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Learn about the basic concepts of polymers, including the definition of a polymer, the formation and breakdown of covalent bonds, and the different classes of macromolecules such as carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins.
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I. Polymers • What is a polymer? • Poly = many; mer = part. A polymer is a large molecule consisting of many smaller sub-units bonded together. • What is a monomer? • A monomer is a sub-unit of a polymer.
A Polymer Here are some analogies to better understand what polymers and monomers are….
A. Making and Breaking Polymers • How are covalent bonds between monomers formed in the creation of polymers? • Condensation or dehydration synthesis reactions. • Monomers are covalently linked to one another through the removal of water.
Hydrolysis • What is a hydrolysis reaction? • Polymers are broken down into monomers. • Hydro = water; lysis = loosening/ • Water is added and the lysis of the polymer occurs.
II. Classes of Organic Molecules: • What are the four classes of organic molecules? • Carbohydrates • Lipids • Proteins • Nucleic Acids
A. Carbohydrates • Sugars • Carbo = carbon, hydrate = water; carbohydrates have the molecular formula (CH2O)n • Functions: • Store energy in chemical bonds • Glucose is the most common monosaccharide • Glucose is produced by photosynthetic autotrophs
CARBOHYDRATES TYPES THERE ARE 2 TYPES OF CARBOHYDRATES Simple Complex
1. Structure of Monosaccharides • An OH group is attached to each carbon except one, which is double bonded to an oxygen (carbonyl).
Simple Sugars are carbohydrates made up of 1 or 2 monomers. They also taste sweet.
Complex Carbohydrates…What are they? Complex Carbohydrates are polymers made up of many monomers. Most also taste starchy
Triose = 3 carbons Pentose = 5 carbons Hexose = 6 carbons • Classified according to the size of their carbon chains, varies from 3 to 7 carbons.
2. Structure of Disaccharides • Double sugar that consists of 2 monosaccharides, joined by a glycosidic linkage. • What reaction forms the glycosidic linkage? • Condensation synthesis
Examples of Disaccharides: Sucrose = glucose + fructose Lactose = glucose + galactose
3. Polysaccharides • Structure: Polymers of a few hundred or a few thousand monosaccharides. • Functions: energy storage molecules or for structural support:
Starch is a plant storage from of energy, easily hydrolyzed to glucose units • Cellulose is a fiber-like structureal material - tough and insoluble - used in plant cell walls • Glycogen is a highly branched chain used by animals to store energy in muscles and the liver. • Chitin is a polysaccharide used as a structural material in arthropod exoskeleton and fungal cell walls.
B. Lipids • Structure: Greasy or oily nonpolar compounds • Functions: • Energy storage • membrane structure • Protecting against desiccation (drying out). • Insulating against cold. • Absorbing shocks. • Regulating cell activities by hormone actions.
1. Structure of Fatty Acids • Long chains of mostly carbon and hydrogen atoms with a -COOH group at one end. • When they are part of lipids, the fatty acids resemble long flexible tails.
Saturated and Unsaturated Fats • Unsaturated fats : • liquid at room temp • one or more double bonds between carbons in the fatty acids allows for “kinks” in the tails • most plant fats • Saturated fats: • have only single C-C bonds in fatty acid tails • solid at room temp • most animal fats
Saturated fatty acid Unsaturated fatty acid
2. Structure of Triglycerides • Glycerol + 3 fatty acids • 3 ester linkages are formed between a hydroxyl group of the glycerol and a carboxyl group of the fatty acid.
3. Phospholipids • Structure: Glycerol + 2 fatty acids + phosphate group. • Function: Main structural component of membranes, where they arrange in bilayers.
4. Waxes • Function: • Lipids that serve as coatings for plant parts and as animal coverings.
5. Steroids • Structure: Four carbon rings with no fatty acid tails • Functions: • Component of animal cell membranes • Modified to form sex hormones
C. Proteins • Structure: • Polypeptide chains • Consist of peptide bonds between 20 possible amino acid monomers • Have a 3 dimensional globular shape
1. Functions of Proteins • Enzymes which accelerate specific chemical reactions up to 10 billion times faster than they would spontaneously occur. • Structural materials, including keratin (the protein found in hair and nails) and collagen (the protein found in connective tissue).
Specific binding, such as antibodies that bind specifically to foreign substances to identify them to the body's immune system. • Specific carriers, including membrane transport proteins that move substances across cell membranes, and blood proteins, such as hemoglobin, that carry oxygen, iron, and other substances through the body.
Contraction, such as actin and myosin fibers that interact in muscle tissue. • Signaling, including hormones such as insulin that regulate sugar levels in blood.
2. Structure of Amino Acid Monomers • Consist of an asymmetric carbon covalently bonded to: • Hydrogen • Amino group • Carboxyl (acid) group • Variable R group specific to each amino acid
Properties of Amino Acids • Grouped by polarity • Variable R groups (side chains) confer different properties to each amino acid: • polar, water soluble. • non-polar, water insoluble • positively charged • negatively charged.
4 levels of protein structure: • primary • secondary • tertiary • quaternary
3. Primary Structure • Unique sequence of amino acids in a protein • Slight change in primary structure can alter function • Determined by genes • Condensation synthesis reactions form the peptide bonds between amino acids
4. Secondary Structure • Repeated folding of protein’s polypeptide backbone • stabilized by H bonds between peptide linkages in the protein’s backbone • 2 types, alpha helix, beta pleated sheets
5. Tertiary Structure • Irregular contortions of a protein due to bonding between R groups • Weak bonds: • H bonding between polar side chains • ionic bonding between charged side chains • hydrophobic and van der Waals interactions • Strong bonds: • disulfide bridges form strong covalent linkages
5. Quaternary Structure • Results from interactions among 2 or more polypeptides
Factors That Determine Protein Conformation • Occurs during protein synthesis within cell • Depends on physical conditions of environment • pH, temperature, salinity, etc. • Change in environment may lead to denaturation of protein • Denatured protein is biologically inactive • Can renature if primary structure is not lost
D. Nucleic Acids • Two kinds: • DNA: double stranded can self replicate makes up genes which code for proteins is passed from one generation to another • RNA: single stranded functions in actual synthesis of proteins coded for by DNA is made from the DNA template molecule