Title: Introductory Biochemistry II
1Biochemistry The Chemistry of the Human Body
2Macromolecules
- Many of the common macromolecules are synthesized
from monomers.
3(No Transcript)
4Carbohydrates
- Monosaccharides
- Disaccharides
- Polysaccharides
5Carbohydrates
- Compounds which provide energy to living cells.
- Made up of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen with a
ratio of two hydrogens for every oxygen atom. - The name carbohydrate means "watered carbon" or
carbon with attached water molecules. - Are used directly to supply energy to living
organisms.
6Carbohydrates
- Many carbohydrates have empirical formuli which
would imply about equal numbers of carbon and
water molecules. - The general formula for carbohydrates is (CH2O)n.
- The names of most sugars end with the letters
-ose. - The pentose sugars ribose and deoxyribose are
important in the structure of nucleic acids like
DNA and RNA.
7Carbohydrates
- Three key classification schemes for sugars are
- Monosaccharides
- Disaccharides
- Polysaccharides
8Monosaccharides
- Simple sugars, having 3 to 7 carbon atoms.
- Are linear molecules but in aqueous solution they
form a ring form structure. - In aqueous solution, monosaccharides with five or
more C atoms form cyclic ring structures. - These 6-membered ring compounds are called
pyranoses. - These rings form due to a general reaction that
occurs between alcohols and aldehydes or ketones
to form derivatives called hemiacetals or
hemiketals.
9Monosaccharides
10Monosaccharides
- May form several types of stereoisomers since
they share the same molecular formula. - Four Classes of Stereoisomers
- Diastereomers
- Enantiomers
- Epimers
- Anomers
11Monosaccharides Isomers
12Monosaccharides Diastereomers
- Stereoisomers that are not mirror images of each
other. - Diastereomers for the molecular formula C5H10O5
13Monosaccharides Diastereomers
- Diastereomers for the molecular formula C6H12O6
14Monosaccharides Enantiomers
- Stereoisomers that are mirror images of each
other. - Two types D or L
15Monosaccharides Epimers
- Two diastereomers that differ around one chiral
center.
16Monosaccharides Anomers
- Stereoisomers that differ in the configuration
around the anomeric carbon. - Two types of anomers are a or ß.
- In hemiacetals, the anomeric carbon is at
position 1.
17Monosaccharides Anomers
18Monosaccharides Anomers
- In hemiketals, the anomeric carbon is at position
2.
19Disaccharides
- Glycosides
- Formed from two monosaccharides.
- The -OH of one monosaccharide condenses with the
intramolecular hemiacetal of another
monosaccharide, forming a glycosidic bond. - Glycosidic bonds can be a or ß.
20Disaccharides
21Disaccharides
- Common disaccharides are
- Sucrose
- Lactose
- Maltose
- Trehalose
22Disaccharides
23Sucrose
- Prevalent in sugar cane and sugar beets
24Sucrose
25Lactose
- Found exclusively in milk.
26Lactose
27Maltose
- Major degradation product of starch.
28Maltose
29Trehalose
- Found in bacteria, yeast, invertebrates,
mushrooms and seaweed. - Glycosidic Linkages
- Protects organisms from extreme temperatures and
drying out.
30Trehalose
- Is used
- As a preservative for foods and to minimize harsh
flavors and odors. - As a moisturizer in cosmetics.
- As an natural sweetener for diabetics.
- Antioxidant to stabilize proteins and lipids in
neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and
Huntington's Disease. - To protect organs for transplants.
31Trehalose
- Is
- Involved in the regulation of developmental and
metabolic processes in plants. - The major transport sugar in shrimp, insects and
plants. - The major carbohydrate energy storage molecule
used by insects for flight.
32Trehalose
- In plants, synthesis is carried out by trehalose
phosphate synthase and trehalose phosphataseÂ
33Trehalose
34Trehalose
Trehalase
35Polyssacharides
- Ten or more monosaccharides bonded together to
form long chains. - The chains are typically contain hundreds of
monosaccharaides. - Can have one, two or many different types of
monosaccharides. - Homopolysaccharides
- Heteropolysaccharides
36Polyssacharides
37Polyssacharides
- Are classified as
- Cellulose
- Chitin
- Glycogen
- Starches
38Cellulose Chitin
- Are polysaccharides with 1500 glucose rings chain
together. - Function is support and protection.
