Title: Chapter 5 The Structure and Function of Macromolecules
1Chapter 5The Structure and Function of
Macromolecules
2Types of Macromolecules
- Carbohydrates
- Lipids (phospholipids)
- Proteins
- Nucleic Acids
3Polymers
- Covalent monomers
- Condensation reaction (dehydration reaction)
- One monomer provides a hydroxyl group while the
other provides a hydrogen to form a water
molecule - Hydrolysis
- bonds between monomers are broken by adding
water (digestion)
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5Carbohydrates
- Monosaccharides CH2O formula
- multiple hydroxyl (-OH) groups and
- 1 carbonyl (CO) group
- Aldehyde sugar (aldose)
- Ketone sugar (ketose)
- Cellular Respiration
- raw material for amino acids and fatty acids
6Linear and Ring Forms of Glucose
7- Disaccharides
- glycosidic linkage
- (covalent bond) between
- 2 monosaccharides
- covalent bond by dehydration reaction
- Sucrose
- most common
- disaccharide
- glucose fructose
8 Polysaccharides of Glucose
-
- Structural
- Plants cellulose
- Animals chitin
- Storage
- Plants starch (plastids)
- Animals glycogen
9Glycogen branched structure
10Chitin structure
11Lipids
- No polymers glycerol and fatty acid
- Fats, phospholipids, steroids
- Hydrophobic H bonds in water exclude fats
- Carboxyl group fatty acid
- Non-polar C-H bonds in fatty acid tails
- Ester linkage 3 fatty acids to 1 glycerol
(dehydration formation) - Triacyglycerol (triglyceride)
- Saturated vs. unsaturated fats
- single vs. double bonds
12Lipids Diverse Hydrophobic Molecules
- Fats - store large amounts of energy, solid or
oil - - glycerol 3 fatty acid molecules
- Phospholipids - cell membranes
- - glycerol, 2 fatty acids and PO4 group
- Steroids - precurser to sex steroids, cell
membranes - - 4 fused carbon rings with functional
groups -
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18LDLs (bad) carry cholesterol from the liver to
the body, leaving deposits in the blood vessels.
HDLs (good) carry cholesterol from the body
back to the liver for elimination
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21Manufacturers bombard cis fats with hydrogen
(hydrogenation) in order to render the oil more
solid better shelf life and cooking
characteristics.
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24Phospholipids
- 2 fatty acids instead of 3 (phosphate group)
- Tails hydrophobic heads hydrophilic
- Micelle (phospholipid droplet in water)
- Bilayer (double layer)cell membranes
25Structure of a Phospholipid
26Steroids
- Lipids with 4 fused carbon rings
- E.g. cholesterol cell membranes precursor for
other steroids (sex hormones) atherosclerosis
27Proteins
- Importance
- Instrumental in nearly everything organisms do
50 dry weight of cells most structurally
sophisticated molecules known - Monomer amino acids (there are 20)
- Carboxyl (-COOH) group, amino group (NH2),
variable group (R) - Variable group (R) characteristics
- polar (hydrophilic), nonpolar
(hydrophobic), acidic or basic - Three-dimensional shape (conformation)
- Polypeptides (dehydration reaction)
- peptide bonds covalent bond carboxyl group to
amino group (polar)
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31Protein Structure
Animation 5.4.1
32Primary Structure
- Conformation Linear structure
- Molecular Biology each type of protein has
a unique primary structure of amino acids - Amino acid substitution hemoglobin sickle-cell
anemia
33Primary Structure of Proteins
Animation 5.4.2
34Secondary Structure
- Conformation coils folds (hydrogen
bonds) - Alpha Helix coiling keratin
- Pleated Sheet parallel silk
35Secondary Protein Structure
Animation 5.4.3
36Tertiary Structure
- Conformation irregular contortions from R
group bonding. - Hydrophobic and v.d.w.
- disulfide bridges
- hydrogen bonds
- ionic bonds
37Tertiary Protein Structure
Animation 5.4.4
38Quaternary Structure
- Conformation 2 or more polypeptide
chains aggregated into 1 macromolecule - e.g. collagen (connective tissue)
- E.g. hemoglobin
39Quaternary Protein Structure
Animation 5.4.5
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43Denaturation and Re-naturation of a
Protein
High temperatures or various chemical treatments
will denature a protein, causing it to loose its
conformation and hence its ability to
function. Proteins can often re-nature when the
chemical and physical aspects of its environment
are restored.
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46Spider Silk
Normal length, 5 times length,
20 times length
47- Spider silk is 5 times stronger than steel
Spider silk goes through this sort of stretching
before it breaks, and in doing so, it absorbs a
lot of energy. The energy that you're putting
into pushing it or pulling it is actually being
taken up by the stretching process. This
energy-absorbing process is what makes the
material so tough.
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49Prions
50Nucleic Acids
- Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
- Ribonucleic acid (RNA)
- DNA-gtRNA-gtprotein
- Polymers of nucleotides (polynucleotide)
- nitrogenous base
- pentose sugar
- phosphate group
- phosphodiester bond
- Nucleoside base sugar
- Nitrogenous bases
- pyrimidinescytosine, thymine, uracil
- purinesadenine, guanine
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52Double helix (Watson Crick - 1953)
- Inheritance based
- on DNA replication
- H bonds - between
- paired bases
- van der Waals - between stacked bases
- A to T C to G pairing
- Complementary
53The Double Helix