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Macromolecules

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Title: Macromolecules


1
Macromolecules
  • Carbohydrates
  • Lipids
  • Proteins
  • Nucleic Acids

2
1. Carbohydraytes
  • Are organic compounds made of sugars and their
    monomers.
  • Monomers are called monosaccharides.
  • 2 monomers are disaccharides
  • Polymers are polysaccharides

3
monosaccharides
  • C, H, and O occur in a ratio that is ALWAYS
  • Are the major source energy for all cells.

4
monosaccharides
  • Aldehydes-
  • Ketones-

5
Figure 5.3 The structure and classification of
some monosaccharides
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monosaccharides
  • Location/spatial arrangement of functional groups
    are important!
  • Isomers

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monosaccharides
  • Carbohydrates can be linear, but form rings in
    aqueous solutions.

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Disaccharides
  • contain two monosaccharides.
  • formed through the process of
  • Monosaccharide monosaccharide ? Disaccharide

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Figure 5.5 Examples of disaccharide synthesis
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Polysaccharides
  • Macromolecules that are polymers of a few hundred
    or thousand monosaccharides.
  • Important in
  • 1.
  • 2.

15
Polysaccharides Energy Storage
  • starch

16
Polysaccharides Energy - Starch
  • Starch is the energy found in plants.
  • Made entirely of
  • Two common forms are amylose (unbranched) and
    amylopectin (branched).

17
Polysaccharides Energy - Glycogen
  • Glycogen is how store their energy.
  • Made entirely of glucose and highly branched.
  • Where do animals store their glycogen reserves?

18
Polysaccharides Structural
  • Cellulose is found in
  • Made entirely of glucose, but differs from starch
    because of where the branching is.
  • Can you digest cellulose?
  • What can?

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Figure 5.8 The arrangement of cellulose in plant
cell walls
21
Figure 5.6 Storage polysaccharides
22
Figure 5.7b,c Starch and cellulose structures 
23
  • Chitin is found in the exoskeleton of arthropods
    and the walls of some fungi.
  • Chitins monomer is an amino sugar.

24
Figure 5.9 Chitin, a structural polysaccharide
exoskeleton and surgical thread
25
Macromolecules 2. Lipids
  • Diverse group of molecules that are non-polar.
    There are three major groups
  • 1. Fats
  • 2.
  • 3.

26
Lipids 1. Fats
  • glycerol attached to 3 fatty acid chains.
  • Glycerol is a
  • Fatty acids are hydrocarbons with a carboxyl
    group at one end.
  • Hydrocarbon tail is extremely hydrophobic.

27
Fats
  • Hydrocarbons have a long Carbon skeleton with an
    even number of Cs (usually 16 or 18).
  • Fats are built by condensation synthesis, linking
    3 fatty acid tails to a single glycerol molecule.

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  • This linking results in a covalent bond called an
  • Entire macromolecule (glycerol 3 fatty acids)
    is called a

30
Lipids
  • Fatty acid (FA) chains in a triglyceride may all
    be the same, or can all be different.
  • Variation comes from
  • 1. Different FA chains
  • 2.
  • 3. Number location of double bonds
  • in a chain.

31
Lipids
  • Fats may be
  • 1.
  • 2.
  • What are fats saturated with?

32
Lipids Saturated Fats
  • No C to C
  • C skeleton is bonded to the maximum number of Hs
    (saturated w/Hs).
  • Usually a solid at room temperature.
  • Most
  • Ex

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Lipids Unsaturated Fats
  • Are not saturated with H, because there are C C
    double bonds present.
  • The chain bends at each C C, so molecules can
    not pack tight together.
  • Are at room temperature.
  • Most
  • Corn oil, peanut oil, olive oil

35
  • In many commercially produced foods, unsaturated
    fats are artificially hydrogenated to prevent
    them from spreading out into an oil.
  • Ex

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Figure 5.11 Examples of saturated and
unsaturated fats and fatty acids 
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Lipids The functions of Fats
  • Energy storage- one gram of fat stores 2x the
    energy of a carbohydrate.
  • More compact fuel
  • Cushions
  • Insulation
  • Fat

39
Lipids 2. Phospholipids
  • Compound with a backbone of glycerol, bonded to 2
    FA chains.
  • Replacing the 3rd FA chain is instead a phosphate
    group.
  • Attached to the phosphate group is another small
    chemical group.

40
Figure 5.12 The structure of a phospholipid
41
Figure 5.13 Two structures formed by
self-assembly of phospholipids in aqueous
environments   
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Lipids 3. Steroids
  • Steroids have four fused carbon rings with
    various f(x)al groups.
  • Some hormones are steroids.
  • Cholesterol is an important steroid because
  • 1. it is the precursor
  • 2. Found in animal

44
Figure 5.14 Cholesterol, a steroid    
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Figure 4.8 A comparison of functional groups of
female (estradiol) and male (testosterone) sex
hormones
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Figure 46.10 Ovulation
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Figure 46.13b Oogenesis
51
Figure 46.9x Ovary (left) and follicle (right)
52
Figure 46.15 The reproductive cycle of the human
female
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FSH
  • Follicle stimulating hormone
  • It is the main hormone involved in producing
    mature eggs.

