Title: Chemical Level of Organization Chapter 2
1Chemical Level of OrganizationChapter 2
- Atoms, Molecules and Bonds
2What Are Atoms?
- Smallest particles that retain properties of an
element, smallest particle of a substance - Made up of subatomic particles
- Protons ()
- Electrons (-)
- Neutrons (0) no charge)
3Elements
- Fundamental forms of matter
- Cant be broken apart by normal means
- 92 occur naturally on Earth
4Most Common Elements in Living Organisms
- Oxygen
- Hydrogen
- Carbon
- Nitrogen
- P and S
5Representing the Hydrogen Atom
Shell model
Ball model
Electron density cloud
6Atomic Number and Mass
- Number of protons
- All atoms of an element have the same atomic
number - Mass of P on N
- 1.0079 ----- Atomic Mass
- H element symbol
- 1 --- Atomic number
7Mass Number
-
- Number of protons
-
- Number of neutrons
- Isotopes vary in mass number
- of protons of electrons
8Isotopes
- Atoms of an element with different numbers of
neutrons (different mass numbers) - Carbon 12 has 6 protons, 6 neutrons
- Carbon 14 has 6 protons, 8 neutrons
9What Determines whether Atoms Will Interact?
- The number and arrangement of their electrons
10Electrons
- Carry a negative charge
- Repel one another
- Are attracted to protons in the nucleus
- Move in orbitals - volumes of space that surround
the nucleus
11Shell Model
- First shell
- Lowest energy
- Holds 1 orbital with up to 2 electrons
- Second shell
- 4 orbitals hold up to 8 electrons
12Chemical Bonds, Molecules, Compounds
- Bond is union between electron structures of
atoms - Atoms bond to form molecules
- Molecules may contain atoms of only one element -
O2 - Molecules of compounds contain more than one
element - H2O - Compound /- atoms
13Important Bonds in Biological Molecules
- Ionic Bonds
- Covalent Bonds
- Hydrogen Bonds
14Ionic Bonding
- One atom loses electrons, becomes positively
charged ion - Another atom gains these electrons, becomes
negatively charged ion - Charge difference attracts the two ions to each
other
15Formation of NaCl
- Sodium atom (Na)
- Outer shell has one electron
- Chlorine atom (Cl)
- Outer shell has seven electrons
- Na transfers electron to Cl forming Na and Cl-
- Ions remain together as NaCl
16Covalent Bonding
- Atoms share a pair or pairs of electrons to fill
outermost shell
- Single covalent bond
- Double covalent bond
- Triple covalent bond
17Polar Covalent Bonds
- Number of protons in nuclei of participating
atoms is not equal - Electrons spend more time near nucleus with most
protons - Water - Electrons more attracted to O nucleus
than to H nuclei
18Hydrogen Bonding
- Molecule held together by polar covalent bonds
has no net charge - However, atoms of the molecule carry different
charges - Atom in one polar covalent molecule can be
attracted to oppositely charged atom in another
such molecule
19hydrogen bond
Examples of Hydrogen Bonds
water molecule
ammonia molecule
20Water Is a Polar Covalent Molecule
- Molecule has no net charge
- Oxygen end has a slight negative charge
- Hydrogen end has a slight positive charge
O
H
H
21Organic CompoundsHydrogen and other elements
covalently bonded to carbon
- The Biomolecules
- Carbohydrates
- Lipids
- Proteins
- Nucleic Acids
22Carbohydrates
- Monosaccharides
- (simple sugars)
- Oligosaccharides
- (short-chain carbohydrates)
- Polysaccharides
- (complex carbohydrates)
23Monosaccharides
- Simplest carbohydrates
- Most are sweet tasting, water soluble
- Most have 5- or 6-carbon backbone
- Glucose (6 C) Fructose (6 C)
- Ribose (5 C) Deoxyribose (5 C)
24Polysaccharides
- Straight or branched chains of many sugar
monomers - Most common are composed entirely of glucose
- Cellulose
- Starch (such as amylose)
- Glycogen
25Glycogen
- Sugar storage form in animals
- Large stores in muscle and liver cells
- When blood sugar decreases, liver cells degrade
glycogen, release glucose
26Lipids
- Most include fatty acids
- Fats
- Phospholipids
- Waxes
- Sterols and their derivatives have no fatty acids
- Tend to be insoluble in water
27Fats
- Fatty acid(s) attached to glycerol
- Triglycerides are most common
- Carboxyl group (-COOH) at one end
- Carbon backbone (up to 36 C atoms)
- Saturated - Single bonds between carbons
- Unsaturated - One or more double bonds
28Sterols and Derivatives
- No fatty acids
- Rigid backbone of four fused-together carbon
rings - Cholesterol - most common type in animals
29Properties of Amino Acids
- Determined by the R group
- Amino acids may be
- Non-polar
- Uncharged, polar
- Positively charged, polar
- Negatively charged, polar
30Protein Synthesis
- Protein is a chain of amino acids linked by
peptide bonds - Peptide bond
- Type of covalent bond
- Links amino group of one amino acid with carboxyl
group of next - Forms through condensation reaction
31Protein Shapes
- Fibrous proteins
- Polypeptide chains arranged as strands or sheets
- Globular proteins
- Polypeptide chains folded into compact, rounded
shapes
32Primary Structure Protein Shape
- Primary structure influences shape in two main
ways - Allows hydrogen bonds to form between different
amino acids along length of chain - Puts R groups in positions that allow them to
interact
33Secondary Structure
- Hydrogen bonds form between different parts of
polypeptide chain - These bonds give rise to coiled or extended
pattern - Helix or pleated sheet
34Tertiary Structure
- Folding as a result of interactions between R
groups
35Quaternary Structure Some proteins are made up
of more than one polypeptide chain
36Polypeptides with Attached Organic Compounds
- Lipoproteins
- Proteins combined with cholesterol,
triglycerides, phospholipids - Glycoproteins
- Proteins combined with oligosaccharides
37Nucleotide Structure
- Sugar
- Ribose or deoxyribose
- At least one phosphate group
- Base
- Nitrogen-containing
- Single or double ring structure
38- Nucleic Acids
- Composed of nucleotides
- Single- or double-stranded
- Sugar-phosphate backbone
39DNA
- Double-stranded
- Consists of four types of nucleotides
- A bound to T
- C bound to G
40RNA
- Usually single strands
- Four types of nucleotides
- Unlike DNA, contains the base uracil in place of
thymine - Three types are key players in protein synthesis