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1. Chapter 5The Structure and Function of Macromolecules
2. Types of Macromolecules Carbohydrates
Lipids (phospholipids)
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
3. Polymers Covalent monomers
Condensation reaction (dehydration reaction):
One monomer provides a hydroxyl group while the other provides a hydrogen to form a water molecule
Hydrolysis:
bonds between monomers are broken by adding water (digestion)
5. Carbohydrates Monosaccharides CH2O formula;
multiple hydroxyl (-OH) groups and
1 carbonyl (C=O) group:
Aldehyde sugar (aldose)
Ketone sugar (ketose)
Cellular Respiration;
raw material for amino acids and fatty acids
6. Linear and Ring Forms of Glucose
7. Disaccharides
glycosidic linkage
(covalent bond) between
2 monosaccharides;
covalent bond by dehydration reaction
Sucrose
most common
disaccharide
glucose + fructose
8.
Storage:
Plants: starch (plastids)
Animals: glycogen
Structural:
Plants: cellulose
Animals: chitin
9. Glycogen – branched structure
10. Chitin structure
11. Lipids No polymers; glycerol and fatty acid
Fats, phospholipids, steroids
Hydrophobic; H bonds in water exclude fats
Carboxyl group = fatty acid
Non-polar C-H bonds in fatty acid ‘tails’
Ester linkage: 3 fatty acids to 1 glycerol (dehydration formation)
Triacyglycerol (triglyceride)
Saturated vs. unsaturated fats;
single vs. double bonds
12. Lipids Diverse Hydrophobic Molecules Fats - store large amounts of energy, solid or oil
- glycerol + 3 fatty acid molecules
Phospholipids - cell membranes
- glycerol, 2 fatty acids and PO4 group
Steroids - precurser to sex steroids, cell membranes
- 4 fused carbon rings with functional groups
24. Phospholipids 2 fatty acids instead of 3 (phosphate group)
‘Tails’ hydrophobic; ‘heads’ hydrophilic
Micelle (phospholipid droplet in water)
Bilayer (double layer);cell membranes
25. Structure of a Phospholipid
26. Steroids Lipids with 4 fused carbon rings
E.g. cholesterol: cell membranes; precursor for other steroids (sex hormones); atherosclerosis
27. Proteins Importance:
Instrumental in nearly everything organisms do; 50% dry weight of cells; most structurally sophisticated molecules known
Monomer: amino acids (there are 20) ~
Carboxyl (-COOH) group, amino group (NH2), variable group (R)
Variable group (R) characteristics:
polar (hydrophilic), nonpolar (hydrophobic), acidic or basic
Three-dimensional shape (conformation)
Polypeptides (dehydration reaction):
peptide bonds~ covalent bond; carboxyl group to amino group (polar)
31. Protein Structure
32. Primary Structure Conformation: Linear structure
Molecular Biology: each type of protein has a unique primary structure of amino acids
Amino acid substitution hemoglobin; sickle-cell anemia
33. Primary Structure of Proteins
34. Secondary Structure Conformation: coils & folds (hydrogen bonds)
Alpha Helix: coiling; keratin
Pleated Sheet: parallel; silk
35. Secondary Protein Structure
36. Tertiary Structure Conformation: irregular contortions from R group bonding.
Hydrophobic and v.d.w.
disulfide bridges
hydrogen bonds
ionic bonds
37. Tertiary Protein Structure
38. Quaternary Structure Conformation: 2 or more polypeptide chains aggregated into 1 macromolecule
e.g. collagen (connective tissue)
E.g. hemoglobin
39. Quaternary Protein Structure
46. Spider Silk
47. Spider silk is 5 times stronger than steel
49. Prions
50. Nucleic Acids Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
Ribonucleic acid (RNA)
DNA->RNA->protein
Polymers of nucleotides (polynucleotide):
nitrogenous base
pentose sugar
phosphate group
phosphodiester bond
Nucleoside = base +sugar
Nitrogenous bases:
pyrimidines~cytosine, thymine, uracil
purines~adenine, guanine
52. Inheritance based
on DNA replication
H bonds - between
paired bases
van der Waals - between stacked bases
A to T; C to G pairing
Complementary
53. The Double Helix