54
LH
  • In both sexes, LH stimulates secretion of sex
    steroids from the gonads.

55
GnRH
  • gonadotropin-releasing hormone
  • Made by the hypothalamus.
  • Signals the pituitary to make LH and FSH
  • Works as a negative feedback loop

56
Figure 46.14 Hormonal control of the testes
57
Progesterone
  • maintains the uterine lining during pregnancy

58
Figure 46.16 Formation of the zygote and early
postfertilization events
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Figure 46.19 Hormonal induction of labor
60
               
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Figure 46.11x Spermatogenesis Seminiferous
tubules (left), sperm in semen (right)
62
Figure 46.12 Structure of a human sperm cell
63
Testosterone
  • synthesized mostly by the testes in males and by
    the adrenal glands of both sexes.

64
Figure 46.14 Hormonal control of the testes
65
Macromolecules 3. Proteins
  • The molecular tools for most cellular functions.
  • Consist of one or more polypeptide chains folded
    into a specific shape.
  • Extremely specific for the jobs they do in the
    cell.
  • Are abundant,

66
Proteins their functions
  • They are the most diverse type of macromolecule.
    They are responsible for
  • 1. Structural support
  • 2.
  • 3. Transport
  • 4. Signaling

67
Proteins their functions
  • 5. Cellular response to chemical stimuli
  • (receptors)
  • 6. Movement (contractile proteins).
  • 7. Defense
  • 8.

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Figure 5.21 Spider silk a structural protein
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  • Each type of protein has a unique 3-D shape.
  • Despite diversity, there are only 20 amino acids
    monomers most commonly found in nature.

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  • Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.
  • AA AA AA protein
  • Every amino acid has
  • Terminal
  • Amino group
  • Variable group

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Variable R group can be
  • Nonpolar
  • Polar
  • Uncharged polar
  • Charged Polar
  • - acidic
  • - basic

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  • Polypeptides are made through condensation
    synthesis linking AA to another AA through a
    covalent peptide bond.
  • Rxn always occurs at the carboxyl end of one AA
    with the amino group of the adjacent AA.

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Figure 5.16 Making a polypeptide chain
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  • Proteins can range in length from a few monomers
    to over a thousand.
  • Native conformation is the f(x)al shape of a
    protein under normal biological conditions.
  • There are four levels to protein structure
  • 1. Primary
  • 2. Secondary
  • 3. Tertiary
  • 4. Quaternary

78
Proteins Primary Level
  • Primary level is just the unique sequence of
    amino acids in a protein.
  • This sequence is determined
  • Any change in the order can result in

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Figure 5.19 A single amino acid substitution in
a protein causes sickle-cell disease
82
Proteins Secondary Level
  • Is the regulated, repeated coiling folding of a
    protein.
  • Coiling is stabilized by hydrogen bonds.
  • There are two major types
  • beta

83
Proteins Secondary Level a helix
  • Alpha helix is stabilized by H-bonds.
  • Found in fibrous proteins (keratin collagen)
    and some globular proteins.

84
Figure 5.20 The secondary structure of a protein
85
Proteins Tertiary Structure
  • Irregular contortions due to bonding of side
    chains (R-groups).
  • Types of bonds are
  • A.
  • B.

86
Proteins Tertiary Structure
  • A. Weak interactions include
  • - hydrogen bonding
  • -
  • - hydrophobic interactions between
  • nonpolar side chains

87
Proteins Tertiary Structure
  • B. Covalent links disulfide bridges form
    between two cysteine monomers brought together

88
Figure 5.22 Examples of interactions
contributing to the tertiary structure of a
protein
89
Proteins Quaternary Structure
  • Structure that results from the interaction among
    several polypeptides in a single protein.
  • This is the overall shape of the protein.
  • Collagen

90
Figure 5.23 The quaternary structure of proteins
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Proteins
  • All 4 levels of protein structure contribute to
    its shape.
  • Changing any part of any level can have drastic
    effects on the proteins function.
  • If a protein is altered, it may become

93
Figure 5.25 Denaturation and renaturation of a
protein
94
Macromolecules 4. Nucleic Acids
95
Nucleic Acids
  • There are two type of nucleic acids

96
DNA Deoxyribonucleic Acid
  • Contains coded information that programs cell
    activity.
  • Is copied and passed from one generation of cells
    to another.
  • Has genes that contain instructions for protein
    synthesis.
  • Usually double

97
DNA
  • Is a polymer of nucleotides joined by
    phosphodiester linkages between the phosphate
    group of one nucleotide and the sugar of the
    next.
  • This results in a backbone pattern of

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Figure 5.30 The DNA double helix and its
replication
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RNA Ribonucleic Acid
  • Functions in the actual synthesis of proteins
    coded for by DNA.
  • Usually single stranded.
  • Flow of genetic information is

103
Nucleic Acids
  • Nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides linked
    together.
  • Nucleotides are the monomers they have

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Nucleic Acids
  • The phosphate group is attached to the number 5
    carbon of the sugar.
  • The nitrogenous base is where variation comes
    from. There are two families

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Nitrogenous Bases Pyrimidines
  • Characterized by a 6-membered ring made up of
    carbon nitrogen atoms.
  • Abbreviated with letters
  • C (cytosine)
  • T (thymine)
  • U (uracil)

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Nitrogenous Bases Purines
  • Characterized by a five-membered ring fused to a
    six-membered ring (are larger in size than
    pyrimidines).

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  • Pyrimidines only bond with purines.
  • Bonding occurs from one stand of helix to the
    other.
  • It is hydrogen bonding that holds the double
    helix together.
  • A always bonds with

111
Figure 5.29 The components of nucleic acids
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