- The monomers of cellulose and chitin are bonded
together in such a way that the molecule is
straight and unbranched. - The molecule remains straight because every other
glucose is twisted to an upside-down position
compared to the two monomers on each side.
39Cellulose Chitin
- Humans and most animals do not have the necessary
enzymes needed to break the linkages of cellulose
or chitin. - Some bacteria and some fungi produce enzymes that
digest cellulose. - Some animals have microorganisms in their gut
that digest cellulose for them. - Fiber is cellulose, an important component of the
human diet.
40Cellulose
- Is composed of beta-glucose monomers.
- Cellulose fibers are composed of long parallel
chains of these molecules. - The chains are attached to each other by hydrogen
bonds between the hydroxyl groups of adjacent
molecules. - The cell walls of plants are composed of
cellulose.
41Cellulose
42Chitin
- The cell walls of fungi and the exoskeleton of
arthropods are composed of chitin. - The glucose monomers of chitin have a side chain
containing nitrogen.
43Chitin
44Glycogen
- Animals and some bacteria store extra
carbohydrates as glycogen. - In animals, glycogen is stored in the liver and
muscle cells. - Between meals, the liver breaks down glycogen to
glucose in order to keep the concentration of
glucoses in the blood stable. - After meals, as glucose levels in the blood rise,
glucose is removed from the blood and stored as
glycogen.
45Glycogen
46Glycogen
- Homopolymer of glucose.
- Two types of glycosidic linkage
- a(1, 4) for straight chains
- a(1, 6) for branched chains, occurring every
8-10 residues.
47Glycogen
- Glycogen is a very compact structure that results
from the coiling of the polymer chains. - This compactness allows large amounts of carbon
energy to be stored in a small volume, with
little effect on cellular osmolarity.
48Starches
- Starch and glycogen are composed of 300 1000
alpha-glucose units join together. - It is a polysaccharide which plants use to store
energy for later use. - Starches are smaller than cellulose units, and
can be more readily used for energy.
49Starches
- Foods such as potatoes, rice, corn and wheat
contain starch granules which are important
energy sources for humans. - The human digestive process breaks down the
starches into glucose units with the aid of
enzymes, and those glucose molecules can
circulate in the blood stream as an energy
source.
50Starches
- Amylopectin is
- A form of starch that is very similar to
glycogen. - Branched but have less branches than glycogen.
- Amylose is
- A form of starch that is unbranched.
51Starches
52Starches Glycogen
- The bond orientation between the glucose subunits
of starch and glycogen allows the polymers to
form compact spirals.
53Summary of Carbohydrates
- CHO
- Monosaccharides simple sugars
- Functional group(s)
- Carboxyl
- Hydroxyl
- Disaccharides
- Polysaccharides
54Summary of Carbohydrates
55Summary of Carbohydrates
56Summary of Carbohydrates
57Proteins
58Definitions
- Peptide - a short chain of amino acids bonded
together. - Oligopeptide- a short chain of at least 2 amino
acids and up to 20 amino acids long. - Polypeptide - a longer chain of many amino acids,
typically 50 or more. - Proteins - consist of one or more polypeptides,
subunits, chains or domains.
59Proteins
- Are the building materials for living cells,
appearing in the structures inside the cell and
within the cell membrane. About 75 of the dry
weight of our bodies. - They contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen,
sulfur and phosphorus. - Protein molecules are often very large and are
made up of hundreds to thousands of amino acid
units.
60Proteins
- Functions
- Transport oxygen (Hb)
- Build tissue (Muscle)
- Copy DNA for cell replication
- Support the body as structural proteins
- Components of cell membranes (receptors, membrane
transport, antigens) - Control metabolic reactions as regulatory
proteins called enzymes
61Proteins
- Functions
- Hormones
- Storage (egg whites of birds, reptiles seeds)
- Protection (antibodies)
- Toxins (botulism, diphtheria)
- Some proteins are in solution in the blood and
other body fluids. - Others are solids that make up the framework of
tissue, bone and hair.
62Proteins
- Proteins can be characterized as extremely
long-chain polyamides. The amides contain
nitrogen, and nitrogen composes about 16 of the
protein atomic content. - In the cell, the DNA directs or provides the
master blueprint for creating proteins, using
transcription of information to mRNA and then
translation to actually create proteins.
