Title: Nerve activates contraction
1CHAPTER 5 THE STRUCTURE AND FUNCTION OF
MACROMOLECULES
2Polymers
- Polymers
- Similar or same building blocks repeated.
- Building block monomer
- Covalent bonds!
3Polymer formation Dehydration reaction
- One monomer provides a hydroxyl group
- the other provides a hydrogen
- Releases water.
- Process requires energy is aided by enzymes.
4Breakdown of polymers Hydrolysis
- covalent bond between two monomers is broken
with the help of water - E.g. digestive process, catalyzed by enzymes.
5There are four major varieties of macromolecules
seen in all living things
- Polymers of size 100,000 daltons or more called
macromolecules - Carbohydrates
- Proteins
- Lipids
- Nucleic acids
6Carbohydrates - Fuel and Building Material
- Sugars,smallest carbohydrates, serve as fuel and
or source of energy for all living things - 2. Polysaccharides, the polymers of sugars, have
storage and structural roles
7Carbohydrates
- Carbohydrates can be studied as
- Monosaccharides simple sugars.
- Disaccharides, double sugars 2 monosaccharides
joined by a condensation reaction. - Polysaccharides polymers of monosaccharides.
8Sugars, the smallest carbohydrates serve as a
source of fuel and carbon sources
- Monosaccharides generally have molecular formulas
that are in general multiple of CH2O. - For example,
- Molecular formula of glucose 6CH2O or C6H12O6
- Most names for sugars end in -ose. glucose,
fructose, maltose etc.
glucose
9Monosaccharides
10- Monosaccharides are represented as
- linear skeleton in a solid state,
- form rings in aqueous solutions.
Fig. 5.5
-
11- Functions of monosaccharides
- glucose is a major fuel for cellular work.
- Serve as raw material for the synthesis of other
monomers, including those of amino acids and
fatty acids.
Energy to think comes from glucose
12- Dissaccharides
- Maltose, malt sugar, is formed by joining two
glucose molecules. - Sucrose, table sugar, is formed by joining
glucose and fructose and is the major transport
form of sugars in plants.
Fig. 5.5a
-
13Polysaccharides
- polymers of hundreds to thousands of
monosaccharides - glycogen, starch, cellulose, chitin
- Functions of polysaccharides
- Serve as energy storage macromolecule
- serve as building materials for the cell or whole
organism.
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15Cellulose
- The architecture or how the monomers are linked
are very important - Can give different characteristic to polymer
Chitin
16Compare Cellulose and Chitin
17- Cellulose in diet
- Cellulose cannot be digested in human intestine
because of lack of enzyme cellulase - thus eliminated in feces as insoluble fiber.
- However it stimulates the secretion of mucus.
- -Facilitates defecation
18- How do cows or termites ( herbivores) digest
plants ? - They also do not have enzyme cellulase
- Herbivores have symbiotic relationships with
microbes in their digestive tract, - Microbes have the enzyme cellulase
- Breaks the cellulose and releases glucose.
19Lipids - Diverse Hydrophobic Molecules
- Fats store large amounts of energy
- Phospholipids are major components of cell
membranes - 3. Steroids include cholesterol and certain
hormones
20- Lipids
- an exception among macromolecules because they
are not repeating units of monomers - All hydrophobic
- b/c structures are dominated by nonpolar
covalent bonds. - 3 types
- Fats
- Phospholipids
- Steroids
21Fats
- A fat consists of two kinds of
- glycerol fatty acids.
22 Glycerol consists of a three carbon skeleton
with a hydroxyl group attached to each. A
fatty acid consists of a carboxyl group attached
to a long carbon skeleton, often 16 to 18 carbons
long.
Fig. 5.10a
-
23- Non-polar, long hydrocarbon skeleton make fats
hydrophobic. - In a fat, three fatty acids are joined to
glycerol creating a triacylglycerol.
-
24- The three fatty acids in a fat can be the same or
different. - Fatty acids may vary
- 1) length (number of carbons)
- 2) number and locations of double bonds (if any).
Fig. 5.11a
-
25The presence or absence of a double bond
determines the shape of the fatty acid.
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27- A diet rich in saturated fats may contribute to
cardiovascular disease (atherosclerosis) through
plaque deposits.
28- Functions of fat
- Source of energy
- Fat also functions to cushion vital organs.
- layer of fats can also function as insulation.
- E.g. This subcutaneous layer is especially thick
in whales, seals, and most other marine mammals
29Phosopholipids
- Phospholipids 2 fatty acids attached to glycerol
phosphate group at the third position. - The phosphate group carries a negative charge
- (Additional smaller groups may be attached to the
phosphate group)
30Phospholipid Bilayer
31- When phospholipids are added to water,
- they self assemble into 2 possible structures
- 1) Micelles
- 2) Bilayers
Fig. 5.13a
32- The phospholipid bilayer forms a barrier between
the cell and the external environment. - Major component of membranes.
Fig. 5.12b
-
33- Steroids are lipids
- carbon skeleton made of four fused carbon rings.
