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Important Biological Compounds Chapter 3. Carbohydrates Sugars, starches, cellulose Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen (CH 2 O) n 2:1 ratio hydrogen to oxygen like.

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Presentation on theme: "Important Biological Compounds Chapter 3. Carbohydrates Sugars, starches, cellulose Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen (CH 2 O) n 2:1 ratio hydrogen to oxygen like."— Presentation transcript:

1 Important Biological Compounds Chapter 3

2 Carbohydrates Sugars, starches, cellulose Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen (CH 2 O) n 2:1 ratio hydrogen to oxygen like water Monosaccharide – 1 sugar units Disaccharide – 2 sugar units Polysaccharides – many sugar units

3 Monosaccharides 3 – 7 carbon atoms Hydroxyl group bonded to each C except one; that C double bonded to an O which forms a carbonyl group Carbons are numbered starting with the C at the carbonyl group

4 Glucose – an important monosaccharide A hexose (6 C sugar) Used as an energy source in most organisms – cells oxidize glucose to produce ATP Glucose is also used to produce amino acids and fatty acids Is a structural isomer with fructose (found in fruit & honey) In cells is typically in ring form

5 Disaccharides – 2 monosaccharide units Maltose (malt sugar) = 2 glucose units Lactose (milk sugar) = glucose + galactose Sucrose (table sugar) = glucose + fructose During digestion these are hydrolyzed to form their monosaccharides

6 Polysaccharides – used for energy storage or structures Macromolecule – usually glucose units Starch – energy storage in plants 2 forms: amylose and amylopectin Glycogen – ‘animal starch’ – energy storage in animals, especially liver and muscle cells Cellulose – a structural carbohydrate found in plant cell walls

7 Lipids Nonpolar Fats, phospholipids, some cell pigments, steroids, and waxes Triglyceride – glycerol + 3 fatty acids Yield more than 2x energy per gram as carbohydrates

8 Saturated vs Unsaturated Fats Saturated fatty acids – contain the max number of H atoms Tend to be solid at room temp Are associated with increased risk of heart disease Unsaturated fatty acids – contain one or more carbon to carbon double bonds Tend to be liquid at room temp

9 Phospholipids One end is hydrophobic, one end hydrophilic This causes them to orient in an aqueous environment with the hydrophobic tails inside a double layer

10 Carotenoids Orange and yellow plant pigments In animals these are converted to vitamin A and then to retinal – the visual pigment Are carrots really good for your eyes??

11 Steroids Cholesterol – an essential component of animal cells; excess can build up on artery walls and lead to heart disease Reproductive hormones Bile salts


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