63Proteins
- Proteins are synthesized via condensation of
amino acids under the influence of enzyme
catalysts. - The 20 amino acids are combined in different ways
to make up the 100,000 or so different proteins
in the human body. - The amino acid units in a protein molecule are
held together by peptide bonds, and form chains
called polypeptide chains.
64Proteins
65Proteins
- During translation, the protein goes through
several different structural stages - Primary
- Secondary
- Tertiary
- Quaternary
- Final structures may undergo post-translational
modifications based on their determined function.
66Proteins
Subunit or domain
67Proteins Primary Structure
- The sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide
chain. - The sequence of the R groups determines the
folding of the protein. - A change of a single amino acid can alter the
function of the protein. - Sickle cell anemia - caused by a change of one
amino acid from glutamine to valine.
68Proteins Primary Structure
69Proteins Secondary Structure
- Folding and coiling due to H bond formation
between carboxyl and amino groups of non-adjacent
amino acid. - R groups are NOT involved.
- This bonding produces two common kinds of shapes
seen in protein molecules- coils, called alpha
helices, and beta sheets. - A single polypeptide may contain many of these
helices and sheets.
70Proteins Secondary Structures
Alpha
Beta
71Proteins Tertiary Structure
- The overall 3-dimensional shape of the
polypeptide chain.  - Hydrophobic interactions with water molecules are
important in creating and stabilizing the
structure of proteins. - Hydrophobic (nonpolar) amino acids aggregate to
produce areas of the protein that are out of
contact with water molecules.
72Proteins Tertiary Structure
- Hydrophilic (polar and ionized) amino acids form
hydrogen bonds with water molecules. - Hydrogen bonds and ionic bonds form between R
groups to help shape the polypeptide chain. - Disulfide bonds are covalent bonds between sulfur
atoms in the R groups of two different amino
acids. These bonds are very important in
maintaining the tertiary structure of some
proteins.
73Proteins Tertiary Structure
74Proteins Tertiary Structure
- The shape of a protein is typically described as
being globular or fibrous. - Globular proteins contain both coils and sheets.
- Fibrous proteins are elongated molecules in which
either a-helices or ß-pleated sheets are the
dominant structures.Â
75Proteins Tertiary Structure
76Proteins Quaternary Structure
- Relationship among multiple polypeptide chains
forming one protein structure. - Contain two or more tertiary structures that
associate to form a single protein. - The overall 3-D structure is due to interactions
between polypeptide chains after synthesis - Hydrophobic hydrophilic interactions
- H- bonds
- Ionic interactions
- Disulfide bonds
77Proteins Quaternary Structure
78Proteins Enzymes
- Some proteins are structural, but some are
control proteins called enzymes. - These enzymes can be used in the synthesis of
proteins, including their own synthesis. - Each protein, including enzymes, is made
according to a pattern of nucleotides along a
segment of the DNA called a "gene". - A single living cell contains thousands of
enzymes.
79Proteins Enzymes
80Proteins Enzymes
- Speed up the rate of chemical reactions.
- Proteins are able to function as enzymes due to
their shape. - Enzyme molecules are shaped like the reactants,
allowing the reactants to bind closely with the
enzyme.
81Proteins Enzymes
- Have a small a pocket located on the 3-D surface
of the folded protein. - This is the binding site, where the substrate
binds and chemical reactions take place .
82Proteins Enzymes
- The binding site matches the shape of the
substrate molecules. - The enzyme is then able to hold the substrate
molecules in the correct orientation for the
chemical reaction to proceed. - The enzyme itself does not participate in the
reaction and is not changed by the reaction.
83Other Kinds of Proteins
- Simple proteins contain only amino acids.
- Conjugated proteins contain other kinds of
molecules. - Three key classes of conjugated proteins
- Glycoproteins (carbohydrates)
- Nucleoproteins (nucleic acids)
- Lipoproteins (lipids)
84Conjugated Proteins
85Conjugated Proteins
86Amino Acids
- Are organic compounds.
- Each has a carboxyl group and an amino group
attached to the same carbon atom, called the
alpha carbon. - Amino acids have the general form
87Amino Acids
- There are 20 amino acids which make up the
proteins, distinguished by the R-group. - The structure of the R-group determines the
chemical properties of the amino acid. - Types of chemical properties
- Polar Charged
- Nonpolar
- Electrically Charged
88Amino Acids Polar Uncharged
- Are hydrophilic and can form hydrogen bonds.
