Title: II. Biochemical Building Blocks
1II. Biochemical Building Blocks
- A. Carbohydrates
- B. Lipids
- C. Proteins
- D. Nucleic Acids
2Carbohydrates
- 1. Vocabulary
- 2. Stereochemistry
- 3. Ring Formation
- 4. Biologically Important Monosaccharides
3Carbohydrates
- Carbohydrates- Polyhydroxy aldehydes and ketones
or compounds that yield these upon hydrolysis - General Formula Cx(H2O)y
- Monosaccharides - Simplest sugar unit
- Disaccharides - Two monosaccharide units
connected together by a glycosidic bond - consequence of condensation reaction
- Oligosaccharides - Several (2-10) monosaccharide
units bonded together - Polysaccharides - Polymers containing huge
numbers of monosaccharide units bonded together.
4Classification of Monosaccharides
- By the number of carbon atoms
- triose 3
- tetrose 4
- pentose 5
- hexose 6
- By aldehyde or ketone functional group
- aldose aldehyde
- ketose ketone
- An aldopentose is a 5-carbon aldose
- A ketohexose is a 6-carbon ketose.
5Enantiomers of glyceraldehyde
C
H
O
H
O
H
C
H
O
H
2
L-glyceraldehyde
D-glyceraldehyde
6D- and L-Glucose
C
H
O
C
H
O
O
H
H
H
O
H
H
O
H
O
H
H
O
H
H
H
O
H
O
H
H
H
O
H
C
H
O
H
C
H
O
H
2
2
D-glucose
L-glucose
7Cyclic Forms - How to get
8Haworth Projections
- Haworth Projections are illustrations of the
cyclic forms of carbohydrates. - Draw a polygon containing the ring C and O atoms
with the O atom at the upper right (6-membered
ring) or the top (5-membered ring) with the
-CH2OH group (the flag) up (all D
enantiomers) - -OH groups on the right of chiral carbons in
Fischer projections go down and those on the left
go up - LURD
- The anomeric carbon atom is the carbon of the
ring that was originally the aldehyde or ketone
carbon (the hemiacetal C) this OH group on the
anomeric C may go either up or down to form two
anomers, called a and b . - The b- anomer has the -OH group on the anomeric
carbon on the same side as CH2OH group - b b both on same side of ring
9The Anomeric Carbon
a-anomer
b-anomer
6
6
C
H
O
H
C
H
O
H
2
2
O
H
O
O
5
5
1
O
H
O
H
1
4
4
2
2
O
H
O
H
O
H
3
3
O
H
O
H
Anomeric carbon
10Relative Amounts of the a and b Anomers and the
Chain Form of D-Glucose.
- The two cyclic forms of D-glucose and the
aldehyde open chain form are at equilibrium. - About 37 is the a-anomer, about 63 the
b-anomer, and less than 1 in the open chain form.
11Formation of Acetals and Ketals
- Since the cyclic forms of monosaccharides are
hemiacetals or hemiketals, they can react with
alcohols to form acetals and ketals. - The -OH group on the anomeric carbon is always
involved in the reaction. - Sugar acetals are called glycosides.
- The bond from the anomeric carbon to the -OR
group of the acetal is called the glycosidic bond.
12Biologically Important Monosaccharides
13Formation of Phosphate Esters
- D-glucose, and other monosaccharides, can form
phosphate esters. - These substances have enhanced biological energy
14Carbohydrates - Evaluation
- 1. highly polar monomers therefore water soluble
- 2. parent monosaccharides do not have any
ionizable groups - 3. several different potential connect or
reactive points - 4. can be derivatized and oxidized easily
- condensation to make polymers
- oxidation for extraction of energy content
- 5. biochemical energy content is substantial
15Lipids
- 1. Fatty Acids
- 2. Fats and Oils
- 3. Phosphoacylglycerols (Phosphoglycerides)
-
-
16Fatty Acids
- Fatty Acid - A long chain carboxylic acid having
an even number of carbon atoms. - Most common have 18 or 16 carbon atoms
- Saturated
- 12 lauric CH3(CH2)10COOH
- 14 myristic CH3(CH2)12COOH
- 16 palmitic acid CH3(CH2)14COOH
- 18 stearic acid CH3(CH2)16COOH
17Unsaturated Fatty Acids
- 16 palmitoleic
- CH3(CH2)5CHCH(CH2)7COOH
- 18 oleic
- CH3(CH2)7CHCH(CH2)7COOH
- 18 linoleic CH3(CH2)4CHCHCH2CHCH(CH2)7COOH
- 18 linolenic CH3CH2CHCHCH2CHCHCH2CHCH(CH2)7C
OOH
18Melting Points of Fatty Acids
- Saturated fatty acids have higher melting points
than unsaturated fatty acids.
19Triacylglycerides
- Fat - A triacylglycerol that is a solid at room
temperature. - Generally has an animal origin (animal fat)
- Contains primarily saturated fatty acids
- Oil - A triacylglycerol that is a liquid at room
temperature. - Has a vegetable origin
- Contains predominantly unsaturated fatty acids
20Fats and Oils
Typical fat
21Phosphoglycerides
- Phosphoglycerides - Diglycerides that are also
phosphate esters of glycerol
22Lipids - Evaluation
- 1. highly nonpolar monomers in uncharged form
- water insoluble
- 2. parent fatty acids have ionizable groups
- enhanced water solubility in charged form
- 3. connect point ONLY at carboxyl group
- 4. can be derivatized and oxidized easily
- condensation to make various products but not
polymers - oxidation for extraction of energy content
- 5. biochemical energy content is substantial
23Proteins - Amino Acids
1. Generalized Amino Acid 2. Classes of
Amino Acids
24Generalized Amino Acid
Neutral form - solid
basic form
zwitterion form
acidic form
Dissolved forms
25Neutral, Nonpolar Amino Acids
Alanine (Ala, A)
Valine (Val, V)
Phenylalanine (Phe, F)
26Neutral, Nonpolar Amino Acids
27Neutral, Polar Amino Acids - I
28Neutral, Polar Amino Acids - II
29Acidic Amino Acids
O
O
C
Aspartic Acid (Asp,D)
C
H
2
N
H
C
H
C
O
3
O
O
O
C
C
H
2
Glutamic Acid (Glu,E)
C
H
2
N
H
C
H
C
O
3
O
30Basic Amino Acids
Lysine (Lys, K)
N
H
3
C
H
2
Histidine (His, H)
C
H
2
C
H
2
C
H
2
N
H
C
H
C
O
3
O
31Amino Acids - Evaluation
- 1. highly variable polarity of monomers
depending on side chain structure - variable solubility in water
- 2. All parent amino acids have 2 ionizable groups
- 3. two key connect points on each monomer
- complementary connect points can form polymers
- huge variability in possible structures depending
on numbers and orders of amino acids - huge potential differences in properties and
potential of polymers depending balance and order
of amino acids - 4. biochemical energy content is variable but
average
32Nucleic Acids Components
- 1. Bases
- 2. Nucleosides, Nucleotides
- 3. DNA RNA
33Pyrimidines
Pyrimidine
Cytosine (C)
34Purines
Purine
Adenine (A)
Guanine (G)
35Nucleic Acids
- Nucleoside - A purine or pyrmidine base joined to
b-D-ribose or b-D- 2-deoxyribose by replacing
the -OH group on the anomeric carbon by a N atom
from the base. - Nucleotide - A 5 phosphate ester of a nucleoside
- Nucleic Acid - A polymer composed of repeating
nucleotide units - RNA Ribonucleic Acid
- DNA Deoxyribonucleic Acid
36Nucleotides
37Nucleotides - Evaluation
- 1. Parent purines and pyrimidines made more
soluble by addition of polar O and N groups - 2. Highly polar sugar and ionic phosphate groups
makes nucleotides very water soluble - 3. Two key connect points on each monomer
- complementary connect points can form polymers
- huge variability in possible structures depending
on numbers and orders of nucleotides lots of
information - not a lot of variability in terms of chemical and
physical properties since nucleotides are very
similar - 4. biochemical energy content is quite low
38Fuel Value of Biological Substances