Title: MACROMOLECULES
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5MACROMOLECULES
- Macromolecules (1000s of atoms and weigh over
100,000 daltons) - 4 Kinds of macromolecules Carbohydrates, lipids,
proteins, and nucleic acids (know this in your
sleep!)
6MACROMOLECULES ARE
- POLYMERS chainlike molecules made up of -
- MONOMERS (the repeated units)
- Diversity of Polymers different sequences of
the basic 40-50 monomers
7How do monomers make polymers?
- Condensation /Dehydration reaction
- One monomer provides an OH and the other
provides a -H and together these form H2O - H2O is REMOVED Covalent bond is formed between
MONOMERS Polymers are made! - Needs ATP and Enzymes
- Anabolic/biosynthesis reactions use this to make
macromolecules for growth/replacement
8How do polymers break up?
- Hydrolysis Reaction
- Covalent Bond is broken H2O is added across the
broken bond - Polymers make Monomers
- Provides ATP and Uses Enzymes
- Used for digestion, cell respiration
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10I) Sugars are all - Carbohydrates
- Monomer Unit of Carbohydrates called
Monosaccharides - Polymer called Polysaccharide
- General formula CH2On
- For example, glucose has the formula C6H12O6.
- Most names for sugars end in -ose.
11SUCROSE (from cane sugar)
FRUCTOSE (from FRUIT!!)
MALTOSE (from Malt a fermentation product)
DEXTROSE (glucose)
LACTOSE (from MILK)
12Monosaccharide Classification Overview
- Based on Aldehyde or Ketone Functional group
(aldose/ketose) - Number of Carbon atoms (pentose, hexose)
- Arrangement of Carbon Atoms - Isomers
- Straight chain or ring structure
- Know how to identify a simple sugar/monosachcharid
e by sight as a ring structure and a straight
chain structure - Know the glycosidic linkage is represented as an
-O- when 2 monosachcharides are connected
13Monosaccharide Classification
- 1) Based on Functional Group
- KETOSE Ketone function group (CO)
- ALDOSE Aldehyde functional group
- (-CHO)
GLUCOSE
FRUCTOSE
14Monosaccharide Classification
- 2) Based on Number of Carbons
- HEXOSE 6 C
- PENTOSE 5 C
- TRIOSE 3C
GLUCOSE (6)
RIBOSE (5)
15Monosaccharide Classification
- 3) Based on Arrangement of Carbon Atoms
- Enantiomers Isomers (Glucose and Galactose)
- No test ques. on this for your level!
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17Monosaccharide Classification
- 4) Based on Ring Structure Linear monomers form
rings in solutions - (Alpha and Beta Rings based on plane of OH
-skip details)
18Monosaccharide to Disaccharide(dehydration
reaction)
- Important Disaccharides (Sucrose table sugar,
Lactose Milk, Maltose Beer)
Glucose
Fructose
Sucrose
Galactose
Lactose
Glucose
Maltose
Glucose
Glucose
19Monosaccharide to Disaccharide
- A Glucose monomer and a fructose monomer can be
joined using a GLYCOSIDIC LINKAGE to form SUCROSE
(know to identify this link) - SUCROSE is a DISACCHARIDE
SUCROSE
Fructose
Glucose
20Monosaccharide to Disaccharide
- A Glucose monomer and a fructose monomer can be
joined using a GLYCOSIDIC LINKAGE to form SUCROSE - SUCROSE (table sugar) is a DISACCHARIDE
Fructose
SUCROSE
Glucose
21Monosaccharide to Polysaccharide
- 1000s of monosaccharides join up to form
POLYSACCHARIDES
G
G
G
G
Polysaccharide
22Carbohydrate Review
Monosacharrides Disacharrides (glucose,
fructose) (sucrose, lactose)
Condensation/dehydration reaction Polysacharrides
Structural Storage Cellulose
Starch (Plant) Chitin
Glycogen (Animals)
23a) Storage Polysaccharides
- 1) STARCH (in potatoes stored NRG in plants)
- MONOMER is Glucose
- Links up to form starch many, many glucose
molecs)
24a) Storage Polysaccharides
- 1) STARCH has 2 polymers (skip details)
- 1-4 ? linkage of Glucose Monomers (amylose
-helical) - 1-6 ? linkages causes branching (amylopectin)
25a) Storage Polysaccharides
- 2) GLYCOGEN
- (in animals stored ATP in muscle and liver)
- MONOMERS Glucose
26b) Structural Polysaccharides
- 1) CELLULOSE
- (in plant cell wall)
- Monomers-Glucose
- ?1-4 linkage
27b) Structural Polysaccharides
- 2) CHITIN
- (in exoskeleton of arthropods)
- Monomers-Glucose
- Glucose has a -N group attached
28Starch Test Lugols Iodine
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30Benedicts Test
- Will be positive for Reducing Sugars
(monosaccharides, disaccharides except sucrose)
31Benedicts Test
- CuSO4 Cu SO4--
- 2 Cu Reducing Sugar Cu
(electron donor) - Cu Cu2O
32II) Lipids
- Lipids are hydrophobic
- (mostly hydrocarbons)
- They are NOT polymers
- Important classes FATS, PHOSPHOLIPIDS, and
STEROIDS
33FATS
- Fats are triglycerides - have glycerol and
fattyacids linked up by an ester bond - Glycerol is a 3C alcohol
- Fatty acid is RCOOH and can have long hydrophobic
C-H chains- these can have double bonds or single
bonds or a mixture
34Saturated fats - solids at room temp. - have all
Carbons SATURATED - that means every carbon has
max. number of hydrogen attached Ex.
butter Unsaturated fats - liquid at room temp. -
have some Carbons UNSATURATED - that means DOUBLE
BONDS from some carbons having less than max.
number of hydrogen attached Ex. Oil.