- Serine
- Threonine
- Glutamine
- Asparagine
- Tyrosine
- Cysteine
89Amino Acids Nonpolar
- Are hydrophobic and are usually found in the
center of the protein. - Also found in proteins which are associated with
cell membranes.
- Glycine
- Alanine
- Valine
- Leucine
- Isoleucine
- Methionine
- Phenylalanine
- Tryptophan
- Proline
90Amino Acids Electrically Charged
- Have electrical charges that can change depending
on the pH. - Aspartic Acid
- Glutamic Acid
- Lysine
- Arginine
- Histidine
91Amino Acids Chemical Properties
- The simplest amino acid is glycine. It fits in
tight spaces in the 3-D structure of proteins. It
contain hydrogen as an R group. - Cysteine can form covalent disulfide bonds in 3
and 4 structures. - Proline has a unique structure and causes kinks
in the protein chains.
92Amino Acids
- Amino acids are the structural elements from
which proteins are built. - When amino acids bond to each other, it makes an
amide bond. - This bond is formed as a result of a condensation
reaction between the amino group of one amino
acid and the carboxyl group of another.
93Amino Acids
- Amino acids can have either left-handed or
right-handed molecular symmetry. - The most common are left-handed amino acids.
These are the building blocks of proteins.
94Amino Acids
- The human body can synthesize all of the amino
acids necessary to build proteins, except for the
ten called the essential amino acids. - An adequate diet must contain these essential
amino acids. - Typically, they are supplied by meat and dairy
products, but if those are not consumed, some
care must be applied to ensuring an adequate
supply.
95Amino Acids Non-essential
- The 10 amino acids that we can produce are
alanine, asparagine, aspartic acid, cysteine,
glutamic acid, glutamine, glycine, proline,
serine and tyrosine. - Tyrosine is produced from phenylalanine, so if
the diet is deficient in phenylalanine, tyrosine
will be required as well.
96Amino Acids Essential
- The essential amino acids are arginine (required
for growing children), histidine, isoleucine,
leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine,
threonine, tryptophan, and valine. - Humans do not have all the enzymes required for
the biosynthesis of essential amino acids.
97Amino Acids
- The failure to obtain enough of any of the 10
essential amino acids has serious health
implications and can result in degradation of the
body's proteins. - Muscle and other protein structures may be
degraded to obtain the one amino acid that is
needed. - The human body does not store excess amino acids
for later use. The amino acids must be obtained
from food daily.
98Amino Acids
99Summary of Proteins Amino Acids
- Monomer amino acids
- 20 total, 9 or 10 essential
- Functional group(s)
- Carboxyl
- Amino
- Polymer
- Polypeptide
- Protein
100Summary of Amino Acids
101Nucleic Acids
- Control the processes of heredity
- Transcription
- Translation
- Cell Replication
- The key nucleic acids are
- DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)
- RNA (ribonucleic acid)
102Nucleic Acids
- Nuclei acid consist of a long chain of units
called nucleotides. - Nucleotides are the basic structural units of
nucleic acids - The nucleotides are made up of a phosphate group,
a pentose sugar, and a nitrogen base.
103Nucleic Acids
104Nucleic Acids
- The sugar ribose is characteristic of RNA.
- The sugar deoxyribose is characteristic of DNA.
105Nucleic Acids
- For RNA, the bases are adenine, guanine, cytosine
and uracil. - For DNA, the bases may be adenine, guanine,
cytosine or thymine.
106Nucleic Acids
107Nucleic Acids
- The larger bases adenine and guanine are purines
which differ in the kinds of atoms that are
attached to their double ring. - The other bases (cytosine, uracil, and thymine)
are pyrimidines, which differ in the atoms
attached to their single ring. - The resulting DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)
contains no uracil, and RNA(ribonucleic acid)
does not contain any thymine.
108DNA
- Stores information regarding the sequence of
amino acids in each of the bodys proteins. - Is the master blueprint for the production of
proteins and cell replication. - In protein synthesis, serves as a pattern for
mRNA synthesis, in a process called
transcription. - mRNA contains all the DNA information to
manufacture a protein, in a process called
translation.
109DNA Structure
- Is a double helix.
- The bases may be attached in any order. This
gives the vast number of possibilities of
arrangements, making the genetic code diverse. - The bases are only attached by hydrogen bonds to
their complementary base. This arrangement makes
possible the separation of the strands and the
replication of the DNA double helix.
