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Chapter 3

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Chapter 3. Molecules of Life. Organic compounds. Always contain carbon Always have covalent bonds (not ionic) Usually associated with large numbers of atoms Commonly associated with living things. carbon. Can covalently bond with as many as 4 other atoms Can form many shapes. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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CHAPTER 3Molecules of Life

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ORGANIC COMPOUNDS Always contain carbon Always have covalent bonds (not ionic) Usually associated with large numbers

of atoms Commonly associated with living things

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CARBON Can covalently bond with as many as 4

other atoms Can form many shapes

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CARBON COMPOUNDS

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CARBON COMPOUNDS Carbohydrates Lipids Proteins Nucleic Acids

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BUILDING COMPOUNDS Monomer—individual building unit Polymer—many units covalently bonded

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BUILDING COMPOUNDS Functional groups—atoms or clusters of

atoms covalently bonded to organic compounds that affect the compound’s structure and fuction

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REACTION CATEGORIES Mediated by enzymes (special proteins)

Fuctional-group transfer Electron transfer Rearrangement Condensation Cleavage

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CONDENSATION Split OH- from one molecule Split H+ from another molecule Bonds form at exposed sites Water is byproduct

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HYDROLYSIS Reverse of condensation Split molecules Add OH- and H+ from water

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CARBOHYDRATES Monosaccharides

Single sugar unitSoluble in waterSweet tasteHydroxyl group (OH-)Used to assemble larger carbohydrates

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CARBOHYDRATES Oligosaccharide

Short chain of two or more sugar monomersDisaccharide—2 units, simplest

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CARBOHYDRATES Polysaccharide—chain of hundreds or

thousands of monomers “Complex” carbohydrates

Starch—plant energy sourceCellulose—plant cell wallGlycogen—animal muscle energyChitin—structural component of insects

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LIPIDS Greasy or oily compounds Non-polar, hydrophobic Energy storage, membrane structure,

coatings

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LIPIDS Fatty acids—long chain of mostly C and

H with a carboxyl group (-COOH) at the end

Saturated—single Carbon bonds Unsaturated—double Carbon bonds

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LIPIDS Fat—one or more fatty acids attached to

glycerol Twice the energy of carbohydrates Insulation

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LIPIDS Phospolipid

2 Fatty Acids + Phosphate Group + GlycerolMain structural material of membranes

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LIPIDS Sterols

4 carbon rings, no fatty acid tailsCholesterol, testosterone, estrogen

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LIPIDS Waxes

Long-chain fatty acids + alcohols or carbon rings

Coatings for plant parts or animal coverings

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PROTEINS Most diverse of all biological molecules Enzymes Cell movement Storage & transport Hormones Antibodies Structure

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PROTEINS Amino acid—monomer unit Three groups covalently bonded to

central C

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PROTEINS Polypeptides—polymer of proteins

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PROTEINS Structure

PrimarySecondaryTertiaryQuaternary

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PROTEINS Why is structure important? Change in shape is VERY important to

function

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NUCLEIC ACIDS Nucleotide—monomer unit

5-carbon sugar (ribose or deoxyribose)Nitrogen basePhosphate group

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NUCLEIC ACID DNA—double-stranded helix, carries

hereditary information RNA—single-stranded helix, translates

code to build proteins ATP—single nucleotide, releases energy

for cells to work

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DNA & RNA Large number of hydrogen bonds Nitrogen bases: Adenine, Cytosine,

Guanine, Thymine (Urasil)


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