Title: Introduction to Lipids
1Introduction to Lipids
2What are Lipids ??
- Lipids are organic compounds which are related to
fatty acids - Lipids are insoluble in water soluble in
nonpolar solvents (fat solvents) such as alcohol,
ether, benzene, acetone, chloroform
3classification of lipids
Derived Lipids
Simple Lipids
Conjugated Lipids
- Phospholipids
- Galactolipids
- lipoproteins
Substances obtained by hydrolysis of lipids
Natural fats
waxes
4Simple lipidsNatural fats or (Triglycerides,
Triacylglycerols)
- They are esters of 3 fatty acids with the
tri-hydroxy alcohol glycerol - They include two types
- Solid at ordinary temperature FATs
- Liquid at ordinary temperature OILs
- Occurrence of neutral fat
- 1- in plants e.g. oils of cotton seed, olive,
lin seed , palm oil, coconut .etc - 2- in animals e.g. butter, lard etc
- 3- in marin oils e.g. oils of sea animals as
cod liver
5Chemistry of Triacylglycerols
- Triacylglycerols are esters resulting from the
reaction of - fatty acids glycerol
- CH2- OH R1-COOH
CH2-O-C-R1 - I
-3 H2O I - CH2 OH R2-COOH
CH -O- C - R2 - I
I - CH2 OH R3-COOH
CH-O- C- R3 - GLYCEROL 3 molecules of fatty acids
Triacylglycerol
O
O
O
6Chemistry of Fatty Acids
- They are monocarboxylic acids (R- COOH) with
-
- 1- Hydrocarbon chain (R) hydrophobic
- 2- Carboxyl group (COOH ) that ionize to
COO- (hydrophilic) -
- so,
- Fatty acid is an amphipathic molecule
- i.e. it have both hydrophilic hydrophobic
regions on the same molecule
7Classification of Fatty Acids in Nature
(according to saturation)
- 1- Saturated Fatty Acids
-
- contain even number of carbon atoms with no
double bonds -
- general formula Cn H2n1 COOH
-
- important examples
- Butyric acid (4C) CH3 - CH2 - CH2
- COOH 40 - Palmitic acid (16 C) CH3 - (CH2)14
COOH 160 - Stearic acid (18C) CH3 - (CH2)16 -
COOH 180 -
8Classification of Fatty Acids according to
saturation (cont.)
- 2-
- 2- Unsaturated Fatty Acids
- They contain even number of carbon atoms
- and one or more double bonds
- The most important
- Oleic acid (18C) contains one double bond
between C9 C10 in the chain -
CH3-(CH2)7-CHCH-(CH2)7-COOH -
181(9) - Linoleic acid (18 C) contains two double
bonds between C9 C10 and C12 C13 -
CH3-(CH2)4-CHCH-CH2-CHCH-(CH2)7-COOH
-
182(9,12) - Linolenic acid (18 C) contains three double
bonds between C9-10 , C12-13 C15-16 -
CH3-CH2-CHCH-CH2-CHCH-CH2-CHCH-(
CH2)7-COOH
9Essential Fatty Acids
- Essential fatty acids
- can NOT be synthesized in human body.
- So, MUST be supplied with food.
- Two fatty acids are dietary essential in humans
- Linoleic acid
- precursor of arachidonic acid
- which is important for prostaglandin synthesis
- a-Linolenic acid
- precursor for other w3 (omega3) fatty acids
- which are important for growth and development
10Transport of Fatty Acids in Blood
- - Fatty acids are highly water-insoluble
- - So, a fatty acid must be transported in blood
in with a protein - 1- Fatty Acid Esters
- gt 90 of blood fatty acids are esters
- i.e. included in triacylglycerol, in
cholesterol esters in phospholipids - that are transported in blood with
lipoprotein particles - 2- Free Fatty Acids (Unesterified)
- lt 10 of blood fatty acids are free
(unesterified) - i.e. not bound to any other molecule
- They are transported in blood with albumin.
11Phospholipids
- PL are conjugated lipids
- PL are ionic polar structure formed of an
alcohol that is attached by bridge to a back bone
either diacylglycerol or sphinogosine
Long hydrophobic Tail
A
hydrophilic head
12Phospholipids Glycolipids
13Cholesterol
14Cholesterol (cont.)
- It is the major sterol in animal tissues
-
- It is available in cells of the body and in blood
-
- Most plasma cholesterol is in esterified form
(bound with a fatty acid attached to C-3). - Free cholesterol esterified cholesterol in
blood is transported with a protein in
liopoproteins - Blood cholesterol level is normally 150-250 mg/dl
- High cholesterol levels in blood
(HYPERCHOLESTEROLEMIA) may lead to
ATHEROSCLEROSIS (i.e. deposition of cholesterol
on inner walls of blood vessels) -
15Cholesterol (cont.)
- Sources of cholesterol
- 1- Diet in animal sources
- 2- Synthesis by liver cells others
- Excretion of cholesterol
- cholesterol is excreted in bile
- BUT NOT excreted in urine
16Functions of Cholesterol
-
- 1- Cholesterol enters in the structure of cell
membrane, brain, liver other - organs
- 2- Cholesterol is the precursor for vitamin
D3 - 3- Cholesterol is the precursor of steroid
hormones -
- 4- Cholesterol is the source of bile acids
salts which are secreted with - the bile juice essential for the
digestion of lipids in the intestine -
-
17Plasma Lipoproteins
- Plasma lipoproteins are spherical
macromolecular complexes of - lipids and proteins (apoproteins,
apolipoproteins) -
- They include
- chylomicrons,
- very low density lipoproteins (VLDL),
- low density lipoproteins (LDL)
- high density lipoproteins (HDL)
-
- They differ in lipid protein composition, in
size, density site of origin - lipoproteins function to keep their component
lipids soluble to - transport them in plasma
18Structure of Plasma Lipoproteins
- lipoproteins are composed of lipids
proteins - 1 - a neutral lipid core of hydrophobic
lipid - (containing triacylglycerol and
cholesterol esters) -
- 2 - surrounded by a shell of amphipathic
lipids - (phospholipids nonesterified
cholesterol) - 3 - Then, the outermost layer is amphipathic
apolipoprotein (protein) -
- Amphipathic compounds are oriented so that their
polar portions are exposed on the surface of the
lipoprotein thus making the particle soluble in
aqueous solution - The triacylglycerol and cholesterol carried by
the lipoproteins are obtained either from the
diet (exogenous source) or from de novo synthesis
(endogenous source)
19Structure of Plasma Lipoproteins
20Size Density of Plasma Lipoprotein Particles
- 1- Chylomicrons
- lowest in density largest size of all
lipoproteins - contains the highest percentage of lipid the
lowest percentage of protein -
- 2- VLDLs LDLs
- are denser, having higher ratios of protein to
lipid than chylomicrons - 3- HDL
- the densest as it contains the highest level of
protein to lipid in all lipoproteind - Plasma lipoproteins can be separated
- - on the basis of their electrophoretic
mobility (lipoprotein electrophoresis) -
21Plasma Lipoprotein Electrophoresis
22Functions of plasma lipoproteins
- Chylomicrons
- They carry dietary lipids (TG
Cholesterol) fat soluble vitamins to blood. - Very low density lipoproteins (VLDL)
- is to carry lipid from the liver to
tissues. - Low density lipoproteins (LDL)
- transfers cholesterol from blood to
tissues (originated from VLDL in blood). - High density lipoproteins (HDL)
- HDL takes cholesterol from peripheral
tissues and transfers it to liver. -
-