Carbon compounds.
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Transcript Carbon compounds.
Organic compounds
One
carbon atom can make 4 possible
covalent bonds.
Living molecules are made from
molecules that contain carbon.
Carbon bonds can form long chains that
can be unlimited in length.
Carbon is the most versatile element.
Groups
of organic molecules that contain
carbon:
• Carbohydrates
• Lipids
• Proteins
• Nucleic
acids
the
small subunits that ultimately link
together to form larger molecules are
called monomers. Mono - one
When a bunch of monomers join together
into a much larger molecule, they form
a polymer. Poly- many
‘giant
molecules’
Comprised of monomers that like together
through polymerization.
‘many small subunits make one large unit’
We consume the macromolecule, but it is later
broken down into these smaller monomers to
be used in out body.
Carbohydrates
are an important source
of energy for cells and provide a means
of transporting and storing that energy.
They are also a structural support.
Carbohydrates
= energy for cells.
Carbohydrates
are made of carbon (C),
hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O), or CHO, in
an approximate ratio of 1:2:1.
All
sugars are carbohydrates. Another
word for sugar is saccharide.
Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen
1:2:1
ratio
Main source of energy
C6H12O6
monomer
Glucose, C6H12O6
Galactose, C6H12O6
Fructose, C6H12O6
When
2 monosaccharides join together,
they form a disaccharide through
dehydration synthesis.
Monomer- monosaccharide “simple sugars”
sucrose — common table sugar = glucose + fructose
lactose — major sugar in milk = glucose + galactose
maltose — product of starch digestion = glucose +
glucose
What
is the ratio of carbon to hydrogen to
oxygen in a carbohydrate molecule.
Why do we need carbohydrates?
What is dehydration synthesis?
Fats, oils, waxes, detergents
Insoluble
in water
Made of mostly carbon and hydrogen
Lipids
are hydrophobic – water fearing!!
Lipids
are used for long term energy
storage.
Create structure of the cell membrane.
Transmit information
Warmth and protection
Glycerol
molecule and 3 fatty acids
Butter, oil, lard
Store almost twice as many calories as
carbohydrates, more energy!
Saturated
Unsaturated
Animal fats (meat, eggs, dairy
products)
Oils ( olive oil, peanut oil)
no double bonds; saturated with
hydrogen.
Contains double bond.
Solid at room temperature
Liquid at room temperature
https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature
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Contain: nitrogen,(N)
carbon (C),
hydrogen (H), oxygen (O)
Monomer: amino acids
• Amino group (NH2) on one end and a carboxyl
group (COOH) on the other end.
• What distinguishes amino acids is the R group.
Amino
acids are joined together in
proteins by peptide bonds.
A peptide bond forms between the
carboxyl group of one amino acid and
the amino group of the adjacent amino
acid.
Each
protein has a specific role.
Transport
Hormonal
Storage
Form muscle/bone
Enzymes
Fight disease
Proteins
are chains of amino acids folded up
into complex arrangements.
First level of organization – amino acids in a
protein chain held together by peptide
bonds.
Second level of organization – the chain is
twisted or folded. (helix or sheet)
Third level- the chains themselves are folded
to make a 3D structure.
Fourth level- 3D structure of multiple protein
subunits.
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Contain
Hydrogen (H), Oxygen (O),
Nitrogen (N), Carbon (C), and
Phosphorus (P).
Monomer- nucleotide
• 5-carbon sugar, phosphate group, nitrogen base.
• Nucleic acids store and transmit genetic
information.
DNA and RNA