Chapter 2 BioMOlecules

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Chapter 2 BioMOlecules. A. Organic Compounds = compounds containing carbon atoms that are covalently bonded to other carbon atoms and other elements such as oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen. 1. Carbon forms bonds easily because it has 4 valence electrons. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Chapter 2 BioMOlecules

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A. Organic Compounds = compounds containing carbon atoms that are covalently bonded to other carbon atoms and other elements such as oxygen, hydrogen, and nitrogen.

1. Carbon forms bonds easily because it has 4 valence electrons.2. Carbon atoms can bond to other carbon

atoms, forming chains that are almost unlimited in length.

3. All living things contain carbon (C), hydrogen (H), oxygen (O), nitrogen (N), and phosphorous (P).

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B. Attack of the Macromolecules! (“Giant Molecules”)

1. Monomers (building blocks of many carbon compounds) – created when C, H, O, N, P bond together to form small molecules.

2. Polymer – large compounds that are formed by joining monomers together.

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a. The process of making a polymer is called Polymerization.

b. Condensation/Dehydration Reaction – reaction linking monomers into polymers, with the loss of water.

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c. Hydrolysis – reaction breaking down polymers into monomers with the addition of water, reversing a

condensation reaction. d. Chemical reactions are fueled by

an energy molecule of the cell, Adenosine Triphosphate

(ATP).

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3. Some polymers are also called biomolecules or macromolecules.

a. Carbohydratesb. Lipidsc. Proteinsd. Nucleic Acids

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B. Carbohydrates (made of Carbon, Hydrogen, and Oxygen, in a 1:2:1 ratio)

1. Commonly called sugars and starches.

2. Monomers (subunits) are monosaccharides, also known

as simple sugars.a. Monosaccharides = 1 sugar

b. Example of Monosaccharide: glucose, fructose, galactose

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c. Disaccharides = 2 monosaccharides joined

d. Example of Disaccharide: sucrose = glucose and

fructose joinede. Example of Disaccharide:

maltose = glucose and glucose joined

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f. Polysaccharides = many monosaccharides joined

g. Example of Polysaccharide: glycogen = stores excess sugar in

animalsh. Example of Polysaccharide: cellulose = makes rigid plant cell

walls

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3. Functions:a. Store and release quick energyb. Provide structural supportExample: Exoskeletons of insects

4. Food examples:a. Bread, Potatoes, Beans, Pasta,

Cereal, Fruit

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B. Lipids (made of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen; large non-polar molecules that DON’T dissolve in water)

1. Commonly called fats, oils, steroids, and waxes

2. Monomers (subunits) are glycerol (hydrophilic “head”) with fatty acid chains

(hydrophobic “tail”)

Glycerol

Fatty Acid

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a. Triglycerides – 3 fatty acids joined to glycerol (alcohol with a carboxyl group – COOH)

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b. Phospholipids – 2 fatty acids joined to glycerol (alcohol with carboxyl group –

COOH)

- Example: cell membrane (barrier between inside and outside of cell)

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c. Waxes – many fatty acids joined to glycerol (alcohol with a carboxyl

group – COOH)- Example: earwax, surface of

some plant leaves

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3. Functions:a. Store long-term energyb. Insulationc. Make up cell membranes

4. Food examples:a. Oil, Butter, Steak, Bacon

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C. Proteins (made of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, and Nitrogen)

1. Monomers (subunits) are amino acids; only 20 different amino acids exist.

a. Structure of an amino acid:- Amino Group (end)- Carboxyl Group (end)- R- Group (middle)

*changes*

Tryptophan SerineLeucine

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b. Dipeptides – 2 amino acids

joined by a

peptide bond

c. Polypeptides – many amino acids joined by a peptide bond

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d. Levels of Protein Structure (Very complex!)- Primary (1’) – arrangement of amino acids- Secondary (2’) –

folding/coiling of amino acids

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- Tertiary (3’) – folding of the whole protein - Quaternary (4’) –

polypeptides attracted together

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2. Functions:a. Transport oxygen to

blood stream (hemoglobin)

b. Provide immunity (antibodies)c. Muscle Contractionsd. Speed up chemical

reactions (enzymes)

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3. Food examples:a. Fish, Meat, Peanut Butter, Milk, Rice

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4. Other Protein Examples

a. An enzyme is a protein acting as a biological catalyst.

b. Catalyst – special proteins that speed up chemical reactions by lowering the activation energy

needed to start the reaction.

- Lowering the activation energy allows cells to do work more efficiently, because it requires less energy to do its work.

- If the cell requires less energy, it can react more rapidly, therefore, enzyme to help to increase the rate of reaction.

c. Enzyme names end in “- ase”.

- Examples: Catalase, Sucrase, Lactase

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d. Characteristics of an Enzyme

- Enzymes act on specific substrates.

- Substrate – substance that the enzyme breaks down

- Each substrate fits in to the active site of the enzyme. (Like a lock & key.)

- Active Site – region where enzyme substrate bind together

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- Product – the substrate broken down after the

enzyme has acted on it

- ENZYMES ARE NOT CHANGED OR USED IN THE REACTION!

- Enzymes go on to carry out the same reactions again and again.

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- Denature – when an enzyme changes shape due to a change in temp., pH, or other factor preventing binding

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D. Nucleic Acids (made of Carbon, Hydrogen, Oxygen, Nitrogen, Phosphorous)

1. Monomers (subunits) are called nucleotides.

a. Made up of a 5-carbon sugar, phosphate, and nitrogen

base.

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2. Function: a. Store genetic information in cells

3. Examples:a. DNA and RNA