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The Structure and Function of Macromolecules

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Title: The Structure and Function of Macromolecules


1
Chapter 5
  • The Structure and Function of Macromolecules

2
The Molecules of Life
  • Overview
  • Another level in the hierarchy of biological
    organization is reached when small organic
    molecules are joined together
  • Atom ---gt molecule ---? compound

3
Macromolecules
  • Are large molecules composed of smaller molecules
  • Are complex in their structures

4
Macromolecules
  • Most macromolecules are polymers, built from
    monomers
  • Four classes of lifes organic molecules are
    polymers
  • Carbohydrates
  • Proteins
  • Nucleic acids
  • Lipids

5
  • A polymer
  • Is a long molecule consisting of many similar
    building blocks called monomers
  • Specific monomers make up each macromolecule
  • E.g. amino acids are the monomers for proteins

6
The Synthesis and Breakdown of Polymers
  • Monomers form larger molecules by condensation
    reactions called dehydration synthesis

7
The Synthesis and Breakdown of Polymers
  • Polymers can disassemble by
  • Hydrolysis (addition of water molecules)

8
  • Although organisms share the same limited number
    of monomer types, each organism is unique based
    on the arrangement of monomers into polymers
  • An immense variety of polymers can be built from
    a small set of monomers

9
Carbohydrates
  • Serve as fuel and building material
  • Include both sugars and their polymers (starch,
    cellulose, etc.)

10
Sugars
  • Monosaccharides
  • Are the simplest sugars
  • Contain a carbonyl group and a hydroxyl group.
  • Can be used for fuel
  • Can be converted into other organic molecules
  • Can be combined into polymers

11
  • Examples of monosaccharides

12
  • Monosaccharides
  • May be linear
  • Can form rings

13
  • Disaccharides
  • Consist of two monosaccharides
  • Are joined by a glycosidic linkage

14
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15
Polysaccharides
  • Polysaccharides
  • Are polymers of sugars
  • Serve many roles in organisms
  • Source of energy

16
Storage Polysaccharides
  • Starch
  • Is a polymer consisting entirely of aglucose
    monomers
  • Is the major storage form of glucose in plants

17
  • Glycogen
  • Consists of glucose monomers
  • Is the major storage form of glucose in animals

18
Structural Polysaccharides
  • Cellulose
  • Is a polymer of glucose
  • Found in the cell walls of plant cells.
  • Build up with ßglucose monomers.

19
  • Has different glycosidic linkages than starch

20
  • Is a major component of the tough walls that
    enclose plant cells

21
  • Cellulose is difficult to digest
  • Cows have microbes in their stomachs to
    facilitate this process

22
  • Chitin, another important structural
    polysaccharide
  • Is found in the exoskeleton of arthropods
  • Can be used as surgical thread

23
Lipids
  • Lipids are a diverse group of hydrophobic
    molecules
  • Lipids
  • Are the one class of large biological molecules
    that do not consist of polymers
  • Share the common trait of being hydrophobic

24
Fats
  • Are constructed from two types of smaller
    molecules, a single glycerol and usually three
    fatty acids
  • Vary in the length and number and locations of
    double bonds they contain
  • Store energy, cushion organs and insulate.

25
  • Saturated fatty acids (animal fat)
  • Have the maximum number of hydrogen atoms
    possible
  • Have no double bonds
  • Solid at room temperature

26
  • Unsaturated fatty acids (fish, plant fat)
  • Have one or more double bonds
  • Liquid at room temperature

27
  • Phospholipids
  • Have only two fatty acids
  • Have a phosphate group instead of a third fatty
    acid

28
  • Phospholipid structure
  • Consists of a hydrophilic head and hydrophobic
    tails

29
  • The structure of phospholipids
  • Results in a bilayer arrangement found in cell
    membranes

30
Steroids
  • Steroids
  • Are lipids characterized by a carbon skeleton
    consisting of four fused rings
  • Differ in functional groups attached to rings

31
  • One steroid, cholesterol
  • Is found in cell membranes
  • Is a precursor for some hormones

32
Proteins
  • Proteins have many structures, resulting in a
    wide range of functions
  • Proteins do most of the work in cells and act as
    enzymes
  • Proteins are made of monomers called amino acids

