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AP Biology Wed. 9/5/12 Agenda  Start Chp.4&5 with Chp.4 Notes  Macromolecules Synthesis/Degradation Video Clip  Start Biomolecules group poster.

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Presentation on theme: "AP Biology Wed. 9/5/12 Agenda  Start Chp.4&5 with Chp.4 Notes  Macromolecules Synthesis/Degradation Video Clip  Start Biomolecules group poster."— Presentation transcript:

1 AP Biology Wed. 9/5/12 Agenda  Start Chp.4&5 with Chp.4 Notes  Macromolecules Synthesis/Degradation Video Clip  Start Biomolecules group poster

2 AP Biology Chapter 4. The Chemistry of Carbon

3 AP Biology Why study Carbon?  All living things are made of cells  Cells  ~72% H 2 O  ~3% salts (Na, Cl, K…)  ~25% carbon (organic) compounds  carbohydrates  lipids  proteins  nucleic acids

4 AP Biology Could organic compounds have been synthesized abiotically on the early Earth?  Stanley Miller’s Experiment: (1953)  Simulated what was thought to be environmental conditions on the lifeless, primordial Earth. Used electrical charges (simulated lightning) to trigger reactions in the primitive “atmosphere” of H2O, H2, NH3 (ammonia), and CH4 (methane) – some of the gases re;eased by volcanoes

5 AP Biology  Conclusion:  Organic compounds may have been synthesized abiotically on the early Earth, setting the stage for the origin of life Results: a variety of organic compounds that play key roles in living cells were synthesized in Miller’s apparatus

6 AP Biology Chemistry of Life  Organic chemistry is the study of carbon compounds  C atoms are versatile building blocks  bonding properties  4 stable covalent bonds

7 AP Biology Complex molecules assembled like TinkerToys

8 AP Biology Hydrocarbons  Simplest C molecules = hydrocarbons  combinations of C & H  Simplest HC molecule = methane  1 carbon bound to 4 H atoms  non-polar  not soluble in H 2 O  hydrophobic  stable  very little attraction between molecules  a gas at room temperature

9 AP Biology Hydrocarbons can grow  adding C-C bonds  straight line  ethane  hexane  branching  isohexane  ring  cyclohexane ethane hexane cyclohexane isohexane methane

10 AP Biology Diversity of organic molecules

11 AP Biology 2003- 2004 Isomers  Molecules with same molecular formula but different structures  different chemical properties

12 AP Biology Structural isomers  Molecules differ in structural arrangement of atoms

13 AP Biology Geometric isomers  Molecules differ in arrangement around C=C double bond  same covalent partnerships

14 AP Biology Enantiomers  Molecules which are mirror images of each other  C bonded to 4 different atoms or groups  asymmetric  left-handed & right-handed versions  “L” versions are biologically active

15 AP Biology Form affects function  Structural differences create important functional significance  amino acid alanine  L-alanine used in proteins  but not D-alanine  medicines  L-version active  but not D-version  sometimes with tragic results…

16 AP Biology 2003- 2004 Form affects function  Thalidomide  prescribed to pregnant women in 50’s & 60’s  reduced morning sickness, but…  stereoisomer caused severe birth defects

17 AP Biology Diversity of molecules  Substitute other atoms or groups around the C  ethane vs. ethanol  H replaced by a hydroxyl group (–OH)  nonpolar vs. polar  gas vs. liquid  biological effects! ethanol ethane

18 AP Biology Functional Groups

19 AP Biology Functional groups  Components of organic molecules that are involved in chemical reactions  give organic molecules distinctive properties  ex: male & female hormones…

20 AP Biology Viva la difference!  Basic structure of male & female hormones is identical  identical C skeleton  attachment of different functional groups  interact with different targets in the body

21 AP Biology Types of functional groups  6 functional groups most important to chemistry of life:  hydroxyl u amino  carbonyl u sulfhydryl  carboxyl u phosphate  Affect reactivity  hydrophilic  increase solubility in water

22 AP Biology Hydroxyl (Go to Activity #4)  –OH  organic compounds with OH = alcohols  names typically end in -ol  ethanol

23 AP Biology Carbonyl  C=O  O double bonded to C  if C=O at end molecule = aldelhyde  if C=O in middle of molecule = ketone

24 AP Biology Carboxyl  –COOH  C double bonded to O & single bonded to OH group  compounds with COOH = acids  fatty acids  amino acids

25 AP Biology Amino  -NH 2  N attached to 2 H  compounds with NH 2 = amines  amino acids  NH 2 acts as base  ammonia picks up H + from solution

26 AP Biology Sulfhydryl  –SH  S bonded to H  compounds with SH = thiols  SH groups stabilize the structure of proteins

27 AP Biology Phosphate  –PO 4  P bound to 4 O  connects to C through an O  PO 4 are anions with 2 negative charges  function of PO 4 is to transfer energy between organic molecules (ATP)

28 AP Biology Why study Functional Groups?  These are the building blocks for biological molecules …and that comes next!

29 AP Biology Polymers: made of monomers A. Condensation reaction (dehydration synthesis): Joins monomers to make polymers One monomer provides a hydroxyl group while the other provides a hydrogen to form a water molecule B. Hydrolysis: Digests (breaks down) polymers bonds between monomers are broken by adding water

30 AP Biology

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33 Any Questions??

34 AP Biology Thursday 9/6/12 Agenda  Finish Biomolecules group posters  Present Posters  HW – Organic Compounds Concept Map

35 AP Biology Friday, 9/7/12 Agenda  Biomolecule Match-Up  HW – Enzyme Reading (Chp.8)  Lab next week – make sure your safety contract is turned in


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