Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

108
Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules

Transcript of Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Page 1: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Molecules of Life

Organic Molecules

Biological Molecules

Page 2: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Organic MoleculesWhy is this important?Cells are mostly water and carbon-based

moleculesCarbon has a valence of 4 so it will form a

tremendous variety of large, complex and diverse molecules

Large variety of molecules = diversity of life

Page 3: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Unity in DiversityAll life is composed of carbon

compounds (UnityUnity) DiversityDiversity of life is due to various ways

carbon can be assembled Organic chemistryOrganic chemistry = study of the

compounds formed by carbon

Page 4: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Organic ChemistryThe four valence electrons in carboncarbon

enable it to be bonded in four different directions

Usually forms COVALENT bonds with Hydrogen

Often oxygen, nitrogenFour most common elements are: CHON

Page 5: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

6+

1

1

1

1

Page 6: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C H H

H

H

Page 7: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C C H

H

H H

H

H

Page 8: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C C H

H

H H

H

C

Page 9: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C C C C

Page 10: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C C C

C

Page 11: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C C C C C C C C

Page 12: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

CC C C C C C C

Page 13: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

CC C C C C C C

Page 14: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C C

C C C C C C

Page 15: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

CC C C C C C C

Page 16: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C CC C C C C C

Page 17: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

CC C C C C C

C

Page 18: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C OH H

H

H

Page 19: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C OH N

H

H

H

H

Page 20: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

C OH H

H

H

HN

Page 21: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Organic Chemistry

Functional groupsFunctional groups – clusters of atoms that have a specific role on the molecule

OHOH – hydroxide (polar) NHNH22 – amino (polar)

COOHCOOH – carboxyl (polar) CHCH33 – methyl (nonpolar)

Page 22: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Organic Chemistry

C

C

CC

C

C

Rings H

H

H HHH

H

H

HHH

H

Each carbon has 4 bonds

Page 23: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Organic Chemistry

C

C

CC

C

C

Rings

Sometimes the carbon atoms form double bonds with

itself

Benzene ring

Page 24: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Organic Chemistry

C

C

CC

C

C

Rings OH

O

Page 25: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Organic Chemistry

OC

CC

C

C

OH

O

C

Page 26: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Organic ChemistryFunctional groups change the chemical

properties of a moleculeThe great diversity of life is caused by only

a few molecules with different arrangements of FUNCTIONAL GROUPS

BiochemistryBiochemistry - chemistry of living things

Page 27: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Differences in functional groups The rearrangement of FUNCTIONAL GROUPS on a molecule causes major changes in its function

Page 28: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

BiochemistryFour basic carbon molecules important

to all living things:CarbohydratesLipidsProteinsNucleic acids

Page 29: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

BiochemistryBiochemistry

The four basic molecules are long The four basic molecules are long chains of smaller molecules linked chains of smaller molecules linked togethertogether

A train formed by various types of A train formed by various types of carscars

Page 30: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Biochemistry

Smaller molecules are called

MONOMERSMONOMERSLong chains are called………POLYMERSPOLYMERSPolymers are large molecules MACROMOLECULESMACROMOLECULES – large

polymer

Page 31: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

What You Have to Know: For each of the 4 types of molecules:

1. How each molecule is formed

2. The types and names of the monomers

3. The role of each molecule in life

Page 32: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

How Are Organic Compounds Formed?

Monomers = smaller functional molecules that can be linked together

Macromolecule = ‘large molecule’

Polymers = macromolecules formed by linking monomers together

Page 33: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

PolymerizationPolymerization

Many monomers are linked Many monomers are linked together to form macromoleculestogether to form macromolecules

Dehydration synthesisDehydration synthesis

Page 34: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Monomer Monomer Monomer Monomer

Page 35: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

How Are Organic Compounds Formed?

Dehydration synthesisDehydration synthesis; p. 41OH- combines with OH- from adjacent

monomer (molecule)OH + OH = HOH + OHOH = H2O

Page 36: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

How Are Organic Compounds Formed?

