1 The Chemical Building Blocks of Life Biological Chemistry.

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Transcript of 1 The Chemical Building Blocks of Life Biological Chemistry.

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The Chemical Building Blocks of Life

Biological Chemistry

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Questions to ponder…..

1) What elements do all organisms include?

2) What are organic compounds?

3) Next to water, what is the most common substance in living things?

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CARBON

• Carbon is unique because:

1. It has the ability to form stable & strong covalent bonds because of its structure

2. It can form chains of almost unlimited length bonding to other C atoms

3. It can form single, double & triple bonds….no other atom can do all this

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Outline

• Biological or Organic Compounds • The Macromolecules (in a

nutshell) Proteins

Hormones, transport, structure & enzymes Nucleic Acids

Pass genetic info Lipids

E storage & barriers Carbohydrates

E source & structural support

Carbon atom

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Biological Molecules

• The framework of biological molecules consists of carbon bonded to other carbon molecules, or other types of atoms.

– Hydrocarbons consist of carbon and hydrogen.

Covalent bonds store considerable energy.

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Building Biological Molecules

• Functional groups– specific groups of atoms attached to

carbon backbones retain definite chemical properties Ex:??

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The Macromolecules

• Include:– proteins– nucleic acids– lipids– carbohydrates

PLUS:Macromolecules are often polymers.

long molecule built by linking together small, similar subunits

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Macromolecules

Dehydration synthesis removes OH and H during synthesis of a new molecule.

Hydrolysis breaks a covalent bond by adding OH and H.

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Chemical reactions review…..

• Chemical reactions involve the making and breaking of chemical bonds.

• Chemical bonds “store” energy.

• When a bond is broken, energy is released (heat, light, sound)

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Exergonic Reaction

• Exergonic Reaction is one in which more energy is released than used.

• Ex. Fireworks, cellular respiration, digestion

• These reactions involve the breaking of polymers into monomers

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• Endergonic Reaction is one in which more energy

is absorbed (stored in bonds) than is released. • These reactions involve joining monomers into

polymers.• Ex. Photosynthesis, making proteins, etc.

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Proteins

• Protein functions:– structure– movement– storage– defense– transport– regulation– enzymes

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Structure is related to function!

• Structurally sophisticated.

• Shape determines function and is crucial to the job of a protein.

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Monomer: Amino Acids (AA)

• twenty common AA (grouped into • 5 groups) compose all the proteins

AA are made in the ribosomes of

the cell & joined by peptide bonds

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Amino Acids• Peptide bond links two amino acids.

– A protein is composed of one or more long chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds (These are called polypeptides).

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Protein Structure• Protein function is

determined by its shape.– Protein structure

primary - specific amino acid sequence

secondary - folding of amino acid chains

motifs - folds or creases

supersecondary structure

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Protein Structure

tertiary - final folded shape of globular protein

domains - functional units

quaternary - forms when two or more polypeptide chains associate to form a functional protein

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Enzymes

• Enzymes are proteins that function as a catalyst - they control the rate of a reaction without being consumed by the reaction.

• They usually speed up the rate of a reaction by lowering the amount of activation energy needed to start the reaction.

• End with -ase.• Ex. lactase•

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Reaction with enzyme

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How enzymes work…Induced Fit Model• The substrate (what the enzyme is going to work

upon) comes into contact with the active site of the enzyme.

• The enzyme “wraps” around the substrate breaking or forming bonds.

• The product is released.

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Enzyme at work

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Unfolding Proteins

• Denaturation refers to the process of changing a protein’s shape.

– usually rendered

biologically inactive salt-curing and pickling used to preserve

food temperature - high temperatures break

bonds pH- designed to work at a specific pH

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Nucleic Acids: Main Functions

• Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)– Encodes information used to assemble

proteins.• Ribonucleic Acid (RNA)

– Reads DNA-encoded information to direct protein synthesis.

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Nucleic Acid Structure• Nucleic acids are composed of long

polymers of repeating subunits nucleotides - the monomer.

– five-carbon sugar– phosphate– nitrogenous base

adenine, cytosine,

guanine & either

thymine or uracil

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Nucleic Acid Structure

• DNA :1. Sugar=deoxyribose2. Bases=ATCG3. Phosphate

RNA :• Sugar=ribose• Bases=AUCG• Phosphate

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Structure of DNA

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Lipids• Lipids made up of C & H with nonpolar bonds.

Lipids are not attracted to water-hydrophobic.

Ex: Fats, oils, waxes, and

steroids.• Phospholipids form the core of

all cell membranes.

Ex of a monomer of lipid like in

fats & phospholipids:

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Lipids

• Steroids – include cholesterol (common in animal cell membranes) & hormones

• Anabolic steroids - synthetic variants of testosterone

• Testosterone causes buildup of bone and muscle mass in puberty.

• Too much testosterone can cause serious physical and mental problems: mood swings, depression, liver damage, increased blood cholesterol, infertility, testicular atrophy, breasts development

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Fats:

• SATURATED FATS:

1. animal fats

2. commonly found in meats & dairy products

3. tend to be solid at room temperature

• POLYUNSATURATED FATS:

1. plant fats

2. cooking oils like sesame, peanut & corn oil

3. tend to be liquid at room temperature

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Saturated vs. unsaturated fatty acids

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Fats as Energy Storage Molecules• Fats, on average, yield about 9 kcal per

gram versus 4 kcal per gram for carbohydrates

• Animal fats are saturated while most plant fats are unsaturated

• Consumption of excess carbohydrates leads to conversion into starch, glycogen, or fats for future use.

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Isomers isomers - alternative forms of the same

substance ex. 8 isomers of “glucose”

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Carbohydrates• Carbohydrates :molecules that contain

carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in a 1:2:1 ratio or sugars

– monosaccharides - simple sugars (the mononomers)

– disaccharides - two monosaccharides joined by a covalent

– bond– polysaccharides -

made of many monosaccharide subunits

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Carbohydrate Transport

a) Humans transport glucose as a simple monosaccharide

b) plants transform glucose into a dissaccharide transport form

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Storage polysaccharides….• Starch - plant storage

from glucose• Glycogen - animal

storage-stored in liver & muscle

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Structural Carbohydrates• Cellulose - plants

– Building material of cell walls-

provides protection/support – animals can not digest cellulose - “fiber”– chitin - exoskeleton of

arthropods and in fungi cell walls

– modified form of cellulose

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Summary

• The Biological Molecules.

Why are each important? Proteins

Nucleic Acid

Lipids

Carbohydrates

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Summary

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