Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

AP Biology Discuss the following with your group and be prepared to discuss with the class 1. Why is the shape of a molecule important? 2. How is a covalent.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "AP Biology Discuss the following with your group and be prepared to discuss with the class 1. Why is the shape of a molecule important? 2. How is a covalent."— Presentation transcript:

1

2 AP Biology Discuss the following with your group and be prepared to discuss with the class 1. Why is the shape of a molecule important? 2. How is a covalent bond different from ionic? 3. How are hydrogen bonds different from covalent? We are beginning our first Unit today: Bio-Molecules Right now, the test is set for Tuesday, Sept 17th

3 Functional groups -parts of organic molecules that are involved in chemical reactions They give organic molecules distinctive properties hydroxyl amino carbonyl (ketones and aldehydes) sulfhydryl carboxyl phosphate

4 H2OH2O HO H HH Polymers - long molecules built by linking repeating building blocks in a chain  monomers  building blocks  repeated small units  covalent bonds

5 H2OH2O HO H HH How to build a larger Bio-molecule  Dehydration Synthesis (also called Condensation Reaction)  joins monomers by “taking” H 2 O out  one monomer donates OH –  other monomer donates H +  together these form H 2 O  requires energy & enzymes enzyme This is an example of an Anabolic, endergonic reaction.

6 H2OH2O HOH H H How to break down a larger molecule  Hydrolysis (also called Digestion)  use H 2 O to breakdown polymers  reverse of dehydration synthesis  takes off one monomer at a time  H 2 O is split into H + and OH –  H + & OH – attach to ends  requires enzymes  releases energy enzyme This is an example of an Catabolic, exergonic reaction.

7 Bio-Molecules  Large organic molecules formed by smaller molecules bonding together  macromolecules  4 major classes of macromolecules:  carbohydrates  lipids  proteins  nucleic acids

8 AP Biology 2008-2009 Proteins Multipurpose molecules

9 Proteins  Various functions:  enzymes (speed up metabolism)  structure physical stability and movement (keratin-hair/nails/skin, collagen- bones/cartilage/tendons, myosin-muscles)  transport (hemoglobin- in red blood cells, proteins in cell membranes)  cell communication/regulatory  signals (insulin & other hormones)  receptors  defense (antibodies/recognize foreign invaders)  storage (hold amino acids for later use) - Most structurally & functionally diverse group

10 Amino acids  central carbon  Two functional groups:  carboxyl group (acid)  amino group  R group (side chain)  variable group that is different for each amino acid  gives unique chemical properties to each amino acid  like 20 different letters of an alphabet  can make many words (proteins) —N— H H C—OH || O R | —C— | H Protein monomer (building block)

11 Peptide Bonds – Linking of Amino Acids

12 Effect of different R groups: Nonpolar amino acids  nonpolar & hydrophobic

13 Effect of different R groups: Polar amino acids  polar or charged & hydrophilic

14 Building proteins  Peptide bonds  covalent bond between NH 2 (amino) of one amino acid & COOH (carboxyl) of another  C–N bond peptide bond dehydration synthesis H2OH2O

15 Building proteins  Polypeptide chains have direction  N-terminus = NH 2 end  C-terminus = COOH end  repeated sequence (N-C-C) is the polypeptide backbone

16 Protein structure & function hemoglobin  Function depends on structure  3-D structure  twisted, folded, coiled into unique shape collagen pepsin

17 Primary (1°) structure  Order of amino acids in chain  amino acid sequence determined by genes (DNA)  slight change in amino acid sequence can affect protein’s structure & its function  even just one amino acid change can make all the difference!

18 (Example of structure determining function) Sickle Cell Anemia What type of mutation is this?

19 Secondary (2°) structure  “Local folding”  folding along short sections of polypeptide  interactions between adjacent amino acids  H bonds  weak bonds between R groups  forms sections of 3-D structure  helix  pleated sheet

20

21 Tertiary (3°) structure  “Whole molecule folding”  interactions between distant amino acids and R groups

22 Quaternary (4°) structure  More than one polypeptide chain bonded together collagen = skin & tendons hemoglobin

23

24 Protein denaturation  Unfolding a protein  conditions that disrupt H bonds and ionic bonds  temperature  pH  salinity  alter 2° & 3° structure  alter 3-D shape  destroys functionality  some proteins can return to their functional shape after being denatured, many cannot

25  Enzymes a type of protein that acts as a catalyst, speeding up chemical reactions

26 H2OH2O Substrate (sucrose) Fructose Glucose

27

28 Some enzymes require other atoms or molecules in order to function: -Cofactors: inorganic ions, such as iron, copper, or zinc that bind to enzymes in order to help break down specific substances. -Coenzymes: organic molecules that are required by certain enzymes to carry out catabolic reactions.


Download ppt "AP Biology Discuss the following with your group and be prepared to discuss with the class 1. Why is the shape of a molecule important? 2. How is a covalent."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google