Title: What is the chemical basis of life?
1What is the chemical basis of life?
- What are some of the ideas central to the
chemistry of life? - (Key concepts of the chemical basis of life)
2Ideas central to the chem of life
- Based on covalent bonding
- Carbon is the backbone of biomolecules
- Simple building code
- Variation on common theme in extreme
- Only 4 fundamental types of biomolecules
- Enzymes make and break the covalent bonds in the
chemical reactions in the cell - Isomers and polymers
- Condensation and Hydrolysis
3Elements Essential to Life
- About 25 of the 92 natural occurring elements are
essential to life - CHON 96 liv mat
- CHONPS gt 99
4Famous ions in Biology
- Hydronium H3O and Hydroxide OH-
- Potassium K ions
- Sodium Na ions
- Calcium Ca2 ions
- Hydrogen H ions (protons)
5A continuum view of bonding
- Atoms complete their valence shell in a continuum
of - Nonpolar covalent with equal sharing of e-
- Examples HH O O
- Polar covalent, unequal sharing of e-
- Examples H2O NH3
- Ionic, with complete transfer of e-
- Examples NaCl Al2O3
6Weak Bonds are Bioly ImportantH bonds,
hydrophobic interactions
- Can form between different parts of a single
large molecule or between molecules - Help stabilize 3D shape of proteins Nucleic
Acids - Hold enzymes to substrates
- Function in chemical signaling
7Biological Building Codes
- Covalent Bond shared pair of electrons between 2
nonmetals - H, 1 unpaired e-
- O, 2 unpaired e-
- N, 3 unpaired e-
- C, 4 unpaired e-
8Versatility of Carbon
- 4 valence electrons
- Compatibility with many different els
- S, D, T bonds
- Makes large, complex molecules possible
- Strait chains
- Branched chains
- Rings
9- Polymer
- (poly many mer part)
- Large molecules consisting of many similar
subunits connected together - Monomer subunit or building block of polymer
10Macromolecules are Polymers
- Carbohydrates polymer of monosaccharides
- Lipids polymer of fatty acids glycerol
- Proteins polymer of amino acids
- Nucleic Acids polymer of nucleotides
11Polymers Molecular Diversity
- Unity in life Only about 40 or 50 common
monomers build macromolecules - Diversity in life New properties emerge when
these monomers are arranged in different ways
12Sucrose Synthesis
13Hydrolysis
14Making Breaking Polymersanimation
- Dehydration synthesis
- Link monomers
- Via removal of H2O
- 1 water per link (out)
- One monomer lose OH, other loses H
- Any assembling of molecules in cells
- Hydrolysis
- Disassemble polymers
- Via addition of H2O
- 1 water per link (in)
- One monomer gains OH, other gains H
- Any disassembly of molecules in cells
15Carbohydrates (sugars)
- Classified based on of simple sugars
- C H O in 121 ratio
- Major nutrients for cells ie glucose
- Produced by photosynthetic organisms
- Store energy in chemical bonds
- C skeletons raw materials for other organic
compounds
16Carbohydrates-disaccharides
- Disacch. Monomers
- Maltose glu glu
- Lactose glu galac
- Sucrose glu fru
17Carbohydrates Polysaccharides
- 2 Important biological functions
- Energy storage (starch, glycogen)
- Structural support (cellulose, chitin)
18Storage Polysaccharides
- Starch glucose polymer, for energy storage in
plants - Helical glucose polymer
- Most animals have enzymes to hydrolyze it
- Major sources in
- Human diet are potatoes
- And grains
19Storage Polysaccharides
- Glycogen glucose polymer, for energy storage in
animals - Branched molec.
- Stored in muscle
- and liver of humans
- and other vertebrates
20Structural Polysaccharides
- Cellulose linear unbranched polymer
- Major structural component of plant cell walls
- Differs from starch in its monomer linkage
- Cannot be digested by most organisms
21Structural Polysaccharides
- Chitin structural polysacch. a polymer of an
amino sugar (natures plastic) - Forms exoskeleton of Arthropods
- Found as cell walls in fungi
22Lipids
- Diverse group of organic compounds that are
- insoluble in water
- Includes animal fats,
- plant oils, steroids,
- phospholipids
- Made of fatty acids
- and glycerol
23Fat
- Saturated
- All single bonds
- Solid at room temp
- Animal fats
- Unsaturated
- One or more double bonds between carbons
- Liquid at room temp
- Vegetable or plant oils
24Useful functions of fat
- Energy storage
- More compact fuel reserve than carbo.
- Cushions vital organs in mammals
- Insulates against heat loss
25Phospholipids
- Component of cell membranes (bilayer)
- 2 fatty acids phosphate group
- Amphipathic behavior in water
26Steroids
- Lipids w/ 4 fused carbon rings and various
functional groups - Cholesterol important as precurser to other
steroids and enhance membrane fluidity
27Proteins
- Complex polymers of amino acids
- Abundant make up 50 or more of dry wt
- Varied functions in cell structure, metabolism,
transport, signaling, movement, defense - Each has unique 3-D shape
- Made of only 20 different amino acids
28Amino Acid Structure
29Nucleic Acids
- Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA)
- Can replicate itself and be passed from one
generation of cells to the next - Genes are segments of DNA that code for protein
- Ribonucleic Acid (RNA)
- Functions as mediator between genotype and
phenotype - 3 functional forms carry out protein synthesis
30Nucleic Acids
31Nucleotides monomers of nucleic acids
- Pentose, a 5C sugar
- Nitrogen Base
- Phosphate