is taken up

here?

Hydrolysis Dehydration

Synthesis

H2OH2O

Page 10: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

In our model of scale, large chain molecules (polymers) are represented by the cat.

Page 11: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Carbohydrates

Page 12: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

MonomersSimple sugars, such as glucose, are the

monomers of complex

carbohydrates.

Label a hydrogen group and hydroxyl

group on the glucose diagram. What are some properties of

these groups?

Page 13: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

What is similar about these four simple sugars?

What is different?

Page 14: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

glucose fructose sucrose

What process do you see happening here to create this glycosidic linkage between the two sugars?

What is the scientific term for a pair of monomers linked together?

Page 15: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Glycosidic linkages between many sugar molecules create

complex carbohydrates, such as starch.

What is the scientific term for many monomers linked together?

Page 16: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Cellulose

CottonRayon

Linen

Hemp

Dietary “fiber”

Page 17: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

What do you see in the structure of cellulose that tells you that it is a carbohydrate?

How is cellulose similar to starch?

Page 18: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Cellulose vs. Starch

We can digest starch (amylose) but not cellulose. What difference do you see that

might be the reason behind this?

Page 19: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Chitin

PectinIn general, how can we

describe complex

carbohydrates?

Page 20: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

White death?

Some people claim that sugar is harmful, toxic, or addictive. Is it?

http://ed.ted.com/lessons/how-sugar-affects-the-brain-nicole-avena

Page 21: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Fake sugar?

Page 22: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Lipids

Page 23: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

What process do you see happening

here to create these ester

bonds between the

fatty acid chains and the glycerol in this triglyceride?

Label a methyl group and a hydroxyl group on one of the fatty acids. What are some

properties of these groups?

Page 24: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Lipids that are solid at room

temperature are composed mostly of saturated fatty

acids.

Stearic acid (found in wax and lard) and

butyric acid (found in butter) are examples of saturated fatty acids.

Page 25: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Lipids that are liquid at room temperature are composed mostly of unsaturated fatty

acids.

Oleic acid and linoleic acid are unsaturated fatty acids that are

common in vegetable oils.

Page 26: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Saturated vs. Unsaturated

Page 27: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

A puzzle:

Shortening and margarine labels often brag that their products are made with healthy, unsaturated vegetable oils. Vegetable oils are liquid at room temperature. So why are shortening and margarine solid at room temperature?

Page 28: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.
Page 29: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Trans fats?Unsaturated fats bend because of

the cis configuration

Trans configuration results in an unsaturated

fatty acid that is a straight chain like a saturated

fatty acid

Trans fats are rare in nature. Hydrogenation can create both saturated and trans fatty acids.

Page 30: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Phospholipids

Label the phosphate group on this

phospholipid. What are some properties of this

group?

Saturated or unsaturated?

Page 31: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Steroids

Page 32: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Fake fat?

What do you see in this molecular structure that suggests why Olestra is not digested? Why might it cause the symptoms

described on the label?

Page 33: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Proteins

Page 34: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Monomers

Amino acids are the monomers of proteins.On your diagram, label the amino group and the carboxylic acid group. What are some properties

of these groups?

Amino group

Carboxylic acid group

Page 35: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

R-groups determine

the properties of

individual amino acids.

Page 36: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.
Page 37: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

What process do you see happening here to create this peptide bond between the two amino acids?

What is the scientific term for many monomers linked together?

Page 38: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.
Page 39: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Some proteins, like keratin, are structural proteins.

Page 40: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Actin and myosin fibers in muscle cells, spider webs, and silk are also structural proteins.

Page 41: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Some proteins, such as insulin, are hormones.

Page 42: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Some proteins are enzymes that build or break down other molecules in living cells.

Page 43: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Some proteins are structured to carry or move substances, such as hemoglobin that carries

oxygen, or cell membrane proteins that move substances across the membrane.

Page 44: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Heat, acidity, or both can denature proteins. Denaturing changes the shape of a protein, which

changes its appearance and functionality. Denaturing is what happens when we fry an egg (egg whites contain albumin protein) or use acids to turn milk into cheese (milk solids contain casein

proteins).

Page 45: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

The shape of a protein determines its function.

The shape of an individual protein is determined by the order of amino acids in the primary chain, which

affects how the amino acid chain twists and folds into the final shape of the protein.

DNA contains the code that instructs the cell machinery to put amino acids together in a

particular order to make a particular protein. As long as the DNA contains the correct code, the protein

will function. Mistakes in the code (mutations) change the order of amino acids, which changes the structure of the protein, which prevents the protein

from carrying out its function.

Page 46: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Nucleic Acids

Page 47: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Monomers

Label the parts on this nucleotide.

Is this a nucleotide of DNA or RNA? How can you

tell?

Page 48: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Nucleotides link together to form nucleic acids. The sugars bind to the phosphate groups to form

the backbone of the chain.

Page 49: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

DNA is two strands of nucleotides side-

by-side.

What is the type of bond that forms the cross-links holding

the two strands together?

Page 50: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

ATP

Adenosine triphosphate, the universal energy carrier, is a single

nucleotide (adenine) with

two extra phosphate groups

attached.

Page 51: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Monomers Polymers Examples

Simple sugars

Amino acids

Fatty acids & glycerol

Nucleotide

Try to fill in this table from memory:

Page 52: Biological Molecules The Building Blocks of Life.

Recap• Atoms of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and a

few other elements bond together covalently to make the biological molecules.

• Monomers (small molecules, such as glucose) bond together to form polymers (large chain molecules, such as complex carbohydrates).

• The four classes of biological molecules are carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids.