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A little intro to each of the different Macromolecules

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Presentation on theme: "A little intro to each of the different Macromolecules"— Presentation transcript:

1 A little intro to each of the different Macromolecules

2 Biological Molecules The framework of biological molecules consists of carbon bonded to other carbon molecules, or other types of atoms. Hydrocarbons consist of carbon and hydrogen. Covalent bonds store considerable energy. Make good fuels

3 Biological Molecules Functional groups specific groups of atoms attached to carbon backbones retain definite chemical properties Macromolecules. proteins nucleic acids lipids carbohydrates

4 Functional Group Structural Formula Example H H Hydroxyl Carbonyl
Carboxyl Amino Sulfhydryl Phosphate Methyl OH H C C OH H H Ethanol C H O O H C C H H Acetaldehyde O H O C H C C OH H OH Acetic acid H O H H N HO C C N H H CH3 Alanine H H S H HO C C S H H H b-mercaptoethanol O– OH OH H O O P O– H C C C O P O– O H H H O– Glycerol phosphate H O O H C H O– C C C H H H Pyruvate

5 Macromolecules Macromolecules are often polymers. long molecule built by linking together small, similar subunits Dehydration synthesis removes OH and H during synthesis of a new molecule. Hydrolysis breaks a covalent bond by adding OH and H.

6 MACROMOLECULES

7 Carbohydrates Carbohydrates are loosely defined as molecules that contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen in a 1:2:1 ratio. monosaccharides - simple sugars

8 disaccharides - two monosaccharides joined by a covalent bond
H2O

9 polysaccharides - macromolecules made of monosaccharide subunits
isomers - alternative forms of the same substance – Many C6H1206

10 Carbohydrate Transport and Storage
Transport disaccharides Humans transport glucose as a simple monosaccharide. Plants transform glucose into a disaccharide transport form. Storage polysaccharides plant polysaccharides formed from glucose – starches most is amylopectin Animal starch is glycogen

11 Structural Carbohydrates
Cellulose - plants alpha form or beta form of ring Chitin - arthropods and fungi modified form of cellulose

12 Lipids Lipids are loosely defined as groups of molecules that are insoluble in water. fats and oils Phospholipids form the core of all biological membranes. composed of three subunits Glycerol - backbone fatty acid – long tail phosphate group – head Polar head - hydrophilic Nonpolar tail - hydrophobic

13 Phospholipids form membranes

14 Fats and Other Lipids Fats consist a of glycerol molecule with three attached fatty acids (triglyceride / triglycerol). Saturated fats - all internal carbon atoms are bonded to at least two hydrogen atoms – maximum # of H Unsaturated fats - at least one double bond between successive carbon atoms Polyunsaturated - contains more than one double bond usually liquid at room temperature Double bonds in the tail

15 Fats as Energy Storage Molecules
Fats, on average, yield about 9 kcal per gram versus 4 kcal per gram for carbohydrates. Animal fats are saturated while most plant fats are unsaturated. Consumption of excess carbohydrates leads to conversion into starch, glycogen, or fats for future use.

16 R A. Amino acids B. Peptide bonds C. Polypeptide chains H O
Proteins A. Amino acids B. Peptide bonds C. Polypeptide chains R H Amine Group O H - N - C - C - OH H Acid Group

17 Protein Function

18 Amino Acids contain an amino group (-NH2), a carboxyl group (-COOH) and a hydrogen atom, all bonded to a central carbon atom twenty common amino acids grouped into five classes based on side groups nonpolar amino acids polar uncharged amino acids charged amino acids aromatic amino acids special-function amino acids

19 Amino Acids Peptide bond links two amino acids. A protein is composed of one or more long chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds (polypeptides).

20 NONAROMATIC AROMATIC Nonpolar Alanine (Ala) Valine (Val) Leucine (Leu)
CH3 CH3 CH3 NH CH3 CH3 CH CH2 C CH3 CH CH2 H C CH3 CH2 CH2 H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H O H O H O H O H O H O Alanine (Ala) Valine (Val) Leucine (Leu) Isoleucine (Ile) Phenylalanine (Phe) Tryptophan (Trp) Polar uncharged O NH2 OH O C NH2 OH CH3 C CH2 H CH2 H C OH CH2 CH2 CH2 H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H O H O H O H O H O H O Glycine (Gly) Serine (Ser) Threonine (Thr) Asparagine (Asn) Glutamine (Gln) Tyrosine (Tyr) Charged NH2 C NH2+ NH O O– CH2 NH3+ C O O– HC NH+ CH2 CH2 CH2 C CH C N CH2 CH2 H CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 CH2 H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H3N+ C C O– H O H O H O H O H O Glutamic acid (Glu) Aspartic acid (Asp Histidine (His) Lysine (Lys) Arginine (Arg)

21 Protein Structure The shape of proteins is extremely important and can determine the function Water’s tendency to hydrophobically exclude nonpolar molecules literally shoves the nonpolar portions of the protein to the interior Many shapes Primary – the specific amino acid sequences Secondary – formed by hydrogen bonding Alpha helix – coils Beta pleated sheet - foldbacks motifs - folds or creases supersecondary structure

22 1 Primary structure 2 Secondary structure 3 Motifs
H H O R H H O R H H C C N C C N C C N C C N C C N C H O R H H O R H H O R 2 Secondary structure a helix b pleated sheet 3 Motifs a turn a motif b a b motif

23 Protein Structure Tertiary - final folded shape of globular protein (3-dimensional shape) based on bonding of side groups Domains – independent functional units of the protein 100–200 amino acids long - encoded by a specific DNA sequence (exon) Quaternary - forms when two or more polypeptide chains associate to form a functional protein

24 Tertiary structure Domains Quaternary structure
Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. 4 Tertiary structure 5 Domains Domain 1 6 Quaternary structure Domain 2 Domain 3

25 Chaperone Proteins Chaperone proteins are special proteins which help new proteins fold correctly. Chaperone deficiencies may play a role in facilitating certain diseases.

26 Unfolding Proteins Denaturation refers to the process of changing a protein’s shape. usually rendered biologically inactive pH temperature Ionic concentration - salt-curing and pickling used to preserve food

27 Nucleic Acids Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) Encodes information used to assemble proteins. Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) Reads DNA-encoded information to direct protein synthesis.

28 Nucleic Acid Structure
Nucleic acids are composed of long polymers of repeating subunits, nucleotides. five-carbon sugar Phosphate group nitrogenous base Purines double ringed adenine and guanine Pyrimidines – single ringed cytosine, thymine, and uracil

29 59 Phosphate group NH2 Adenine NH2 Cytosine (both DNA and RNA) N C C N C P H C N O H C P U R I N E S N C C H P Y R I M D N E S H C C O N N Phosphodiester bonds H H O Guanine O Thymine (DNA only) P C O N C C N H C N H H C H3C C C N NH2 H C C O N N H H 5-carbon sugar P O O Uracil (RNA only) Nitrogenous base C H C N H H C N C O P O H OH 39

30 Nucleic Acid Structure
DNA exists as double-stranded molecules. double helix complementary base pairing Chargaff’s rule hydrogen bonding RNA exists as a single stand. contains ribose instead of deoxyribose contains uracil in place of thymine                                                                      

31 Structure of DNA


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