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Chapter 27. Biomolecules : Lipids. Why this Chapter?. Lipids are the largest and most diverse class of biomolecules To examine lipid structure, function, and metabolism. About Lipids. Natural materials that preferentially extract into nonpolar organic solvents
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Chapter 27. Biomolecules: Lipids Why this Chapter? Lipids are the largest and most diverse class of biomolecules To examine lipid structure, function, and metabolism
About Lipids • Natural materials that preferentially extract into nonpolar organic solvents • Includes fats, oils, waxes, some vitamins and hormones, some components of membrane • General types: esters (“saponifiable”) and those that can’t be hydrolyzed
27.1 Waxes, Fats, and Oils • Waxes - contain esters formed from long-chain (C16-C36) carboxylic acids and long-chain alcohols (C24-C36) • Triacontyl hexadecanoate is in beeswax
Triacylglycerol • Tri-esters of glycerol with three long-chain carboxylic acids, fatty acids.
Fatty Acids (from Fats and Oils) • Straight-chain (C12 - C20) carboxylic acids • Double bonds are cis-substituted but trans-fatty acids also occur • A fat or oil in nature occurs as a mixture of many different triacylglycerols • The most abundant saturated fatty acids are palmitic (C16) and stearic (C18)
Unsaturated and Polyunsaturated Fatty Acids • Oleic (C18 with one C=C) and linolenic (C18 with 3 C=C) are the most abundant unsaturated
27.2 Soap • A mixture of sodium or potassium salts of long-chain fatty acids produced by alkaline hydrolysis (saponification) of animal fat with alkali
Cleansing Action of Soap • The carboxylate end of the long-chain molecule is ionic and therefore is preferentially dissolved in water • The hydrocarbon tail is nonpolar and dissolves in grease and oil • Soaps enable grease to be dissolved into water
Detergents • “Hard” water contains Mg+2 and Ca+2 that form insoluble salts with soaps • Synthetic detergents are alkylbenzene sulfonates that dissolve dirt like soaps but do not form scums with Mg+2 and Ca+2 .
27.3 Phospholipids • Phospholipids are diesters of H3PO4, phosphoric acid • Phosphoric acid can form monoesters, diesters and triesters • In general these are known as “phosphates”
Phosphoglycerides • Contain a glycerol backbone linked by ester bonds to two fatty acids and phosphoric acid • Fatty acid residues with C12–C20 • The phosphate group at C3 has an ester link to an amino alcohol
Sphingolipids • The other major group of phospholipids • Sphingosine or a dihydroxyamine backbone • Constituents of plant and animal cell membranes • Abundant in brain and nerve tissue, as coating around nerve fibers.
Phosphoglyceride Membranes • Phosphoglycerides comprise the major lipid component of cell membranes • Nonpolar tails aggregate in the center of a bilayer • Ionic head is exposed to solvent
27.4 Prostaglandins & Other Eicosanoids • C20 lipids that contain a five-membered ring with two long side chains • Present in small amounts in all body tissues and fluids • Many physiological effects
Prostaglandin Sources • Biosynthesized from arachidonic acid (C20 unsaturated fatty acid)
27.5 Terpenoids • Steam distillation of plant extracts produces “essential oils” • Chemically related to compounds in turpentine (from pine sap) called terpenes and thus called terpenoids • Mostly hydrocarbons (some oxygens) that do not contain esters (stable to hydrolysis)
Biosynthesis of Terpenoids • Isopentenyl pyrophosphate (IPP) forms higher isoprenoids in reactions catalyzed by prenyl transferase • Monoterpenoids, diterpenoids, and tetraterpoids arise from 1-deoxyxylulose 5-phosphate (DXP).