110DNA Structure
111DNA Structure
- Antiparallel
- The end of a single strand that has the phosphate
group is called the 5 end. The other end is the
3 end. - The two strands of a DNA molecule run in opposite
directions.
112DNA Structure
113DNA Structure
- Complimentary base pairing
- A-T
- G-C
- Two hydrogen bonds hold adenine to thymine.
- Three hydrogen bonds hold cytosine to guanine.
114DNA Base Pairing
115RNA
- Is directly involved in the synthesis of proteins
in a process called "translation". - mRNA itself is directed synthesized from DNA in a
process called transcription. - mRNA is the template for the synthesis of all
proteins. - RNA has many forms, but the three most important
are messenger RNA (mRNA), transfer RNA (tRNA) and
ribosomal RNA (rRNA).
116RNA Structure
117RNA Base Pairing
118mRNA
- The anti-sense strand is used as a template to
produce a single strand of mRNA. - The sequence of bases on a segment of DNA called
a gene is copied to a strand of mRNA with the
assistance of RNA polymerase. - The bases in the mRNA strand are complimentary to
the bases in DNA.
119mRNA
- The mRNA contains three-letter codes, called a
codon. It is the code for one amino acid. - The sequence of codes in DNA therefore determines
the sequence of amino acids in the protein.
120mRNA
- The mRNA has regions called introns and exons.
- Introns are not a part of the pattern for the
protein to be synthesized, so those segments are
excised from the mRNA. - Exons are the only segments present before the
mRNA's are released from the nucleus. - These pattern for protein synthesis is then read
and translated into the language of amino acids
for protein synthesis with the help of tRNA.
121mRNA
122tRNA
- Is directly involved in the translation of the
sequence of nucleotides in mRNA with rRNA. - The synthesis of tRNA itself is directed by the
DNA in the cell that provides a pattern for the
production of mRNA by "transcription". - When mRNA reaches rRNA to be translated, tRNA
molecules with all the required amino acids must
be present for the process to proceed. - Since most proteins use all twenty amino acids,
all must be available, attached to appropriate
tRNA molecules.
123tRNA
- Is commonly called a cloverleaf form.
- Binds an amino acid at one end opposite to the
anticodon on the other end. - This anticodon will bind to a codon consisting of
three nitrogenous bases which specify an amino
acid according to the genetic code.
124tRNA
- The many types of tRNA have roughly the same size
and shape, varying from about 73 to 93
nucleotides. - Besides the usual bases A, U, G, and C, all have
a significant number of modified bases, which are
formed by modification after the transcription.
125tRNA
Letter Code Modified Bases
I Inocine
mI methylinosine
mG methylguanosine
m2G dimethylguanosine
Psi Pseudouridine
D Dihydrouridine
126tRNA
- All tRNAs have sequences of nucleotides that are
complementary to other parts of the molecule and
base-pair to form the five arms of the tRNA. - Four of the arms are fairly consistent, but the
variable arm can range from 4 to 21 nucleotides.
127tRNA
128rRNA
- Associates with a set of proteins to form
ribosomes. - Physically moves an mRNA molecule and catalyze
the assembly of amino acids into protein chains. - Binds tRNAs and various accessory molecules
necessary for protein synthesis. - Ribosomes are composed of a large and small
subunit, each of which contains its own rRNA
molecule or molecules.
129rRNA
130Translation
- Translation is the whole process by which the
base sequence of an mRNA is used to bring and
join amino acids in a polypeptide. - The three types of RNA participate in this
essential protein-synthesizing pathway in all
cells.
131Translation
132ATP
- Adenosine triphosphate is a nucleotide that is
used in energetic reactions for temporary energy
storage. - Energy is stored in the phosphate bonds of ATP.
- The cells use the energy stored in ATP by
breaking one of the phosphate bonds, producing
ADP.
133ATP
134ATP
135ATP
136Summary of Nucleic Acids
- Monomer nucleotide
- A, T (or U), C, G
- Functional group(s)
- Phosphate
- Amino
- Hydroxyl
- Polymer
- DNA and RNA
Basic Nucleotide Structure
137Summary of Nucleic Acids
138Lipids
- Fats, oils, waxes, and sterols are collectively
known as lipids. - Fats contain only carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen.
