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Fats, oils, and other water-insoluble compounds are called lipids.

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Presentation on theme: "Fats, oils, and other water-insoluble compounds are called lipids."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fats, oils, and other water-insoluble compounds are called lipids.
Triglycerides Fats, oils, and other water-insoluble compounds are called lipids. Moderate levels of dietary fats and oils are essential to health.

2 Triglycerides Natural fats and oils exist as triesters of glycerol with fatty acids, which are long-chain carboxylic acids (C12 through C24). This form of lipid is known as a triglyceride.

3 Triglycerides

4 Triglycerides Lipids tend to dissolve readily in organic solvents, such as ether and chloroform, rather than in highly polar solvents such as water. This property sets them apart from most biological substances such as carbohydrates and proteins.

5 Triglycerides The hydrolysis of oils or fats by boiling with an aqueous solution of an alkali-metal hydroxide is called saponification.

6 Phospholipids Phospholipids, or lipids that contain phosphate groups, are abundant in cells. A space-filling model of lecithin is shown here. In the simplified representation above, the hydrophilic head is shown as a sphere and the hydrophobic tails as wavy lines.

7 Phospholipids In water, phospholipids spontaneously form a spherical double layer, called a lipid bilayer, in which the hydrophobic tails of phospholipid molecules are sandwiched between two layers of hydrophilic heads.

8 A cell membrane has a lipid bilayer structure.
Phospholipids A cell membrane has a lipid bilayer structure. A cell membrane has a lipid bilayer structure. a) The hydrophilic heads are in contact with water, but the hydrophobic tails are not. b) The lipid molecules move easily within their own layer but do not readily move to the other layer. Applying Concepts What prevents a lipid molecule from crossing to the opposite side of the bilayer?

9 Phospholipids A cell membrane has a lipid bilayer structure. a) The hydrophilic heads are in contact with water, but the hydrophobic tails are not. b) The lipid molecules move easily within their own layer but do not readily move to the other layer. Applying Concepts What prevents a lipid molecule from crossing to the opposite side of the bilayer?

10 END OF SHOW


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