Mevalonate Pathway to IsopentenylDiphosphate • Begins with the conversion of acetate to acetyl CoA followed by Claisen condensation to yield acetoacetyl CoA • Catalyzed by acetoacetyl-CoA acetyltransferase
Aldol Condensation • Carbonyl condensation reaction of acetoacetyl CoA with acetyl CoA • Produces 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaryl CoA (HMG-CoA)
Reduction • HMG CoA is reduced to mevalonate • Catalyzed by HMG CoA reductase utilizing NADPH
Phosphorylation& Decarboxylation • Pyrophosphorylation gives mevalonyl-PP • Addition of phosphate from ATP followed by loss of CO2 and phosphate
Conversion of IsopentenylDiphosphate to Terpenoids • For triterpenes and larger, head-to-head coupling of farnesyl diphosphates gives squalene
Mechanism of Isomerization • Isomerization of IPP to DMAPP is catalyzed by IPP isomerase through a carbocation pathway
Coupling Mechanism • Nucleophilic substitution reaction in which the double bond of IPP behaves as a nucleophile in displacing diphosphate ion leaving group (PPO)
Conversions of Monoterpenoids • Typically involves carbocation intermediates and multistep reaction pathways catalyzed by a terpene cyclase
27.6 Steroids • Steroids,are another class of nonsaponifiable lipid, defined by structure • Has four fused rings A, B, C, and D, beginning at the lower left • Carbon atoms are numbered beginning in the A ring • The six-membered rings are in fixed chair conformations
Functions of Steroids • In humans as hormones, steroids are chemical messengers secreted by glands and carried through the bloodstream to target tissues • Also widely distributed as cholesterol
Male Sex Hormones • Testosterone and androsterone are the two most important male sex hormones, or androgens • Androstanedione is a precursor
Female Sex Hormones • Estrone and estradiol are the two most important female sex hormones, or estrogens • Progesterone is the most important progestin, steroids that function in pregnancy
Adrenocortical Hormones • Adrenocortical steroids: secreted by the adrenal glands near the upper end of each kidney • Mineralocorticoids: control tissue swelling by regulating cellular salt balance • Glucocorticoids: regulation of glucose metabolism and in the control of inflammation
Synthetic Steroids • Made in pharmaceutical laboratories as new drugs • Includes oral contraceptives and anabolic agents • Methandrostenolone is an anabolic steroid used for tissue-building
27.7 Steroid Biosynthesis • Enzyme-catalyzed addition of oxygen atom to squalene • Stereospecific formation of an oxirane from an alkene
Which fatty acid is not commonly found in nature? • x • x • x • None of these is commonly found in nature. • All of these are commonly found in nature.
Which of the following would not be classified as a lipid? • 1 • 2 • 3 • All of these are lipids. • None of these are lipids.
Which of the following describes how a soap cleans? • The fatty acids react with grease molecules to form water soluble compounds that are subsequently washed away. • The fatty acids form micelles which encapsulate grease molecules. These micelles are soluble in water and consequently washed away. • The fatty acids react with grease molecules to generate new compounds that can form micelles in water. These micelles are soluble in water and consequently washed away. • All of these statements accurately describe how soap works. • None of these statements accurately describe how soap works.
The following molecule would be expected to form micelles. • True • False
What forces are responsible for lipid bilayer and micelle formation? • covalent bonding and electrostatic interactions • hydrophobic effects and hydrogen bonding • electrostatic interactions and hydrophobic effects • electrostatic interactions and fluid mosaics • hydrophobic effects and fluid mosaics
The figure shown is: • phosphatidylethanolamine • phosphatidylcholine • phosphatidylserine • sphingosine • sphingomyelin
What do these two lipids have in common? • They are eicosanoids. • They form micelles in water. • They are prostaglandins. • They are steroids. • They are used as detergents.
Which is a role of the prostaglandins? • They stimulate the contraction of uterine muscle. • They lower blood pressure in the blood stream. • They suppress gastric ulceration. • All of these • None of these
The molecule shown below is a: • thromboxane • prostaglandin • leukotriene • eicosanoid • thromboxane and eicosanoid
The molecule shown below is: • lanosterol • camphor • β-carotene • patchouli alcohol • None of these
The 1ststep of mevalonate synthesis, shown is a: • Claisen condensation • aldol-like condensation • reduction reaction • substitution reaction • Schiff base formation
Why can the molecule below not be classified as a steroid? • Steroids cannot have double bonds. • Steroids cannot contain branched hydrocarbon chains. • Steroids have a different arrangement of rings. • Steroids are usually comprised of benzene rings, making them mostly flat. • All of these
How is cholesterol transported through the blood stream? • through micelles • through ion channels • by prostaglandins • by lipoproteins • as water solvated ions
In which organ of the body is cholesterol synthesized? • the lungs • the gallbladder • the liver • the kidneys • the pancreas
Which of the following is not a good indicator of health? • cholesterol levels below 200 mg/dL • LDL levels greater than 100 mg/dL • HDL levels greater than 60 mg/dL • active, athletic lifestyle • diets rich in seafood