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Do Now  What is Biochemistry?  What are living creatures made of?  Why do we have to eat?

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Presentation on theme: "Do Now  What is Biochemistry?  What are living creatures made of?  Why do we have to eat?"— Presentation transcript:

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2 Do Now  What is Biochemistry?  What are living creatures made of?  Why do we have to eat?

3 BIOCHEMISTRY Biochemical processes are chemical reactions that occur in ALL living things

4 Objectives: Classify the variety of organic compounds. Compare the chemical structures macromolecules and relate their importance to living things.

5 Lesson 1 Organic vs. Inorganic

6 Elements of Life  96% of living organisms is made of: carbon (C) oxygen (O) hydrogen (H) nitrogen (N)

7 Molecules of Life  Put C, H, O, N together in different ways to build living organisms  What are bodies made of? carbohydrates  sugars & starches proteins fats (lipids) nucleic acids  DNA, RNA

8 The Role of Carbon in Organisms  Organic compounds contain carbon & hydrogen  Inorganic compounds do not contain both carbon & hydrogen

9  Which of the following molecules is considered organic?

10 Acids and Bases  Use the pH scale to determine acidity  Buffer – a solution that resists changes in pH when acid is added to it.

11 In class assignment  Acid - Base lab

12 Homework  Complete acid – base lab

13 Lesson 2 Monomers and Polymers

14 Do Now  How does a cookie “stick together”?  Why doesn’t it fall apart?

15 Building large molecules of life  Chain together smaller molecules building block molecules = monomers  Big molecules built from little molecules polymers

16 Building large organic molecules  Small molecules = building blocks  Bond them together = polymers

17 Making and Breaking of POLYMERS  Cells link monomers to form polymers by dehydration synthesis (building up) Short polymer Unlinked monomer Removal of water molecule Longer polymer

18 Making and Breaking of POLYMERS  Polymers are broken down to monomers by the reverse process, hydrolysis ( hydro ~ add water; lysis ~ to split) Addition of water molecule animation

19 In class assignment  Make 2 monomers of glucose C 6 H 12 O 6 out of play dough (3 colors)  Create a polymer by simulating dehydration synthesis  Create 5 monomers by simulating hydrolysis

20 Lesson 3 Macromolecules – Carbohydrates, Lipids and Nucleic Acids

21 Do Now 1. Clear off your desks except for something to write with. 2. Put up binders Body Chemistry

22 Carbohydrates  Building block molecules = sugar sugar - sugar - sugar - sugar - sugar sugars

23 sucrose Carbohydrates  Function: quick energy energy storage structure  cell wall in plants  Examples sugars starches cellulose (cell wall) glucose C 6 H 12 O 6 starch

24 Sugars = building blocks  Names for sugars usually end in glucose fructose sucrose maltose OH H H HO CH 2 OH H H H OH O glucose C 6 H 12 O 6 sucrose fructose maltose -ose

25 The structure of carbohydrates  The monomer (building block) of a carbohydrate is a simple sugar called a monosaccharide*  (ie. glucose, fructose)  are the fuels for cellular work  Function as energy storage  Mono ~ one  sacchar ~ sugar)

26 Building carbohydrates  Synthesis | glucose | glucose 1 sugar = monosaccharide 2 sugars = disaccharide | maltose mono = one saccharide = sugar di = two

27 Building carbohydrates  Synthesis | fructose | glucose 1 sugar = monosaccharide | sucrose (table sugar) 2 sugars = disaccharide

28 BIG carbohydrates  Polysaccharides large carbohydrates  starch energy storage in plants  potatoes  glycogen energy storage in animals  in liver & muscles  cellulose structure in plants  cell walls  chitin structure in arthropods & fungi  exoskeleton poly = many

29 Do Now – October 1, 2013  Hand in test corrections  What is the chemical formula for Glucose?

30 Lipids  Examples fats oils waxes hormones  sex hormones testosterone (male) estrogen (female)

31 Lipids  Function: energy storage  very concentrated  twice the energy as carbohydrates! cell membrane cushions organs insulates body  think whale blubber!

32 Structure of Fat not a chain (polymer) = just a “big fat molecule”

33 Saturated fats  Most animal fats solid at room temperature  Limit the amount in your diet contributes to heart disease deposits in arteries

34 Unsaturated fats  Plant, vegetable & fish fats liquid at room temperature  the fat molecules don’t stack tightly together  Better choice in your diet lipids

35 Other lipids in biology  Cholesterol good molecule in cell membranes make hormones from it  including sex hormones but too much cholesterol in blood may lead to heart disease

36 Other lipids in biology  Cell membranes are made out of lipids phospholipids heads are on the outside touching water  “like” water tails are on inside away from water  “scared” of water forms a barrier between the cell & the outside

37 In Class Assignment  Lipid Review Sheet  Look over vocab words

38 Do Now  Hand in your test corrections  Look over your notes

39 Nucleic Acids Examples DNA  DeoxyriboNucleic Acid RNA  RiboNucleic Acid RNA

40 DNA Nucleic Acids  Function: genetic material  stores information genes blueprint for building proteins  DNA  RNA  proteins  transfers information blueprint for new cells blueprint for next generation proteins

41 Nucleic acids  Building block = nucleotides  5 different nucleotides  different nitrogen bases  A, T, C, G, U nucleotide – nucleotide – nucleotide – nucleotide phosphate sugar N base Nitrogen bases I’m the A,T,C,G or U part!

42 Nucleotide chains  Nucleic acids nucleotides chained into a polymer  DNA double-sided double helix A, C, G, T  RNA single-sided A, C, G, U phosphate sugar N base phosphate sugar N base phosphate sugar N base phosphate sugar N base strong bonds RNA

43 DNA  Double strand twists into a double helix weak bonds between nitrogen bases join the 2 strands  A pairs with T A :: T  C pairs with G C :: G the two strands can separate when our cells need to make copies of it weak bonds

44 Copying DNA  Replication copy DNA 2 strands of DNA helix are complementary  they are matching  have one, can build other  have one, can rebuild the whole

45  Copying DNA pairing of the bases allows each strand to serve as a pattern for a new strand Newly copied strands of DNA DNA replication

46 Lesson 4 Macromolecules - Proteins

47 Do Now  PROTEINS video PROTEINS

48 collagen (skin) Proteins insulin Examples muscle skin, hair, fingernails, claws  collagen, keratin pepsin  digestive enzyme in stomach insulin  hormone that controls blood sugar levels pepsin

49 4. PROTEINS  Essential to the structures and activities of life  Make up 50% of dry weight of cells  Contain carbon, hydrogen, & oxygen PLUS nitrogen and sometimes sulfur  Proteins are involved in cellular structure Movement (muscles) Defense (antibodies) Transport (blood) Communication  Monomers are called amino acids

50 The structure of proteins  20 common amino acids that can make literally thousands of proteins. Their diversity is based on different arrangements of amino acids R = variable group- which distinguishes each of the 20 different amino acids

51 Amino acid chains  Proteins amino acids chained into a polymer  Each amino acid is different  some “like” water & dissolve in it  some “fear” water & separate from it amino acid

52 pepsin For proteins: SHAPE matters! collagen  Proteins fold & twist into 3-D shape that’s what happens in the cell!  Different shapes = different jobs hemoglobin growth hormone

53 It’s SHAPE that matters!  Proteins do their jobs, because of their shape  Unfolding a protein destroys its shape wrong shape = can’t do its job unfolding proteins = “denature”  temperature  pH (acidity) folded unfolded “denatured”

54 Macromolecules

55 Enzymes  Enzymes are important proteins found in living things. An enzyme is a protein that speeds up the rate of a chemical reaction.  (SEE SEPARATE LECTURE.)

56 Homework  Protein Worksheet


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