Molecules of Life

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MOLECULES OF LIFE Fun with Macromolecules

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Molecules of Life. Fun with Macromolecules. Biochemistry Terms. Organic Compounds – Carbon containing compounds produced by living organisms. Macromolecule – when smaller molecules join together to form a larger more complex molecule. Important Macromolecules. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Molecules of Life

Page 1: Molecules of Life

MOLECULES OF LIFE

Fun with Macromolecules

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BIOCHEMISTRY TERMS Organic Compounds

– Carbon containing compounds produced by living organisms.

Macromolecule – when smaller molecules join together to form a larger more complex molecule.

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IMPORTANT MACROMOLECULES

There are four types of macromolecules that make up all living organisms:

1. Carbohydrates2. Lipids3. Proteins4. Nucleic Acids

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ELEMENTS FOUND IN THE FOUR MACROMOLECULES: Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen Nitrogen Phosphorus

FOUND IN ALL!

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Carbohydrates

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1) CARBOHYDRATES Elements: Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen

CHO Arrangement:

ratio of one carbon, two hydrogen, and one oxygen.

Form a RING or chains of RINGS Subunits: Monosaccharides Function:

Quick energy…their bonds store a lot of energy!

Structural support (plants)

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I) SIMPLE

Simple = Monosaccharides (C6H12O6) Glucose from plants Fructose from fruits Galactose from milk

Glucose Fructose

Monomer-simplest unit

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II) COMPLEXComplex = Disaccharides (C12H24O12) -- two

Sucrose = glucose & fructose (table sugar)

Lactose = glucose & galactose

Sucrose Lactose

Polymer-larger units made of monomers

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III) VERY COMPLEXVery Complex=Polysaccharides(CxHyOx) --

many Starch - food storage, plants Cellulose – plant support Glycogen – energy storage, animals

Cellulose

Polymer-larger units made of monomers

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2) LIPIDSElements carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen atoms

CHOArranged in CHAINS

Subunits: glycerol and fatty acids (and sometimes phosphate)

Function: Better for storing energy-more bonds than

carbohydrates.

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LIPID TYPES Fats = energy storage Steroids = hormones & cholesterol Waxes = protective coatings (ear wax

and cuticle of plant leaves) Phospholipids = cell membrane

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3) PROTEINSElements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and

nitrogenCHON

Arrangement: multiple folds Subunits: aminoacids

Functions: Structural proteins-

Fibrous proteins…building blocks of cells

Globular proteins-Enzymes – aids chemical reactionsMessenger and transport proteins (cell

membrane)

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There are 20 different types of amino acids and they can form new proteins based upon their order and the number of them present in a protein chain.

Generalized Amino Acid

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NUCLEIC ACIDS

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4) NUCLEIC ACIDSDNA AND RNA

Elements carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen,

and phosphorus.CHONP

Subunits: nucleotides Function:

Control genetic or heredity information

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I) TYPES OF NUCLEIC ACIDS There are two types of nucleic acids:

a) DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) directs all cell activities and codes for genes

b) RNA (ribonucleic acid) directs protein creation and transfers

information

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HOW THEY ARE MADE: Monomers form polymers using a

process known as dehydration synthesis (removes a water molecule).

Polymers are broken down using a process known as hydrolysis (“breaks” or lyses a water molecule and “adds” it).

http://nhscience.lonestar.edu/biol/dehydrat/dehydrat.html

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ANY QUESTIONS?