Chapter 3, Carbon, Dehydration and Hydrolysis

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Transcript Chapter 3, Carbon, Dehydration and Hydrolysis

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Chapter 3
Carbon and
the Molecular
Diversity of Life
You Must Know
• The properties of carbon that make it so
important.
• The role of dehydration reactions in the
formation of organic compounds and
hydrolysis in the digestion of organic
compounds.
Importance of Carbon
Valences of the major elements of
organic molecules
Hydrogen
(valence  1)
Oxygen
(valence  2)
Nitrogen
(valence  3)
Carbon
(valence  4)
• Critically important molecules of all living things
fall into four main classes
– Carbohydrates
– Lipids
– Proteins
– Nucleic acids
• The first three of these can form huge molecules
called macromolecules
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Molecular Diversity Arising from Variation in Carbon
Skeletons
• Carbon chains form the skeletons of most organic
molecules
• Carbon chains vary in length and shape
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Hydrocarbons
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Concept 3.2: Macromolecules are polymers, built from
monomers
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The Synthesis and Breakdown of Polymers
• A dehydration reaction occurs when two
monomers bond together through the loss of a
water molecule
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Figure 3.6a
(a) Dehydration reaction: synthesizing a polymer
Short polymer
Dehydration removes
a water molecule,
forming a new bond.
Longer polymer
Unlinked monomer
The Synthesis and Breakdown of Polymers
• Polymers are disassembled to monomers by
hydrolysis, a reaction that is essentially the reverse
of the dehydration reaction
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Figure 3.6b
(b) Hydrolysis: breaking down a polymer
Hydrolysis adds
a water molecule,
breaking a bond.
The Diversity of Polymers
• Each cell has thousands of different
macromolecules
• Macromolecules vary among cells of an organism,
vary more within a species, and vary even more
between species
• An immense variety of polymers can be built from a
small set of monomers
HO
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The Chemical Groups Most Important to Life
• Functional groups are the components of organic
molecules that are most commonly involved in
chemical reactions
• The number and arrangement of functional
groups give each molecule its unique properties
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Figure 3.5
Chemical Group
Hydroxyl group (
The seven
functional
groups
that are
most
important
in the
chemistry
of life:
Compound Name
OH)
Alcohol
Carbonyl group (
C
O)
Ethanol
Ketone
Aldehyde
Acetone
Carboxyl group (
Propanal
COOH)
Carboxylic acid,
or organic acid
Acetic acid
Amino group (
NH2)
Amine
Glycine
Sulfhydryl group (
SH)
Thiol
You need
to
memorize
these.
Examples
Phosphate group (
OPO32–)
Organic
phosphate
Methyl group (
Cysteine
Glycerol
phosphate
CH3)
Methylated
compound
5-Methyl cytosine