Dehydration synthesisDehydration synthesis polymers are formed from monomers by the removal of water

All four compounds important to life are formed by dehydration synthesisdehydration synthesis

Page 37: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 38: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 40: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Monomers/Polymers

Dehydration synthesis: building polymers

Hydrolysis: breaking down polymers into monomers

Page 41: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

4 Types of Macromolecules

Carbohydrates Lipids

Proteins

Nucleic acids

Page 42: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

CarbohydratesSugars; three types:

Monosaccharides ‘one sugar’DisaccharidesDisaccharides ‘two sugar’PolysaccharidesPolysaccharides ‘many sugar’

Page 43: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Carbohydrates Carbon, hydrogen, oxygenC(n)H2O

C6H12O6 – glucose

C6H12O6 - fructose

C5H10O5 - ribose

C12H22O11 – sucrose

Page 44: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 45: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Carbohydrates – MonomersSimple sugarsMonosaccharides – ‘one sweet’

Glucose, fructose, ribose, deoxyribose, galactose

Most monosaccharides are used as a source of energyenergyRibose and deoxyribose form part of

the structure of DNA, RNA

Page 46: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Carbohydrates: MonomersGlucose; #1 sugar, most used sugar for

energy, all organismsFructose; very sweet; fruits

Page 47: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Di-saccharides Di = ‘two’Two monosaccharides joined together

by…. DEHYDRATION SYNTHESISDEHYDRATION SYNTHESISEnergy storage

Page 48: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

DisaccharidesGlucose + glucose = maltose;

germinating seeds, malt in beerGlucose + fructose = sucrose; table

sugarGalactose + glucose = lactose; milk

Page 50: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Sugars a Major Cause of a Tooth Decay

Feed bacteria

Page 51: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Polysaccharides ‘Poly’ = manyLong chain of monosaccharidesStarch GlycogenCellulose

Page 52: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Carbohydrates - Polysaccharides

‘poly’ – manyMany monosaccharides =

polysaccharidepolysaccharideMacromolecule

Page 53: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Carbohydrates - Polysaccharides

Examples:CelluloseCellulose – used to make cell walls

of plants; indigestible without bacteria in gut; fiber

StarchStarch – stored glucose in plantsGlygogen – stored glucose in

animals

Page 54: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 55: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Carbohydrates: FunctionsEnergy storageStructure = plant cell wallsMonosaccharidesDisaccharidesPolysaccharides

Page 56: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Types of Macromolecules

Carbohydrates

LipidsProteins

Nucleic acids

Page 57: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Lipids Three types of lipids:

TriglyceridesTriglyceridesPhospholipidsPhospholipidsSteroidsSteroids

Page 58: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Lipids - TriglyceridesExamples:

Fats Oils Waxes

Insoluble in water - nonpolar

Page 59: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Triglycerides Glycerol + three fatty acidsDehydration synthesis Lots of C-H bonds; lots of energy

Page 60: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 62: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Triglycerides 2 types of triglycerides:

SaturatedSaturated UnsaturatedUnsaturated

Saturated fats have no double bonds; are full (saturated) with hydrogen

Page 63: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Saturated fat – fatty acids, full of hydrogen

Page 64: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Unsaturated fat – fatty acids with double bonds; less hydrogen; less energy

Page 65: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Saturated fatty acids

Unsaturated fatty acid

Page 66: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 67: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Types of FatsSaturated

No double bondsSaturated w/ HSolids @ (200)Animal fatsBacon grease,

lard, butter

Unsaturated Double bond(s)UnsaturatedLiquids @ (200)Plant fats (oil)Corn, peanut,

olive oils

Page 68: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Triglycerides Link (?) between saturated fats in diet

and arteriosclerosis

Page 69: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Fats: Functions Store energyStore energy

More energy in fats than in carbohydrates; birds eat sunflower seeds first (fats)

Padding (eye, other organs) Insulation (keep you warmer; seals,

whales)

