Download - CHAPTER FIVE

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Page 1: CHAPTER FIVE

The Structure and Function of Macro Molecules

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Proteins Fats Carbohydrates Nucleic acids Condensation reaction Hydrolysis

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Carbohydrates Proteins Lipids Nucleic Acids

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Carbs Simple Sugars, monomers (monosaccharides)

Proteins Amino Acids Nucleic Acids Nucleotides (A-T C-G)

Lipids: NOT considered polymer◦ Glycerol head and 3 hydrocarbon tails

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Condensation or dehydration 2 Monomers Polymers

Lose a molecule of water: H from 1, OH from another.

Requires Energy (Enzyme)

In Protein specifically this is a peptide bond.

In carbohydrates this is a glycosidic

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Hydrolysis Reaction ..◦ Hydrolysis (Water …… To Break)◦ Polymer 2 monomers◦ H2O Added, Energy Released

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Monosaccharide to monosaccharide = glycosidic linkage, dehydration reaction.

Empirical Formula C6H12O6

Carbonyl:◦ Aldehyde: dbl bond at end of chain: glucose◦ Ketone: dble bond in middle: fructose

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Rings: form of most sugars Glycosidic linkages: between monomers Polysaccharides: 100’s – 1,000’s of mono’s

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Disaccharides:◦ Glucose + glucose = maltose◦ Glucose + fructose = sucrose

Sucrose: table sugar, the form plants use to move sugar from leaf to root.

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Starch: polymer of glucose (1-4 alpha) linkage Amylose: simplest starch(no branches)

Amylopectin: more complex (branches)

Glycogen: storage in animals (liver and muscle)

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Plastids in plant leaf (chloroplasts)

Alpha configuration

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Cellulose: insoluble fiber due to configuration of glucose monomers

Microfibrils: cellulose fibers HYDROGEN bond to each other. Make cables

Wood: rich in cellulose

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Cellulose: Straight beta configuration of glucose

Cellulose: most abundant organic material 100billion tons/year.

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Who can digest cellulose?◦ Microbes: bacteria in cow’s rumen (1st stomach)◦ Microbes: bacteria in gut of termites◦ Some fungi

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Similar to cellulose Contains nitrogen Used to make exoskeleton of

◦ Arthropods◦ Spider◦ Crustaceans◦ Fungi: build with chitin

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Fats: ◦ Triglyceride: glycerol + 3 fatty acids (ester

linkage)◦ Glycerol: 3 OH◦ Fatty acid:

Non polar hydrophobic

Phospholipid steroids

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Phospholipid:◦ 2 hydrocarbon tails (no charge)◦ 1 phosphate group (negative charge)

◦ The non-polar tails and polar phosphate cause phospholipids to form bilayer when placed in water: hydrophilic phos. Out, tails in.

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Steroids: Function at nucleus

of cell Carbon skeleton of

4 fused rings

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Monmers: amino acids – polypeptides

Site: Ribosomes in cytosol or attached to endoplasmic reticulum.

DNA in nucleus. mRNA carries information out into cytosol.

1 gene = 1 polypeptide

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1. peptide bonds between amino acids 2nd hydrogen bonds btwn R-groups cause

alpha helix and beta pleating 3rd hydrogen, van der waals, disulfide

bonds create globular shape 4th hydrogen, van der waals, disulfide

bonds put multiple polypeptides together.

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Enzyme - substrate Tata box binding protein

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collagen aquaporin

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Nucleic acid made up of nucleotidesnitrogenous basepentose sugar (5 carbon sugar)phosphate

Nitrogenous base:pyrimidine: 1 ring (cytosine, thymine, uracil)purines: 2 rings (adenine, guanine)

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Polymer of nucleotides joined byphosphodiester bonds (phos. Of 1 to

sugar of the next)

The order of the nitrogenous bases in a gene specify the amino acid sequence of a protein

3 nitro bases = 1 amino acid

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RNA single strand Backbone of phosphate and ribose sugar DNA double strand backbone on outside

bases: hydrogen bonds in middle Always adenine-thymine

guanine- cytosine