139Lipids
- Are insoluble in water but soluble in nonpolar
solvents. - Are also an important component of cell
membranes. - Used for long-term energy storage.
- One gram of fat stores more than twice as much
energy as one gram of carbohydrate.
140Lipids
- Important classes of lipids
- Phospholipids
- Steroids
- Glycerides
- Waxes
141Phospholipids
- Contain
- Phosphate group on third -OH group of glycerol.
- Two fatty acids.
- Have a polar head, which increases hydrophilicity.
142Phospholipids
- Arrange themselves into double-layered membranes
with the water-soluble phosphate ends on the
outside and the fatty acid facing the inside. - Cell membranes are not rigid or stiff since
phospholipids are in constant motion as they move
with the surrounding water molecules and slide
past one another.
143Phospholipids
- They also form spheroid structures called
micelles.
144Steroids
- Have no fatty acid component.
- Contains a backbone of 4 carbon rings in 6-6/6-5
arrangement. - Examples
- Hormones
- Cholesterol
- Cell membrane components
145Steroids
146Steroids Cholesterol
- Cholesterol is a vital component of the cell
membranes and used by cells to synthesize other
steroids. - High cholesterol levels are associated with heart
disease and the formation of plaques which
obstruct blood vessels. - High blood levels of cholesterol bound to a
carrier molecule called a low-density lipoprotein
(LDL) are associated with the formation of the
plaques in arteries.
147Steroids Cholesterol
148Steroids Cholesterol
- Cholesterol bound to high-density lipoproteins
tends to be metabolized or excreted and is often
referred to as "good cholesterol".
149Glycerides
- Fats and oils are composed of fatty acids and
glycerol. - Fatty acids have a long hydrocarbon chain with a
carboxyl group. - The chains of fatty acids usually contain 16 to
18 carbons. - Fats are nonpolar and therefore they do not
dissolve in water.
150Glycerides
- Fats are generally classified as esters of fatty
acids and glycerol. - There can be one to three ester linkages of fatty
acid chains to the glycerol, leading to the
classification as - Monoglycerides
- Diglycerides
- Triglycerides
151Glycerides Nomenclature
152Fatty Acids
- Structure
- Two classes
- Saturated
- Unsaturated
153Saturated Fatty Acids
- Have no double bonds between the carbons in its
fatty acid chains. - Animal fats are more highly saturated than
vegetable fats. - Highly saturated fats are usually solid at room
temperature.
154Unsaturated Fatty Acids
- Also called polyunsaturated fat.
- Contain at least one to several double bonds
between the carbons in its fatty acid chains. - Each double bonds produces a "bend" in the
molecule. - Molecules with many bends cannot be packed as
closely together, so these fats are less dense.
155Unsaturated Fatty Acids
- Usually these fatty acid are oils.
- Most oils are of vegetable origin.
- Triglycerides composed of unsaturated fatty acids
melt at lower temperatures than those with
saturated fatty acids.
156Unsaturated Fatty Acids
- Trans fat is the common name for a type of
unsaturated fat with trans-isomer fatty acids. - Most trans fats consumed today are created
industrially by partial hydrogenation of plant
oils. - The goal of partial hydrogenation is to add
hydrogen atoms to cis-unsaturated fats, making
them more saturated.
157Unsaturated Fatty Acids
- These saturated fats have a higher melting point,
which makes them attractive for baking and
extends their shelf-life. - Trans fats are not essential in the diet and have
been linked with rises in levels of "bad" LDL
cholesterol and lowering levels of "good" HDL
cholesterol.
158Saturated Unsaturated Fatty Acids
159Triglycerides
- Are made up of a glycerol molecule with three
fatty acid molecules attached to it. - Glycerol contains 3 carbons and 3 hydroxyl
groups. - It reacts with 3 fatty acids to form a
triglyceride or fat molecule. - The naturally occurring fatty acids always have
an even number of carbon atoms.
160Triglycerides
161Waxes
- Are composed of a long-chain fatty acid bonded to
a long-chain alcohol - They form protective coverings for plants and
animals (plant surface, animal ears).
162Summary of Lipids
- Monomer Fatty acid
- Functional group(s)
- Carboxyl
- Cholesterol Fused Rings
- Ester
- Polymers many depending on the type of lipid
- Phospholipid, Steroid, Triglycerides, Waxes
163Summary of Lipids
164Summary of Biochemistry