Page 70: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Fats Oils: Waterproofing -

Page 71: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Lipids - PhospholipidsTriglyceride - One of the fatty acid ‘tails’

is replaced with a phosphate groupPhospho – lipidMajor component of cell membrane

Page 72: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 73: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 74: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Fatty acids

Page 75: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 76: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 77: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Lipids: Steroids

Sex hormonesSex hormones:

Testosterone; maleTestosterone; maleEstrogen; female

Page 78: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Lipids: Steroids Anabolic steroidsAnabolic steroids = artificially created

testosteroneMimics male hormone Increased muscle massDecreased sex drive, infertilityHeart, liver problems

Page 79: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Lipids - Steroids Insoluble in water (nonpolar)Very different from other lipids in

structure4 fused carbon rings with various

FUNCTIONAL GROUPSFUNCTIONAL GROUPSCholesterol – basic molecule used in

cell membrane; also used to make other steroids (estrogenestrogen and testosteronetestosterone)

Page 80: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Cholesterol

Cholesterol

Page 81: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 82: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Lipids - Steroids Anabolic steroidsAnabolic steroids – synthetic variations of

testosterone Builds muscle and bone mass during

puberty; maintains male characteristicsUsed in 1950’s to treat anemia and muscle

diseasesAbused by athletes; linked to liver damage,

cardiovascular, mood swings

Page 83: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Proteins Protein – ‘first place’Composed of AMINO ACIDSAMINO ACIDS

(monomers)20 different kinds of amino acids

Page 84: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Amino group

Page 85: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Carboxyl

COOH

Amino group

Page 86: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Side groupSide group

Carboxyl

COOH

Amino group

Page 87: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Amino AcidsDifferences between the 20 amino acids are

caused by different R (side) groupsAmino acids are linked together by

dehydration synthesisBonds formed between amino acids are

PEPTIDE BONDSPEPTIDE BONDSLong chain of peptides = = polypeptidepolypeptide

Page 88: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 89: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

p. 72

Different amino acids caused by different side groups

Page 90: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Proteins Peptide bond – bond formed between

two amino acids (dehydration synthesis)Long chain of peptides = POLYPEPTIDEPolypeptides - proteins

Page 91: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 92: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

•Amino acids are linked together in a SPECIFICSPECIFIC sequence. Conformational shape

•If the sequence gets messed up, the protein may not function. May be fatal or only cause health problems

•Denaturation

Page 93: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 94: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Protein’s Shape H bonding helps determine shape Breaking the H bond changes the shape of

the protein – DENATURATION; Heat - cooking changes the shape of

proteins; turn brown; eggs turn white Poisons – chemicals change shape by

interrupting bonds (acids, bases, acetone)

Page 95: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Proteins - Functions

1.1. StructureStructure – feathers, hair, muscle, nail, horn

2.2. EnzymesEnzymes – speed up reactions

3.3. HormonesHormones – chemical messengers

4.4. CarriersCarriers – hemoglobin carries oxygen to cells

Page 96: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 97: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 98: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 99: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 100: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Nucleic Acids - Monomers

Monomers – NUCLEOTIDESNUCLEOTIDESNucleotides:

A simple sugarA phosphate groupphosphate groupA NITROGENOUS BASENITROGENOUS BASE

Page 101: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 102: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Adenine always bonds with Thymine

Cytosine always bonds with guanine

A-T

C-G

Page 103: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

H bonding

Page 104: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 105: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.
Page 106: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

A T T C C G C A T G G G T C T T T T

T A A G G C G T A C C C A G A A A A

Page 107: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

TACCATACTTTCGGCTACTTTTGGG

DNA sequence = “genetic code”

If A-T and C-G, what is the complimentary strand?

TACCATACTATAGGCTACTATTGGG

ATGGTATGATATCCGATGATAACCC

Page 108: Molecules of Life Organic Molecules Biological Molecules.

Similarities in DNA sequences indicates close evolutionary relationship