Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Exploring Macromolecules

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Exploring Macromolecules"— Presentation transcript:

1 Exploring Macromolecules
Biochemistry Exploring Macromolecules

2 - study of chemistry of carbon
Organic Chemistry - study of chemistry of carbon - molecules of life made of elements carbon, oxygen, nitrogen, and hydrogen - functional groups – determines the characteristics of that compound Hydroxyl goup: -OH (see fig. 2) Carboxylic acid group: -COOH (see fig. 3) Amine group: -NH2 (see fig. 4) Large carbon molecules = macromolecules - large polymers – composed of repeating units called monomers

3 - monomers are joined in condensation or
- monomers are joined in condensation or dehydration synthesis reactions to form polymers (fig. 5) - breaking polymers down into monomers occurs by hydrolysis reactions - four main classes of macromolecules: *Proteins * Carbohydrates * Lipids * Nucleic Acids

4 Proteins - composed of amino acids = monomers
- all amino acids have a: a. carboxyl group –COOH b. amine group –NH2 - 20 common amino acids in living organisms - joined by peptide bonds = polypeptide - sequence of amino acids determines protein’s structure and function - [examples]

5 - primary structure = sequence of amino acids
- R groups often form attractions that cause the protein to fold (add the following to handout) - secondary structure = regular folding - tertiary structure = irregular folding - quaternary structure = more than one polypeptide joined to make a functional protein - Denaturing a protein changes its shape - change in temperature or pH

6 Hemoglobin (fig. 6 and 7) Primary structure Secondary Tertiary
Quaternary

7 Carbohydrate - general formula Cn(H2O) - provide energy

8 - exist as monosaccharides, disaccharide, polysaccharides
- monomers = monosaccharides (glucose/fructose) - monosaccharides are linked by condensation reactions - sucrose is a disaccharide (fig. 8)

9 - three important polysaccharides
a. glycogen – animal energy storage b. starch – plant storage c. cellulose – in plant cell walls

10 Lipids - large nonpolar molecules that are not very soluble in water
- very efficient energy storage molecules – store twice as much energy as carbohydrates - simplest are fatty acids with long, straight carbon chain with a –COOH, carboxyl group, at one end

11 - carbon chain is hydrophobic (water fearing)
- carboxyl group end is hydrophilic (water loving) - form membranes of cells (phospholipids) (fig. 10) - saturated fats have all single bonds - unsaturated fats have some multiple bonds

12 - Four basic categories: a. Triglycerides b. Phospholipids c. Waxes
d. Steroids – ex. Cholesterol and hormones

13 Nucleic Acids - transmit genetic information - DNA and RNA
- DNA carries genetic information from between generations - monomers are nucleotides - each monomer has a sugar, phosphate group, and a base (fig. 13) - four bases in DNA in different orders code for all characteristics of life! - adenine, thymine, guanine, and cytosine (fig. 15)

14 - DNA is found in nucleus (fig. 14)
- DNA is double helix - hydrogen bonds hold it together - DNA is found in nucleus (fig. 14) - RNA is single stranded - DNA codes for RNA - RNA carries genetic code to cytoplasm where it codes for protein synthesis

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28

29

30

31

32

33


Download ppt "Exploring Macromolecules"

Similar presentations


Ads by Google