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VIDEO LECTURE 1 LIPIDS CLASSIFICATION& FUNCTIONS. DEFINITION. A group of organic compounds that are insoluble in water(hydrophobic) but soluble in organic solvents Most membrane lipids are amphipathic small molecules having polar head group and non polar tail group. FUNCTIONS OF LIPIDS.
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DEFINITION Agroup of organic compounds that are insoluble in water(hydrophobic) but soluble in organic solvents Most membrane lipids are amphipathic small molecules having polar head group and non polar tail group
FUNCTIONS OF LIPIDS • MEMBRANE STRUCTURE • FUELS AND STORAGE FROMS OF ENERGY • DIGESTION(BILE) AND ABSORPTION OF FAT SOLUBLE VITAMINS • STEROID HORMONES • THEY PROVIDE INSULATION FROM ENVIRONMENT
Fatty Acids A fatty acid is a carboxylic acid with a long aliphaticchain which can be eithersaturated or unsaturated Fatty acids that have carbon–carbon double bonds are known as unsaturated. Fatty acids without double bonds are known as saturated
Naming of fatty acids According to IUPACnames/delta-xnomenclature counting begins from the carboxylic acid end. Double bonds are labelled with cis-/trans And each double bond is indicated by Δx, where the double bond is located on the x thcarbon–carbon bond
Cis and Trans fatty acids • Cis-fatty acids are isomers in which the continuing carbon chains on each end of the double bond face the same direction. A cis-isomer is bent or “kinked,” preventing cis-fatty acids from packing closely together. • Trans-fatty acids are isomers often created during commercial food production. In trans-fatty acids, the continuing carbon chains face opposite directions around a double bond. Trans-isomers are structurally similar to saturated fatty acids
Natural Fats/Tri acyl Glycerides • Triglycerides are chemically tri esters of fatty acids and glycerol. • Triglycerides are the main constituents of body fatin animals, as well as vegetable fat.
Complex/Compound Lipids • Esters of fatty acids with alcohol, containing non-lipid Group (PO4, Nitrogenous base, or sugar) • Compound Lipids are Further Classified as: • PHOSPHO-LIPIDS • GLYCO-LIPIDS • PROTEO-LIPIDS (LIPO-PROTEINS) • SULPHO-LIPIDS
Types of phospholipids • The simplest glycerophospholipid is phosphatidic acid (PA) • It consists of glycerol, phosphate, and 2 fatty acyl chains in ester linkages
Different types of phospholipids Phosphatidylethanolamine (cephalin) (PE) • Phosphoinositides: Phosphatidylinositol ((PI) • Phosphatidylcholine (lecithin) (PC) • Phosphatidylserine (PS)
Functions of phospholipids • major constituents of all cell membranes • components of bile • anchor some proteins in membranes • signal mediators • components of lung surfactant • components of lipoproteins
Plasmalogens • Plasmalogens have an ether-linked hydrocarbon chain at C-1 of glycerol, instead of ester-linked fatty acid Platelet-activating factor (PAF) is a plasmalogen (a phosphatidalcholine) with an acetyl group at C-2 of glycerol It has potent physiologic actions (platelet activation; inflammatory responses; bronchoconstriction