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Biochemistry Notes

Date post: 01-Jan-2016
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Biochemistry Notes. Carbon. Organic molecules contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen . Carbon has 4 electrons available for bonding. Carbohydrates. The function is store and release energy Monosaccharid - one sugar examples : glucose C 6 H 12 O 6 , Fructose - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Biochemistry Notes
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Page 1: Biochemistry Notes

Biochemistry Notes

Page 2: Biochemistry Notes

Carbon• Organic

molecules contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen .

• Carbon has 4 electrons available for bonding.

Page 3: Biochemistry Notes

Carbohydrates• The function is store

and release energy

• Monosaccharid - one sugar examples:

glucose C6H12O6, Fructose

• Disaccharide - 2 monosaccharides

• example - sucrose - made of glucose and fructose

Page 4: Biochemistry Notes

Polysaccarides

• Contain many sugars• Examples -

– starch - stored energy in plants– glycogen - stored energy in animals– cellulose - makes cell wall of plants

Page 5: Biochemistry Notes

Polysaccharide

Page 6: Biochemistry Notes

Cellulose in a Plant

Page 7: Biochemistry Notes

Lipids• Monomers are fatty

acids • Ex.– fats, oils, &

phospholipids in cell membranes

• Non-polar - insoluble in water

• Structure– 3 fatty acids bonded to glycerol

Page 8: Biochemistry Notes

Lipid function

Long-term energy storage, insulation, cell structure (lipid bi-layer/cell membrane)

Page 9: Biochemistry Notes

Saturated Fatty Acid

• Solid at room temperature

• Bad for heart• Meat, butter• Contain lots of

hydrogen atoms and carbons are linked with single bonds in fatty acid chain

Page 10: Biochemistry Notes

Unsaturated Fatty Acid• Liquid at room

temperature• Good for your heart• Olive oil, nuts, fish.• Contain few

hydrogen atoms because carbon

atoms have double bonds in fatty acid

chain.

Page 11: Biochemistry Notes

ProteinsProteins provide

structure (skin, hair, cartilage, muscle) and are carry out all cell metabolism (enzymes)

The shape determines function

Monomer—amino acidsLinked together by

peptide bonds (type of covalent bond)

Page 12: Biochemistry Notes

Protein Structure• Primary – amino acid

sequence• Secondary - hydrogen

bonding between a.a.’s – causes twisting; 2-D shape

• Tertiary - additional folding – functional protein; 3-D shape

• Quaternary - 2 or more amino acid (polypeptide) chains– complex

Page 13: Biochemistry Notes

Primary Structure

Secondary Teritary

Quaternary

Page 14: Biochemistry Notes

Nucleic Acids• Macromolecule that stores and

transfers genetic material• Made up of nucleotides

– made up of a sugar, a phosphate group, and a nitrogen base

• DNA: deoxyribonucleic acid• RNA: ribonucleic acid

Page 15: Biochemistry Notes

Nucleotides


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