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ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

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Page 1: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.
Page 2: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Chemistry C H2O Macromolecules Enzymes

10 10 10 10 10

20 20 20 20 20

30 30 30 30 30

40 40 40 40 40

50 50 50 50 50

Page 3: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 1 - 10

Atoms are made of 3 subatomic particles, which particle determines the element?

Page 4: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 1 – 10

Protons!Even in the various isotopes (elements with different

numbers of neutrons), any atoms with the same number of protons will be the same periodic

element.

Ex. Carbon-12, Carbon-13, Carbon-14The 12, 13, and 14 indicate the atomic mass, which changes, but they

have the same atomic number, 6, which represents carbon’s number of protons.

Page 5: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 1 - 20

What type of bond shares electrons to create a very strong bond (they typically keep organic molecules together)?

Page 6: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 1 – 20

Covalent Bonds

Page 7: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 1 - 30

These bonds are formed when electrons are donated to another atom, causing a positively charged atom and a negatively charged atom.

Page 8: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 1 – 30

Ionic BondsThis donation of electrons is what

causes very reactive elements such as chlorine (Cl) and sodium (Na) to stabilize and become inert substances (table salt!).

Page 9: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 1 - 40

Which side of this equation represents the reactants?

Page 10: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 1 – 40

The left side of this equation represents the reactants. The right side is the product-what you made (which is why we call it a product, you produced it, right?).

Page 11: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 1 - 50 How many of each

subatomic particle is present in this element?

Page 12: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 1 – 50

Protons- 13, same as atomic number

Neutrons- 14, Atomic mass (round to nearest whole number) minus atomic number.

Electrons- 13, since there is no charge on the element… but what if it was Al2+ ?

Page 13: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 2 - 10

What type of chemistry

includes most molecules that have

carbon atoms?

Page 14: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 2 – 10

Organic ChemistryThere are a few exceptions… CO2, CO, CN- are

largely considered inorganic. Not all molecules with carbon are organic, but all organic molecules have carbon.

Think of it another way…not all rectangles are squares are they? But all squares are rectangles!

Page 15: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 2 - 20

How many unpaired electrons does carbon have on its outer (valance) shell?

Page 16: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 2 – 20

Four! This allows a single carbon to bind to many different atoms. It acts as an intersection; capable of giving structure to our bodies and holding energy (in bonds). Carbon also has the ability to form single, double, or triple covalent bonds!

Page 17: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 2 - 30

Identify the functional group!

Page 18: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 2 – 30

HydroxylThese functional groups typically create an

alcohol. Below, you see isopropyl alcohol (rubbing alcohol).

Page 19: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 2 - 40

Identify these two functional groups that are in every protein monomer!

Page 20: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 2 – 40

The left side, NH2, is an amine group.The right side, COOH, is a carboxyl group (which

makes a carboxylic acid).Together they make an amino acid, the

monomer of a protein!

Page 21: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 2 - 50

There are two types of carbonyl functional groups. Name each of these!

Page 22: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 2 – 50

The left is a Ketone. (remember, the letter ‘k’ is in the middle of the alphabet, as the carbonyl group is in this carbon chain)

The right is an Aldehyde. (remember, the letter ‘a’ is at one end of the alphabet, as the carbonyl group is at one end of this carbon chain)

Page 23: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 3 - 10

Water is attracted to other water molecules

due to its polarity. What is this property called?

Page 24: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 3 – 10

Cohesion

Page 25: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 3 - 20

Water is also attracted to other polar

molecules. This property is

called what?

Page 26: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 3 – 20

Adhesion

Page 27: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 3 - 30

Adhesion, cohesion, surface tension, the

ability to absorb a large amount of energy, ice floating…all of these

fantastic properties of water are due to what?

Page 28: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 3 – 30

Hydrogen bonding

Page 29: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 3 - 40

1.) A substance with a pOH of 6 is a what?

2.) A subatance with a pH of 14 is a what?

Page 30: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 3 – 40

Both are bases!

pH: 0-7 acid, 7-14 base, true 7 being neutral

pOH: 0-7 base, 7-14 acid, true 7 being neutral

Page 31: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 3 - 50

What is polarity, and what causes it in water molecules?

Page 32: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 3 – 50 Polarity is having two ends with different charges. This

is caused by the covalent bonds between the hydrogen atoms and the oxygen atom in water.

Oxygen has many more protons (8+) than hydrogen (1+). This causes the electrons (-) to be pulled away from hydrogen (opposites attract), creating a positive side where the hydrogen atoms are. The other side is more negative, having more electrons.

Page 33: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 4 - 10

Proteins (a.k.a. polypeptides) are a polymer made of what monomer?

Page 34: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 4 – 10

Amino acids. There are four of them connected together on the example below!

Page 35: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 4 - 20

When macromolecules monomers are put together they give off H2O and make a bigger molecule… what process is this known as?

Double the points if you as can name the phase of metabolism that occured!

Page 36: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 4 – 20

Dehydration Synthesis…. Process: anabolism.

Water (OH and H) was taken from the two original molecules, which is where the dehydration part comes from.

The two pieces joined to make one, which is known as synthesis (putting stuff together).

Page 37: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 4 - 30

ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is a major energy carrier of our body. In order to release the energy, water is added to break off the third phosphate. What reaction is this known as?

Page 38: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 4 – 30

Hydrolysis…

Hydro refers to the presence of water.Lysis refers to the breakdown something.

Water is added to break the one molecule down into two molecules!

Page 39: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 4 - 40

What macromolecule is seen below and how do you know?

Page 40: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 4 – 40

These are carbohydrates, specifically, monosaccharides.

You should be able to tell because they have equal amounts of carbon and oxygen, with twice as many hydrogens (or maybe you just noticed they ended in –ose)

Page 41: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 4 - 50

Name the four macromolecules and one function of each.

Page 42: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 4 – 50

Proteins- Bodily functions; these are the work structures in the body

Carbohydrates- immediate source of energy, cell communication

Lipids- stored energy source, cell membrane, insulation

Nucleic Acid- storage of genetic information, genetic information transfer, energy transfer (ATP)

Page 43: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 5 - 10

Enzymes are proteins that speed up reactions within our bodies, among other things, if conditions are optimal. What happens to the structure of the protein if it is denatured?

Page 44: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 5 – 10

It would unfold in non-optimal (optimal meaning best) environments because the hydrogen bonds would be broken.

Remember…Structure = function in chemistry. To denature something means to take it away from what it would do naturally. Proteins naturally fold. Denaturing a protein would cause it to unfold and be unable to do its job! This can be caused by non-optimal pH, heat, and other conditions!

Page 45: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 5 - 20

Different enzymes affect different molecules…the thing being affected by entering the active site is called what?

????

Page 46: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 5 – 20

The substrate.

Page 47: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 5 - 30

Which phase of metabolism is responsible for breaking molecules down in order to release energy?

Page 48: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 5 – 30

Catabolism

Page 49: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 5 - 40

Enzyme names typically end in what suffix?

Page 50: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 5 – 40

-aseCan you think of what these common biological

enzymes might do?ProteaseHelicaseTranscriptaseLigasePolymerase

Page 51: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Question 5 - 50What are the two types of enzyme

inhibition, and how do they work?

Page 52: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Answer 5 – 50

Competitive inhibition- causes the enzyme to be ineffective by blocking the active site.

Noncompetitive inhibition-Causes the enzyme to be

ineffective by changing the shape of the active site.

Page 53: ChemistryCH2OH2O Macromolecules Enzymes 10 20 30 40 50.

Final Jeopardy

• Make your wager!


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