Title: Theme: Follow the carbon
1Theme Follow the carbon
- Lecture 2
- Building Blocks of Life
2Basic Necessities for Living Organisms
- Building blocks organic molecules (based on C)
and nutrients N, P, Fe, S. - Energy (food)
- Solvent liquid water (H2O)
-
3Carbon is abundant in the Universe but Earth is
depleted in carbon. So why did life choose
carbon?
4Why Carbon?
- Carbon atom can form up to 4 chemical bonds with
many other atoms can form long and complex
molecules - Carbon can form compounds that readily dissolve
in water.
5Chemical element is an atom distinguished by the
number of protons in the nucleus
6Periodic table of the chemical elements
- The layout of the periodic table
- demonstrates recurring ("periodic")
- chemical properties.
- Elements are listed in order of
- increasing atomic number (i.e. the
- number of protons in the atomic
- nucleus).
- Rows are arranged so that elements
- with similar properties fall into the same
- vertical columns ("groups").
- According to quantum mechanical
- theories of electron configuration within
- atoms, each horizontal row ("period") in
- the table corresponded to the filling of a
- quantum shell of electrons.
Dmitriy Mendeleev
7A simplified version of the periodic table
8Electrons can reside only on specific orbits
(shells) Electrons on the inner shells have
lower energy There is a max (optimal) number of
electrons per each shell 1 shell 2 electrons
(S electrons) 2 shell 8 electrons 2(S
electrons) 6 (P electrons)
9Hydrogen
Outer shell/orbits
Typically only electrons from the outer shell
(valent electrons) engage in chemical bonds
Carbon
Elements want to have optimal number of
electrons on the outer shell
Helium
10Chemical bonds
- Covalent (strong)
- Ionic (strong)
- Metallic (strong)
- Hydrogen (weak)
11Covalent bond
- Electrons are shared between atoms
- Polar and non-polar
diamond
12Ionic bond
- Electrons are not shared between atoms
13Hydrogen bond
- Occurs between electronegative
- (electron taker) atom and
- hydrogen atom bonded to N, O or F
14Carbon has 4 valent electrons can form up to 4
bonds
Methane
Ethane
15Draw all possible C-H moleculeswith 5 Carbon
atoms.
- Assume that each Carbon atom forms 4 chemical
bonds - Remember that each Carbon atom can form chemical
bond with either hydrogen or another Carbon atom.
16ethene
benzene
ethanol
fullerene
diamond
17Polymerization
- A polymer is a substance composed of molecules
with large molecular mass composed of repeating
structural units, or monomers, connected by
covalent chemical bonds. Well known examples of
polymers include plastics and DNA.
18Silicon life?
- Si is abundant and also can form four bonds at
once (like C). But! - Si bonds are much weaker complex molecules
based on Si will be fragile - Si does not form double bonds less variety
19Organic and Inorganic Carbon C can be in
reduced or oxidized forms. Organic
carbon Inorganic carbon (reduced)
(oxidized) CH2O CO2 carbon
dioxide H2CO3 carbonic acid Example HCO3?
bicarbonate ion Glucose -- C6H12O6 CO3
carbonate ion
20Inorganic carbon (C-O bonds only)
Organic carbon (has C-H and C-C bonds)
21Coal
Oil
JENNY HAGER/ THE IMAGE WORKS
http//www.nationalfuelgas.com
Organic carbon
http//www.upl.cs.wisc.edu/stroker/jungle.jpg
22Inorganic carbon
Seashells
http//www.cmas-md.org/Images/Sanjay/UnivTop4.jpg
Coral
http//www.summerclouds.com/Vero/Sea20Shells.jpg
http//educate.si.edu/lessons/currkits/ocean/
23Four types of organic macromoleculesin living
systems.
- Most of the molecules in the living systems are
water (H2O) and large organic macromolecules - Lipids
- Carbohydrates
- Proteins
- Nucleic Acids
24Lipids (fats and oils)
- Representatives fatty acids and cholesterol
- Poorly soluble
- Good (concentrated)
- energy source
- Flexible
- (cell membrane material)
25(No Transcript)
26Carbohydrates (sugars, starches, carbs)
- Representatives
- Glucose, Fructose
- Many hydroxyl
- groups (-OH)
- Soluble in water
- Form Polysaccharides
- Good energy source
- Structural support for
- organisms (cellulose
- - the main constituent of wood)
27Glucose
Fructose
Table sugar
28Glucose polymerization
H2O
Linked by dehydration reaction
Polysaccharides
In starch molecule (potato) there can be 100s
thousands of glucose units
29Proteins
- Proteios primary
- Long trains of amino acids
- Different proteins have different sequence of
amino acids - 20 amino acids used in any organism
- Some provide structure (fingernails, hair)
- Some serve as catalysts
- Enzymes proteins with catalitic properties
30L-Alanine
Glycine
Linked by dehydration reaction
31Catalysts in Chemistry
- Suppose chemical reaction
- A B ? AB is a slow reaction
- The same reaction can be accelerated with
catalyst (D) - A D ? AD fast step
- B AD ? AB D fast step
- The net result is still
- A B ? AB but it is much faster
32Proteins (continued)
- Even though there are 70 amino acids any known
life uses only 20 - Amino acids derived abiotically are a mix of both
left-handed and right-handed ones. Biological
amino acids are only left-handed. - Chirality
- Was there a common ancestor for all life?
33Biology uses only left-handed Alanine
34Summary
- All life on Earth is carbon (C) and water (H2O)
based - C atom can form up to 4 covalent bonds with many
other atoms can form complicated molecules - C can be in either organic or inorganic form
- All living systems are made of large organic
molecules (macromolecules) lipids,
carbohydrates, protein, nucleic acids