- Variation in steroids achieved by different
functional groups
Fig. 5.14
34- Cholesterol, an important steroid, is a component
in animal cell membranes. - Cholesterol is also the precursor for sex
hormones
-
35Proteins - Many Structures, Many Functions
A polypeptide is a polymer of amino acids
connected in a specific sequence A protein can be
one or many polypeptides coming together. A
proteins function depends on its specific
conformation
36- Proteins have multiple functions in cell.
- Such as
- structural support
- storage
- transport of other substances
- intercellular signaling
- Cellular movement muscular movement
- defense against foreign substances
- Enzymes!
- Humans have tens of thousands of different
proteins, each with their own structure and
function.
37- Monomers of polypeptides are amino acids.
- AAs consist of 4 components attached to a
central carbon, the alpha carbon. - 1) hydrogen atom
- 2) carboxyl group
- 3) amino group
- 4) variable R group (or side chain).
38- Variable R group creates 20 different amino acids
- The physical and chemical characteristics of the
R group determine the unique characteristics of a
particular amino acid.
39- Hydrophobic or nonpolar amino acids.
40- Polar or hydrophilic amino acids
Fig. 5.15b
41- Acidic and basic amino acids
Fig. 5.15c
42What is anEssential Amino Acid?
- We need 20 amino acids to build all the proteins
we will need for life. - 8 of those amino acids our body cannot
synthesize. - These must be obtained through diet.
- Phe, Met, Trp, Lys, Ala, Val, Leu, Iso
43- Two amino acids react with another by the process
of dehydration - To form a polymer .
- The bond that keeps the two amino acids together
is called peptide bond
44- Repeating the process over and over creates a
long polypeptide chain. - At one end is an amino acid with a free amino
group the (the N-terminus) and - at the other is an amino acid with a free
carboxyl group the (the C-terminus).
45- The folding of a protein from a chain of amino
acids occurs spontaneously. - Three levels of structure
- primary
- secondary
- tertiary structure
- (are used to organize the folding within a
single polypeptide.) - Quaternary structure arises when two or more
polypeptides join to form a protein.
46- The primary structure of a protein is its unique
sequence of amino acids.
47- Sickle cell anemia
- single change in amino acid changes the primary
structure compromises function of the protein
hemoglobin.
48- Secondary structure
- due to hydrogen bonds at regular intervals along
the polypeptide backbone. - 2 types
- 1) coils (an alpha helix) as in hair or
- 2) folds (beta pleated sheets) as in silk
49Biosteel
- Protein in spider web is toughest material known
to man. - Materials sci. wants to mass produce
- Implications light weight bullet proof vests,
medical sutures, fishing line, - Use transgenic goat.
- The Science paper, titled "Spider Silk Fibers
Spun from Soluble Recombinant Silk Produced in
Mammalian Cells" (Lazaris et al., 2002-01-18.
Science. Vol. 295472-476) - http//www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2002-01/nbi
-nau011102.php
50- Tertiary structure
- variety of interactions among R groups and
between R groups and the polypeptide backbone. - These interactions include
- Covalent bonds
- hydrogen bonds
- ionic bonds
- hydrophobic interactions
- van der Waals interactions.
51disulfide bridges, strong covalent bonds that
form between the sulfhydryl groups (SH) of
cysteine monomers, stabilize the structure.
- disulfide bridges, strong covalent bonds that
form between the sulfhydryl groups (SH) of
cysteine monomers, stabilize the structure.
Fig. 5.22
52- Quaternary structure
- aggregation of two or more polypeptide subunits.
- Examples
- 1)Collagen fibrous protein of 3 polypeptides
that are supercoiled like a rope. - This provides the structural strength for their
role in - connective tissue.
- 2) Hemoglobin is a globular protein with two
copies of two kinds of polypeptides.
53Fig. 5.24
54- Environment influences protein structure
- pH, salt concentration, temperature, or other
factors can unravel or denature a protein. - These forces disrupt the hydrogen bonds, ionic
bonds, and disulfide bridges that maintain the
proteins shape.
55Nucleic Acids - Informational Polymers
- 1. Nucleic acids store and transmit hereditary
information - Two types RNA, DNA
56- Nucleic acids are polymers of monomers called
nucleotides. - 3 Parts
- nitrogenous base
- pentose sugar
- phosphate group.
57- Nitrogen bases
- purines and pyrimidines.
- Pyrimidines
- single ring.
- cytosine (C), thymine (T), and uracil (U)
- Purine 2 rings
- adenine (A) and guanine (G).
58- Difference between the sugars is the lack of an
oxygen atom on carbon two in deoxyribose. - DNA deoxyribose
- RNA ribose
59There are two types of nucleic acids
- Deoxyribose nucleic acid (DNA)
- Contains information to make a polypeptide
- ribonucleic acid (RNA)
- Intermediary info. carrying molecule.
60Thus
- The types of nucleic acid molecules can be
distinguished based on - Nitrogenous bases they have
- Pentose sugar
- of strands they possess
- size
61 62Fig. 5.30