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How many grams of sugar do you think you should eat in one day?. helix (‘he liks ) (noun) - the shape formed by a line that curves around and along a central line. The most famous helix is the double- helix formed by DNA. Daily Recommended Nutrient Intake. Compounds of life.
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How many grams of sugar do you think you should eat in one day? helix (‘he liks) (noun) - the shape formed by a line that curves around and along a central line. The most famous helix is the double-helix formed by DNA.
4 macromolecules • These 4 compounds are found in all cells and are necessary for life
Macromolecules are Polymers Monomers: the individual compounds Polymers: many monomers joined together (poly=many) polymer Polymers are like a beaded necklace and monomers are like an individual bead! monomer
The 4 compounds of life are organic compounds Organic means that the molecules contain carbon! 1. Carbohydrates 2. Lipids 3. Proteins 4. Nucleic Acids
1. Carbohydrates • Sugars & starches for making energy • Found in bread, plant matter, grains, sugars • Most sugars end in suffix “-ose”
Simple carbs have one ring – monosaccharides • Carbs with two rings joined together - disaccharides • Multiple rings - polysaccharides
3 main types of polysaccharides (complex carbs): • Plants store excess energy in the form of starch. • Animals store energy as glycogen. 3. Cellulose is structural support for plants. Fiber (what we call cellulose when it is eaten) is indigestible to humans.
Carbohydrates vs. Sugars • On nutrition labels, carbohydrates and sugars are listed different • The ‘sugars’ on nutrient labels are usually monosaccarides • The ‘carbohydrates’ listed are only complex carbohydrates
So, what is the monomer of a carbohydrate? a monosaccharide! (one ring, like glucose!)
2. Lipids • Organic compounds that are waxy, oily, fatty • From foods like butter and oils • Cholesterol: Important lipid that makes cell membranes flexible • Hydrogen to oxygen ratio is always greater than 2:1
Saturated Fats: often solid at room temp. • Only single bonds • Animal fats, lard, butter • Not as healthy • Unsaturated Fats: often liquid at room temp. • One or more double bonds • Plant oils, nuts, avocados • Healthier
So, what is the monomer of a lipid? • One glycerol (an alcohol) attached to three fatty acid chains
3. Proteins • Contain nitrogen as well as C, H, O • Monomer - amino acid • Amino acids are linked together by peptide bonds (a type of covalent bond) to form proteins • R- the variable part of the amino acid
Protein structure There are different ways that proteins can be folded or arranged, depending on what the protein is being built for!
Again, the monomer of a protein is an… Amino Acid!!!! (there are 20 different amino acids)
4. Nucleic Acids • Large complex molecules composed of phosphorous, N, C, O, and H. • 2 basic kinds of nucleic acids: RNA & DNA (genetic material) Monomer: Nucleotide
What is the monomer of a nucleic acid? A nucleotide!!
DNA and RNA contain our genetic material! Can you see the repeating nucleotides???
Enzymes –super special proteins Enzymes speed up chemical reactions. They are also called catalysts. Almost every reaction in your body is controlled by an enzyme!
Enzymes speed up reactions without altering the reaction • They lower the activation energy required for a reaction to happen • They are “denatured” • (destroyed) by: • Temperature • pH changes • Enzyme names end in “-ase”
What does this mean? • It means that each enzyme operates best at a certain temperature and pH
Enzyme specificity • Enzymes are specific to a particular reaction • Each enzyme binds to one particular substrate • Where it binds (attaches) is called the active site • When the enzyme binds it changes the shape of the substrate