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Basic Chemistry and Microbiology. Review of Basic Chemistry. smallest basic particle is the atom Electrons - negatively charged Protons - positively charged in nucleus Neutrons - uncharged in nucleus when electrons are lost or gained, a charge occurs
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Review of Basic Chemistry • smallest basic particle is the atom • Electrons- negatively charged • Protons- positively charged in nucleus • Neutrons- uncharged in nucleus • when electrons are lost or gained, a charge occurs • substances containing only one kind of atom are called elements
approximately 20 elements are found in all living things • carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen make up 97% • the other 16 are called trace elements • Molecules are when two or more atoms are joined together (Ex: O2, CO2 )
Compounds and Solutions • Two or more atoms or molecules joined in a definite proportion by weight is called a compound • Compounds have different characteristics from elements they are made from • Represented by a formula
Compounds and Solutions • Two or more atoms or molecules joined in a definite proportion by weight is called a compound • Compounds have different characteristics from elements they are made from • Represented by a formula
Compounds and Solutions • Types of Compounds • Inorganic • Do not contain carbon • Often has a metal as a positive ion • Organic • Found in living things • Always contain carbon • When with hydrogen they are called hydrocarbons (usually gases) • When with other carbons, they bond in chains
Compounds and Solutions • Solutions • Chemical process take place in solutions • A solution is when one substance dissolves into another • The solute is dissolved into the solvent • If it dissolves it is soluble, if not, insoluble • Note: in microbiology, a tincture is alcohol and some other substance
Carbohydrates • All have carbon (C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O) • Occur in ration of 1:2:1
Carbohydrates • Monosaccharides • Single or simple sugars • Glucose, fructose, galactose • They are isomers (same formula, but different arrangement)
Carbohydrates • Glucose (also known as dextrose) • Carried in bloodstream • Combines with oxygen (oxidation) and produces adenosine triphosphate (ATP) • Fructose (found in fruits and honey) • Sweetest of all monosaccharides • Galactose • Found in small amounts in agar, flaxseed, and milk NOTE: “ose” means sugar
Carbohydrates • Disaccharides • Known as a double sugar • Examples: sucrose(table sugar), lactose (milk sugar)and maltose (malt sugar) • Chemical reaction to join: • Dehydration synthesis (opposite to break apart is hydrolysis)
Dehydration Synthesis + = Disaccharide
Hydrolysis Disaccharide + =
Carbohydrates • Oligosaccharides • Form chains called polymers • Small chains with only 2-10 monosaccharides • Ex: insulin • Polysaccharides • Large, complex molecules • Made of hundreds of thousands of glucose • Have very long polymer chains • Ex: starch, cellulose, and glycogen
Carbohydrates • https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M6ZLDJluj6I • http://www.khanacademy.org/partner-content/crash-course1/crash-course-biology/v/crash-course-biology-103
Lipids • Examples are fats, oils, and waxes • Like carbs, they have carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen, but much less oxygen • Fats are solid and oils are liquid at room temperature • Better sources of energy than carbohydrates (yield more energy) but are harder to oxidize • Three groups: simple lipids, compound lipids, and derived lipids
Lipids Simple Lipids (triacylycerol or triglyceride) • contain one glycerol molecule and three fatty acids held together by ester linkages • Formed by dehydration synthesis
Lipids Simple Lipids • Saturated (when all carbon bonds are single and saturated with hydrogen) • Can block arteries • Difficult to break up • Raises cholesterol • Solid at room temperature
Lipids Simple Lipids • Unsaturated (when two or more hydrogen bonds are replaced with double bonds between carbon atoms) • Liquid at room temperature • Monounsaturated (lacks 2 hydrogen bonds) or Polyunsaturated (lacks 8 or more hydrogen bonds forming 4 or more double bonds) • Lowers Cholesterol • Easier to break up
Lipids • Trans Fats • Unsaturated fat but act like a saturated fat • Has trans arrangement in bonding- the hydrogens are on opposite sides of the double bond. • Typical man-made
Lipids https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3xF_LK9pnL0 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VGHD9e3yRIU
Lipids • Compund lipids- lipids which contain an inorganic or organic group in addition to fatty acids and glycerol. • Phosphpholipids- Lipids containing a phosphate group. A phospholipid molecule has a strongly nonpolar and hydrophobic (water insoluble) tail region represented by fatty acid chains and a strongly polar or hydrophilic (water soluble) head region represented by the phosphate group.
Lipids • Glycolipids- These are lipids containing a carbohydrate group, usually galactose. They are found in the nerve cell membranes especially in the myelin sheath.