33
  • An overview of protein functions

34
  • Enzymes
  • Are a type of protein that acts as a catalyst,
    speeding up chemical reactions

35
Polypeptides
  • Polypeptides
  • Are polymers (chains) of amino acids
  • A protein
  • Consists of one or more polypeptides

36
  • Amino acids
  • Are organic molecules possessing both carboxyl
    and amino groups
  • Differ in their properties due to differing side
    chains, called R groups

37
Twenty Amino Acids
  • 20 different amino acids make up proteins

38
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39
Amino Acid Polymers
  • Amino acids
  • Are linked by peptide bonds

40
Protein Conformation and Function
  • A proteins specific conformation (shape)
    determines how it functions

41
Four Levels of Protein Structure
  • Primary structure
  • Is the unique sequence of amino acids in a
    polypeptide

42
  • Secondary structure
  • Is the folding or coiling of the polypeptide into
    a repeating configuration
  • Includes the ? helix and the ? pleated sheet

43
  • Tertiary structure
  • Is the overall three-dimensional shape of a
    polypeptide
  • Results from interactions between amino acids and
    R groups

44
  • Quaternary structure
  • Is the overall protein structure that results
    from the aggregation of two or more polypeptide
    subunits

45
Review of Protein Structure
46
Sickle-Cell Disease A Simple Change in Primary
Structure
  • Sickle-cell disease
  • Results from a single amino acid substitution in
    the protein hemoglobin

47
Fibers of abnormalhemoglobin deform cell into
sickle shape.
48
What Determines Protein Conformation?
  • Protein conformation Depends on the physical and
    chemical conditions of the proteins environment
  • Temperature, pH, etc. affect protein structure

49
Denaturation is when a protein unravels and loses
its native conformation(shape)
50
The Protein-Folding Problem
  • Most proteins
  • Probably go through several intermediate states
    on their way to a stable conformation
  • Denaturated proteins no longer work in their
    unfolded condition
  • Proteins may be denaturated by extreme changes in
    pH or temperature

51
  • Chaperonins
  • Are protein molecules that assist in the proper
    folding of other proteins

52
  • X-ray crystallography
  • Is used to determine a proteins
    three-dimensional structure

Figure 5.24
53
Nucleic Acids
  • Nucleic acids store and transmit hereditary
    information
  • Genes
  • Are the units of inheritance
  • Program the amino acid sequence of polypeptides
  • Are made of nucleotide sequences on DNA

54
The Roles of Nucleic Acids
  • There are two types of nucleic acids
  • Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
  • Ribonucleic acid (RNA)

55
Deoxyribonucleic Acid
  • DNA
  • Stores information for the synthesis of specific
    proteins
  • Found in the nucleus of cells

56
DNA Functions
  • Directs RNA synthesis (transcription)
  • Directs protein synthesis through RNA
    (translation)

57
The Structure of Nucleic Acids
  • Nucleic acids
  • Exist as polymers called polynucleotides

(a) Polynucleotide, or nucleic acid
58
  • Each polynucleotide
  • Consists of monomers called nucleotides
  • Sugar phosphate nitrogen base

59
Nucleotide Monomers
  • Nucleotide monomers
  • Are made up of nucleosides (sugar base) and
    phosphate groups

Figure 5.26
(c) Nucleoside components
60
Nucleotide Polymers
  • Nucleotide polymers
  • Are made up of nucleotides linked by theOH
    group on the 3 carbon of one nucleotide and the
    phosphate on the 5 carbon on the next

61
Gene
  • The sequence of bases along a nucleotide polymer
  • Is unique for each gene

62
The DNA Double Helix
  • Cellular DNA molecules
  • Have two polynucleotides that spiral around an
    imaginary axis
  • Form a double helix

63
  • The DNA double helix
  • Consists of two antiparallel nucleotide strands

64
A,T,C,G
  • The nitrogenous bases in DNA
  • Form hydrogen bonds in a complementary fashion (A
    with T only, and C with G only)

65
DNA and Proteins as Tape Measures of Evolution
  • Molecular comparisons
  • Help biologists sort out the evolutionary
    connections among species

66
The Theme of Emergent Properties in the Chemistry
of Life A Review
  • Higher levels of organization
  • Result in the emergence of new properties
  • Organization
  • Is the key to the chemistry of life

67
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