Biomolecules
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Transcript Biomolecules
Biomolecules
The Chemical Building
Blocks of Life
The Chemistry of Carbon
• Organic molecules contain carbon
• Carbon’s four valence electrons allow
it to form up to four covalent bonds
• Hydrocarbons consist only of C and H
– Propane CH8
• It can easily bond to itself and form
long chains
– Linear
- Cyclic
- Branched
Functional Groups
• Chemical properties and reactivity are a
result of functional groups
• Functional groups maintain chemical
properties no matter where they occur
• Polar molecules are hydrophilic
• Nonpolar molecules are hydrophobic
• The degree to which organic molecules
interact with water affects their function
• Hydroxyl group (-OH) is one of the most
common functional groups, it will make a
molecule water soluble
Macromolecules – The
Sum of the Parts
• Many complex biological activities
require large macromolecules
• Macromolecules are polymers built by
linking together small subunits called
monomers
– Proteins are polymers of amino acids
– Nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides
– Starches are polymers of simple sugars
Condensation
It’s not just for the water cycle anymore
• Macromolecules are constructed by
covalently bonding monomers by
condensation reactions where water is
removed from the functional groups of the
monomers
• Dehydration synthesis (water is removed)
• A hydroxyl (-OH) from one monomer and a
hydrogen (-H) from another are removed
• Anabolic reaction
Hydrolysis
• Hydrolysis is the reverse of condensation
• Results in the break down of polymers
• Hydration reactions add water and break
bonds releasing energy
animation
Macromolecules
• Perform complex tasks with
precision
• Basic structure and function
of each family similar in all
organisms (bacteria –
humans)
Families of Biomolecules
• Carbohydrates
•Lipids
•Proteins
•Nucleic Acids
Basic Function
Carbo’s
Lipids
N. Acids
Proteins
Energy
Storage
Structure
Long term
storage
Insulation
Protection
Inheritance
Blueprint for
metabolism
Catalysts
Hormones
Structure
Starch
Glycogen
Glucose
Sucrose
Cellulose
Lipid
Fats
Oils
Waxes
DNA
RNA
ATP
Proteins
Enzymes
Carbohydrates
How Sweet It Is!
• General formula (CH2O)n
• Simple sugars or large
molecules made of sugar
monomers
• Monosaccharides (monomer)
are covalently linked by
condensation reaction to form
polysaccharides (polymers)
Sugars
• Monosaccharides
– Five carbon: Ribose
– Six carbon: glucose and fructose
•Disaccharides
–Sucrose
–Lactose
•Polysaccharides
–Starch
–Cellulose
–Glycogen
Polysaccharides
Three Types
• Glycogen – animal storage product that
accumulates in the liver
- Highly branched
GlucoseGlycogenglucosebloodstream
• Starch – plant energy storage
- Helical
- Easily digested by animals through
hydrolysis
Cellulose
• Polysaccharide found in plant cell walls
• For humans cellulose is indigestible and
forms dietary fiber
• Made up entirely of β glucoses
– Structure is constrained into straight
microfibrils
• Not an energy source for animals
• Chitin – insect exoskeletons
So what’s the difference between
condensation and hydration
reactions?
• animation
Lipids
• Long-term energy storage
• Generally insoluble in water
– nonpolar
– hydrophobic
• Structural components of cells
(phospholipids)
• Cellular messengers (hormones)
More FAT
• Triglycerides are composed of three fatty
acids covalently bonded to one glycerol
molecule
•Fatty acids are composed of CH2 units and
are hydrophobic
•Fatty acids can be saturated (all single bonds)
or unsaturated (one or more double bonds)
•A fat (mostly saturated) is solid at room
temp., while an oil (mostly unsaturated) is
liquid at room temp.
•Glycerol is a molecule with
three carbons in a row, each
with a hydroxide group
•Fatty acid chains are
hydrocarbons
• that is, they are
composed of mostly
carbons and hydrogens.
• This is a molecule that is
VERY hydrophobic.