Lipids • Lipoproteins- These are lipids, usually phospho-lipids which contain a protein molecule. They occur in the cell membrane. They are also found in milk and egg yolk
Lipids • Derived Lipids (Sterols) • Contain only carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen • Include steroids found in male and female hormones, Vitamin D, cholesterol, and fat soluble vitamins A, E, and K • Classified as lipids only because they are soluble in fat solvents • These are lipids that do not have a straight chain. They are composed of four fused carbon rings and a long hydrocarbon side chain.
Lipids • Derived Lipids
Proteins • Contain hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen and most times phosphorus and sulfur • Found in every part of living cells • Coat viruses • In binding and structural components like fingernails, hair, ligaments, muscles, etc. • Made of AMINO ACIDS
Proteins • Structure of Amino Acid Position 1 is carbon, Position 2 is amino group (NH2), Position 3 is hydrogen atom, Position 4 is a carboxyl group (COOH), and Position 5 is variable (R)
Proteins Ex: Glycine (H is in R group) Large protein molecules are constructed from any number and sequence of amino acids (can number from 300 to thousands)
Proteins • Amino acids linked by dehydration synthesis (C-N) (bond between carboxyl group of one amino acid and amino group of next amino acid). Called a PEPTIDE BOND and a series of linkages is called a POLYPEPTIDE • THIS IS CALLED A PROTEIN
Proteins • Structure • Primary- straight chain • Secondary- helix • Tertiary- twisted and folded • Quaternary- two or more polypeptide chains are bonded together
Proteins http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lijQ3a8yUYQ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2Jgb_DpaQhM
Proteins Functions: • Enzymes - proteins that allow chemical reactions to occur in living things • Antibodies – proteins that protect the body from infection • Structure – cytoskeleton, hair, nails, muscles, spider web, silk, feathers ,horns, hooves etc…. • Hormones – chemical messengers • Cell membrane – proteins can act as channels through the cell membrane - receptor proteins found on membrane transmit signals to the inside of cells • Hemoglobin – protein found in blood that carries oxygen
Proteins Denatured proteins are proteins that lose their shape - if they lose their shape, they also lose their - What can cause a protein to become denatured? Exposure to: Strong Acid Strong Base Heat Organic solvent: Alcohol or Acetone - Denatured proteins can lose quaternary, tertiary and secondary structure - Primary Structure is left untouched
Proteins (enzymes) • Specialized proteins • Help provide energy to cell at just the right moment and at just the right speed • Also known as organic catalysts • Highly specific • Very large and complex
Proteins (enzymes) • Made of either all protein or part protein (apoenzyme)attached to a non-protein part (coenzyme) • Coenzymes could be calcium, iron, magnesium, copper, or vitamins like C and B-complex
Proteins (enzymes) • The localized site on the enzyme molecule is called the active site • Each enzyme has its own pattern on the active site (no 2 alike) • An enzyme reacts with a reactant whose molecular pattern fits the enzyme’s molecular pattern. • The molecule that the enzyme reacts with is called a SUBSTRATE molecule
Proteins (enzymes) Lock and key model
Proteins (enzymes) • Temporary physical binding called Enzyme-Substrate Complex
Proteins (enzymes) Enzymes are proteins and if they are exposed to extremes of temp or pH lose their shape • - if a protein loses its shape, it loses its function • - a protein that loses its shape is said to be denatured • - if an enzyme is denatured, substrate cannot enter the active site
Proteins (enzymes) extreme temperatures or pH
Proteins (enzymes) • Name usually ends in –ASE • Added to stem word taken from substrate • Examples: • Lactase……lactose • Lipase……...lipids • Maltase……maltose • Protease…...protein • Sucrase…….sucrose
Proteins (enzymes) An example in microbiology: Many bacteria have an enzyme that needs a compound called PABA (para-aminobenzoic acid). PABA helps bacteria make a vitamin called folic acid, which the bacteria need to grow.
Proteins (enzymes) An example in microbiology: When antibiotic sulfanilamide is given to the bacteria instead of PABA, the sulfanilamide molecules attach to active sites of bacteria and folic acid is not made.
Nucleic Acids • Contain carbon, oxygen, hydrogen, nitrogen, and phosphorous • Two types- DNA and RNA
Nucleic Acids • DNA • Found in chromosomes and genes, plasma membrane, mitochondria, and chloroplasts • Consists of a phosphate group, deoxyribose sugar and one of four nitrogenous bases: adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine
Nucleic Acids • RNA • Consists of a phosphate group (ribose sugar), and any of the following nitrogenous bases: adenine, cytosine, guanine, and uracil • Single stranded • Found in cytoplasm, nucleoli, and ribosomes • Two kinds: mRNA and tRNA