Organic Molecules
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Transcript Organic Molecules
Organic Molecules
Molecules
that contain carbon and hydrogen
4 major classes: carbohydrates, lipids,
proteins and nucleic acids
Inorganic versus Organic Molecules
Inorganic
organic
Usually contain +,- ions
always contain carbon and
hydrogen
Usually ionic bonding
always covalent bonding
Always contain a small # of atoms
Often quite large, many atoms
Often associated with nonliving
matter
usually associated with living
organisms
Carbon atom
Needs 4 electrons to complete its outer shell
Can share with as many as four other
elements
Often shares electrons with another carbon
atom
Hydrocarbons – carbon atoms bonded
exclusively with hydrogen atoms
Functional Groups
Specific combination of bonded atoms that always
reacts in the same way
Connected to the carbon backbone of the organic
molecule
Figure 3.2
Hydrophobic – not soluble in water
Hydrophilic – soluble in water
Determines the polarity of an organic molecule and
the types of reactions that will occur
isomers
Organic molecules that have identical
molecular formulas but a different
arrangement of atoms.
Ex. Glyceraldehyde and dihydroxyacetone
C3H6O3
Glucose, fructose, galactose
Macromolecules
Polymers – largest macromolecules, made
up of monomers
Monomers – linked together, make up
polymers
Amino acids = proteins
Nucleotides = nucleic acids
Sugars = carbohydrates
Fats = glycerol and fatty acids (not a
polymer)
Synthesis and degradation of polymers
Dehydration reaction – the equivalent of a water
molecule (-OH hydroxyl group) and (-H hydrogen
atom) is removed as the reaction occurs to
synthesize a macromolecule.
Hydrolysis reaction – used to degrade a
macromolecule, -OH group from water attaches to
one subunit and an –H from water attaches to the
other subunit. Water is used to break the bond
holding the subunits together.
Carbohydrates
Energy source and structural component
1:2:1 ratio of carbon to hydrogen to oxygen
Monosaccharides – single sugar
Glucose, 6 carbon sugar
Major source of cellular fuel
Ribose, deoxyribose, 5 carbon sugars, DNA, RNA
Disaccharides
2 monosaccharides
Dehydration reaction
Glucose + glucose = maltose
Glucose + fructose = sucrose (table sugar)
Glucose + galactose = lactose (milk sugar)
Polysaccharides
Short term energy storage
Much larger than sugars
Helical in shape
Not as soluble in water
Cannot easily pass through the cell
membrane
Plants
Store glucose as starch
Animals
Store glucose as glycogen in the liver
Polysaccharides: structural molecules
Plants
Cellulose
Animals and fungus
Most abundant organic molecule on earth!
Chitin
Bacteria
peptidoglycan
Lipids – long term energy storage
Insoluble in water
Used for insulation and long term energy
Includes fats, oils, phospholipids, steroids
and waxes
Triglycerides: fats and oils
Glycerol – contains 3 –OH groups, polar
3 fatty acids (hence triglyceride)
Fatty acids prevent fats and oils from mixing with
water
Fatty Acids
Saturated – no double bonds between carbons
Solid at room temp, animal origin
Unsaturated – double bonds, liquid at room temp,
usually of plant origin
Phospholipids, steroids, waxes
phospholipids
Glycerol and phosphate group = polar head
2 fatty acid chains = nonpolar tails
Steroids
Skeletons of four fused carbon rings (different lipid
structure)
Cholesterol – animal plasma membrane
Estrogen, progesterone, testosterone
Waxes
Long chain of fatty acid and alcohol
Hydrophobic, waterproof
Skin and fur maintenance, repels insects, protection
Proteins
Functions
Support – keratin, collagen
Enzymes – speed chemical rxns
Transport – channel and carrier, hemoglobin
Defense - antibodies
Hormones – insulin, growth
Motion – actin and myosin
Proteins
Amino acids dehydration reaction
protein
Bonded by covalent bond called peptide bond
Peptide – 2 or more amino acids bonded
Polypeptide – chain of many amino acids
Protein shape determines its function
Primary – polypeptide
Secondary – polypeptide coils or folds,
hydrogen bonds
Alpha - helix
Beta – pleated sheet
Fibrous proteins and keratin
Protein shapes
Tertiary – globular, three dimensional
Various bonding results in rounded shape
Enzymes, can be denatured by temp, pH
Quaternary – consist of
more than one polypeptide
Ex. Hemoglobin
Diseases can be caused because
proteins do not fold the right way
Ex. Prions, mad cow disease
Nucleic Acids: DNA, RNA, ATP
Nucleotides: nitrogen base, phosphate, 5 carbon
sugar
DNA
Double stranded
Deoxyribose
A,T,C,G
RNA
Single stranded
Ribose sugar
A,U, C, G
Adenosine Triphosphate - ATP
High energy molecule
Composed of adenine and ribose
3 phosphate groups attached to ribose
Phosphate bond is hydrolyzed to ADP + P,
releasing energy