DOUBLE BONDS freedom of movement!
35CARCINOGENIC
36 37Artherosclerosis-plaque in artery
38Fat Substitutes
- Olestra - sucrose (sugar) with fatty acids (No
digestion!!) - Hydrogenated Vegetable Oils Peanut Butter,
Shortening, Margarine
39Fat Functions
- Energy Storage (1 gm of fat 2 gm starch fat- 4
cal/gm) - Plants use starch to store energy (bulky) seeds
have oil - Animals store energy as fat
- Insulation Protect vital organs
- Absorption of Vitamins K, E, D, A
40Phospholipids
- Fatty acids (hydrophobic) glycerol phosphate
group polar group (hydrophilic) - The fatty acid tails are hydrophobic, but the
phosphate group and its attachments form a
hydrophilic head - -know to recognize it!
- Two fatty acids attached to glycerol and a
phosphate group at the third position
- Phosphate Group is ve
- R fatty acid hydrocarbon chain
- X other groups
41Steroids
- Consist of 4 fused rings
- Cholesterol, sex hormones
- Vary in functional groups
42Lipid Test
- Brown paper turns translucent with lipid (grease
test) - Sudan IV Test
43Proteins
- Proteios first place!!
- Polymers made up of Amino Acid Monomers
44Amino Acids
- Have Carboxyl (COOH) and amino groups (NH2)
- Center Alpha Carbon
- R 20 different possibilities 20 amino acids
- Ionized at neutral pH inside the cell (COO- and
NH3)
45Amino Acids
46Amino Acids
- Hydrophilic Polar R groups
47Amino Acids
- Electrically charged R groups (Acidic/ Basic
also hydrophilic)
48Amino Acids
- Peptide Bond Formation (OC-NH) Dehydration
reaction linking amino acid monomers into a
polypeptide chain- know this bond!
49Amino Acids
- Primary Structure Sequence of amino acid chain -
is it Val-His-Leu or Val-Glu-Leu. - Change in Primary Structure can cause protein to
function abnormally (DUH!)
50Amino Acids
Lysozyme
- Secondary Structure Result of H Bonding between
OC and N-H (atoms in this secondary structure
are in the polypeptide backbone) - ? Helix (coils) every 4th aa linked
- ? Pleated Sheets (folds)
? Helix
? Pleated Sheets
51Amino Acids
- Tertiary Structure Result of H Bonding between
side chain R groups - H bonds among polar and/or charged groups
- ionic bonds between charged R groups, and
hydrophobic interactions - and van der Waals interactions among hydrophobic
Rgroups - Disulfide Bridges (know this is important in
tertiary structure!)
52Amino Acids
- Quarternary Structure Result of noncovalent
interactions between polypeptide chains - Dimers, Trimers, Tetramers aggregations of many
polypeptide subunits
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54Why is folding important?
Diseased prions induce healthy prion proteins to
change their shape, and clusters of disease
build, leaving holes in the brain. SF
Chronicle
55Denaturation
- Protein Denaturation Loss of biological
activity - Loss of Native Confirmation/folding due to
changes in pH, salt concentration, temperature - Protein can come back to original confirmation
(Renatured)
56Chaperonins
- The folding of many proteins is protected in
cells by chaperonin proteins that shield out bad
influences.
57Biuret Test
- Biuret Reagent has CuSO4 and KOH
- Blue-violet proteins
- Purple/pink peptides
- Will not detect free amino acids
58Nucleic Acids
- Amino Acid Sequence of a Polypeptide is coded by
a GENE - A gene is a specific sequence of DNA
- DNA is made of Nucleic Acids
59Nucleic Acids
- GENE codes for a messenger RNA in the nucleus
- mRNA is translated in the cytoplasm
- Protein is synthesized using the mRNA
60Nucleic Acids
- DNA and RNA are Nucleic Acids
- Nucleic Acids are Polymers
- The monomers are called NUCLEOTIDES
61Nucleotides
- NUCLEOTIDES are made of
- Pentose Sugar
- Nitrogen Base
- Phosphate group
62Nucleotides- Nitrogen Base
- Nitrogen Base can be of 2 types
- Purine 2 rings Adenine and Guanine
- Pyrimidine 1 ring Cytosine, Uracil, and
Thymine
63Nucleotides- Nitrogen Base
- Purines and Pyrimidines bond with each other
- A can form a bond with T or U
- G can form a bond with C
64Nucleotides-Sugar
- Pentose Sugar is Ribose
- DNA has Deoxy Ribose
- RNA has Ribose
65Nucleosides-No Phosphate group
- Pentose Sugar Nitrogen Base
66Nucleotides
- Pentose Sugar Nitrogen Base Phosphate
67Nucleotides join together to make Nucleic Acids
Sugar Phosphate backbone
68DNA is a double helix 2 strands are
complementary
1953
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70DNA Spooling