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Lipids Lipids are a heterogeneous class of naturally occurring organic compounds classified together on the basis of common solubility properties they.

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Presentation on theme: "Lipids Lipids are a heterogeneous class of naturally occurring organic compounds classified together on the basis of common solubility properties they."— Presentation transcript:

1 Lipids Lipids are a heterogeneous class of naturally occurring organic compounds classified together on the basis of common solubility properties they are insoluble in water, but soluble in aprotic organic solvents, including diethyl ether, methylene chloride, and acetone Lipids include triglycerides, phospholipids, prostaglandins, prostacyclins, and fat-soluble vitamins cholesterol, steroid hormones, and bile acids 3 3

2 ..\Word\TYPES OF LIPIDS.doc

3 Fig 20.1, p.501

4 Fatty Acids Fatty acid: a long, unbranched chain carboxylic acid, most commonly of 12 to 20 carbons, derived from hydrolysis of animal fats, vegetable oils, or the phospholipids of biological membranes 5 5

5 Table 20.1, p.496

6 Fatty Acids Among the fatty acids most abundant in plants and animals
nearly all have an even number of carbon atoms, most between 12 and 20, in an unbranched chain the three most abundant are palmitic, stearic acid, and oleic acid in most unsaturated fatty acids, the cis isomer predominates; the trans isomer is rare unsaturated fatty acids have lower melting points than their saturated counterparts; the greater the degree of unsaturation, the lower the melting point 7 7

7 Fig. 21.UN, p.496

8 Fig. 21.UN, p.496

9 Triglycerides Triglyceride: an ester of glycerol with three fatty acids 4 4

10 Fig. 21.UN, p.497

11 Triglycerides Physical properties depend on the fatty acid components
melting point increases as the number of carbons in its hydrocarbon chains increases and as the number of double bonds decreases triglycerides rich in unsaturated fatty acids are generally liquid at room temperature and are called oils triglycerides rich in saturated fatty acids are generally semisolids or solids at room temperature and are called fats 8 8

12 Triglycerides The lower melting points of triglycerides rich in unsaturated fatty acids are related to differences in their three-dimensional shape hydrocarbon chains of saturated fatty acids can lie parallel, there are strong dispersion forces between their chains; these triglycerides pack into well-ordered, compact crystalline forms and have melting points above room temperature because of the cis configuration of the double bonds in unsaturated fatty acids, their hydrocarbon chains have a less ordered structure and dispersion forces between hydrocarbon chains are weaker; these triglycerides have melting points below room temperature 9 9

13 Table 20.2, p.498

14 Soaps and Detergents Natural soaps are prepared by boiling lard or other animal fat with NaOH, in a reaction called saponification (Latin, sapo, soap) 10 10

15 Soaps and Detergents Soaps clean by acting as emulsifying agents
the long hydrophobic hydrocarbon chains of soaps are insoluble in water and tend to cluster in such a way as to minimize their contact with water the polar hydrophilic carboxylate groups, on the other hand, tend to remain in contact with the surrounding water molecules driven by these two forces, soap molecules spontaneously cluster into micelles 11 11

16 Chem Connect 20C, p.500

17 Soaps and Detergents Micelle: a spherical arrangement of organic molecules in water clustered so that their hydrophobic parts are buried inside the sphere and their hydrophilic parts are on the surface of the sphere and in contact with water When soap is mixed with water-insoluble grease, oil, and fat stains, the nonpolar parts of the soap micelles “dissolve” these nonpolar dirt molecules and they are carried away in the polar wash water 12 12

18 Soaps and Detergents Soaps form water-insoluble salts when used in water containing Ca(II), Mg(II), and Fe(III) ions (hard water) 13 13

19 Synthetic Detergents The design criteria for a good detergent are
a long hydrocarbon tail of 12 to 20 carbons a polar head group that does not form insoluble salts with Ca(II), Mg(II), or Fe(III) ions The most widely used synthetic detergents are the linear alkylbenzene sulfonates (LAS) 14 14

20 Chem Connect 20C, p.500

21 Phospholipids Phospholipids are the second most abundant group of naturally occurring lipids they are found almost exclusively in plant and animal membranes, which typically consist of 40% -50% phospholipids and 50% - 60% proteins the most abundant phospholipids are derived from phosphatidic acid, a molecule in which glycerol is esterified with two molecules of fatty acid and one of phosphoric acid the three most abundant fatty acids in phosphatidic acids are palmitic acid (16:0), stearic acid (18:0), and oleic acid (18:1) 44 44

22 Phospholipids A phosphatidic acid
further esterification with a low-molecular weight alcohol gives a phospholipid among the most common of these low-molecular-weight alcohols are 45 45

23 Phospholipids 46 46

24 Fig 20.UN, p.504

25 Phospholipids A lecithin
In aqueous solution, phospholipids spontaneously form into a lipid bilayer, with a back-to-back arrangement of lipid monolayers 47 47

26 Fig 20.3, p.504

27 Biological Membranes Fluid mosaic model: a biological membrane consists of a phospholipid bilayer with proteins, carbohydrates, and other lipids embedded on the surface and in the bilayer fluid signifies that the protein components of membranes “float”in the bilayer and can move freely along the plane of the membrane mosaic signifies that the various components of the membrane exist side-by-side, as discrete units rather than combining to form new molecules and ions 48 48

28 Fig 20.2, p.503

29 Chem Connect 20D, p.502

30 Go to gob – Ch 20 – complex lipids tutorial
D:\GOB.exe

31 Fig 20.UN, p.505

32

33 Fig 20.UN, p.505

34 Chem Connect 20E, p.506

35 Steroids Steroids: a group of plant and animal lipids that have this tetracyclic ring structure The features common to the ring system of most naturally occurring steroids are illustrated on the next screen 23 23

36 Steroids 24 24

37 Cholesterol 26 26

38

39 Fig 20.6, p.513

40 Androgens Androgens - male sex hormones synthesized in the testes
responsible for the development of male secondary sex characteristics 27 27

41 Anabolic Steroids Among the synthetic anabolic steroids are 28 28

42 Estrogens Estrogens - female sex hormones synthesized in the ovaries
responsible for the development of female secondary sex characteristics and control of the menstrual cycle 29 29

43 Synthetic Estrogens Progesterone-like analogs are used in oral contraceptives 30 30

44 Glucorticoid Hormones
synthesized in the adrenal cortex regulate metabolism of carbohydrates decrease inflammation involved in the reaction to stress 31 31

45 Prostaglandins Prostaglandins: a family of compounds that have the 20-carbon skeleton of prostanoic acid 16 16

46 Chem Connect 20I, p.519

47 Fig 20.UN, p.520

48 Prostaglandins Prostaglandins are not stored in tissues as such, but are synthesized from membrane-bound 20-carbon polyunsaturated fatty acids in response to specific physiological triggers one such polyunsaturated fatty acid is arachidonic acid 17 17

49 Prostaglandins Among the prostaglandins synthesized biochemically from arachidonic acid are 18 18

50 Eicosanoids The prostaglandins are members of an even larger family of compounds called eicosanoids, all of which contain 20 carbons and are derived from polyunsaturated fatty acids 21 21


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