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Large Molecules and Living Things, Part 2. Bio 10: Intro to Biology Instructor: Paul Nagami Laney College. Sept. 6, 2013. Agenda. Administrative Stuff Review: Monomers and Polymers Lactose Intolerance, Continued Proteins What Proteins Do (function) What Proteins are Made of (structure)
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Large Molecules and Living Things, Part 2 Bio 10: Intro to BiologyInstructor: Paul NagamiLaney College Sept. 6, 2013
Agenda • Administrative Stuff • Review: Monomers and Polymers • Lactose Intolerance, Continued • Proteins • What Proteins Do (function) • What Proteins are Made of (structure) • DNA • What DNA Does (function) • What DNA is Made of (structure) • Wrap-up
Challenge Statement “Human beings are made of acids.” Agree or disagree?
Monomers and dimers • Macromolecules are often made of repeating pieces. • Each piece is a monomer. Sticking two monomers together makes a dimer. Dimer Monomer two + pieces one + piece Glucose
Polymers Dehydration builds polymers. Hydrolysis breaks polymers. water + breaking
Test Your Memory On your index card, please name... 1) One example of a monomer, and where it can be found. 2) One example of a dimer, and where it can be found. 3) One example of a polymer, and where it can be found. 4) One example of a lipid, and where it can be found. Discuss your guesses briefly with a neighbor.
Lactose Intolerance Disaccharide Monosaccharide
Lactase: A Protein (Image Credit: chemicalconnection.org.uk) Proteins are responsible for most chemical reactions in your body! Proteins that drive chemical reactions are called enzymes.
Explain! When people with lactose intolerance drink normal milk, they can get flatulence and indigestion. However, drinking lactase-treated milk does not usually result in these symptoms. On your index card, please explain why this is the case, discussing your answer with your neighbor.
Protein Structure Strands of the protein keratin. Let’s zoom in even closer... what are these helices (corkscrews) made out of? What holds them together?
Covalent and Hydrogen Bonds! Monomers! Proteins are polymers, like carbohydrates!
Primary Structure: Proteins Are Amino Acid Polymers (Chains) Imagine unfolding a protein chain… You would be able to look at the individual monomers. These monomers are amino acids.
One Amino Acid Can Make a Big Difference! Let’s zoom in even more… what are amino acids made of?
Amino Acids Amine functional group (has N) Acidic functional group Test yourself: Which part of the amino acid could come off in water to make an ion?
Challenge Statement “Human beings are made of acids.” Agree or disagree?
Assembling Proteins Peptide bond = bond between amino acids Polypeptide = many amino acid monomers! (Polymer) Why don’t we call amino acids “monopeptides?” Because they don’t have a peptide bond. (You can have a dipeptide, though.)
Levels of Protein Structure Secondary Primary Tertiary Quaternary
What Causes Lactose Intolerance? DNA’s function: Instructions to make proteins, such as lactase!
Nucleic Acids (DNA/RNA) Adenine Monomer of nucleic acid = nucleotide