•When glycerol combines with
the fatty acid chains it forms
a carboxyl group between
them
•They link by the loss of a
water molecule.
animation
video
Carbon can bond to four
different substances, but
sometimes it will share
more than one pair of
electrons.
Phospholipids
• Important structural component of
cell membranes
• Phosphate group (head) is polar
and water soluble (hydrophilic)
• Two fatty acid tails are
hydrophobic
•This allows the phospholipids to
form bilayers and membranes
• Steroids
Other Lipids
– Insoluble in water
– Built around a four ringed skeleton
• Cholesterol
– Component for animal cell membranes
– Formation of myelin sheath covering nerves
• Hormones
– Chemical messengers
• Waxes
– Many fatty acids linked to a long backbone
– Waterproofing in plants, ears, beehives
overview
Proteins
• 50% dry weight of body
• Mammal cell contains 10,000 proteins
• Enzymes (regulate chemical reactions)
• Structural elements (cell membrane,
muscles, ligaments, hair, fingernails)
• Carriers (regulate what goes into/out
of cells)
• Send and receive messages
(hormones)
• Movement
Building Blocks of Proteins
Amino Acids
• Amino acids (monomers) are linked
together to form proteins (polymers)
– Each unique sequence of amino acids forms a
different protein
– All living things (even viruses) use the same 20
amino acids
• 20 different Amino Acids
–
–
–
–
Amino end (NH2)
Carboxyl end (COOH)
Hydrogen
R group – variable component
Amino Acids
• Amino Acids are grouped by
whether R- group is polar or nonpolar
•Positively charged side chain
•Negatively charged side chains
•Polar but uncharged side chains
•Hydrophobic side chains
•Special cases
Protein Assembly
• AA’s are linked together by joining
the amino end of one molecule to
the carboxyl end of another
•Peptide bond forms a chain called a
polypeptide
http://www.biotopics.co.uk/
as/aminocon.html
Protein Structure
• Primary structure
– Specific linear sequence of AA’s in a
polypeptide
– Determined from code in inherited
genetic material
– Changes in primary structure can
alter proper functioning of the protein
Hormone: Insulin
• Frederick Sanger (1940s, 50s), discovered
the amino acid sequence of Insulin
• Causes cells to take up more glucose, and
liver and muscle cells to create glycogen
• Diabetes is a deficiency of insulin
Carrier: Hemoglobin
-Protein that carries
oxygen to your cells
-Iron an important cofactor, iron deficiency
=anemia
Sickle Cell Disease
Spider silk: a structural protein
Spider Silk Video
Enzyme: Salivary Amylase
• Hydrolyzes starch while chewing
Enzyme: Rubisco
Catalyzes first step of
carbon fixation in
photosynthesis
Movement: Actin and Myosin
• Secondary structure
- the tendency of the
polypeptide to coil or
– pleat due to H-bonding
between R- groups
- -helix, -pleated sheet,
or random coil
• Tertiary structure
- shape of entire chain; folded, twisted, or
– globular
- shape related to function and properties
• Quaternary structure
- more than one polypeptide chain
Nucleic Acids
• Polymers composed of monomer
units known as nucleotides
• Information storage
– DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)
• Protein synthesis
– RNA (ribonucleic acid)
• Energy transfers
– ATP (adenosine tri-phosphate) and
NAD (nicotinamide adenine
dinucleotide)
Nucleotides
• Structure
– Phosphate
– Nitrogenous base
Purines (double-rings)
Adenine and Guanine
Pyrimidines (single-rings)
Cytosine, Thymine, and Uracil
– Sugar – either ribose or deoxyribose
pentoses in ring form
Deoxyribose lacks one oxygen
Functions of Nucleic Acids
• DNA – Physical carrier of genetic
information
– Restricted to nucleus
• RNA – key component of protein
synthesis
– Messenger RNA (mRNA) – blueprint
for construction of a protein
– Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) – construction
site where the protein is made
– Transfer RNA (tRNA) – truck
delivering the proper AA to the site of
construction
The End