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Macromolecules

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Macromolecules. The building blocks of life…. Macromolecules. Cells are composed of several types of biological macromolecules. These function as energy-storage molecules, structural components, and in information storage, and are primarily composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Macromolecules The building blocks of life…
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Page 1: Macromolecules

Macromolecules

The building blocks of life…

Page 2: Macromolecules

Macromolecules

Cells are composed of several types of biological macromolecules.

These function as energy-storage molecules, structural components, and in information storage, and are primarily composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen.

Page 3: Macromolecules

Carbohydrates

carbon, hydrogen & oxygen in a 1:2:1 ratio exist as monosaccharides, disaccharides

and polysaccharides among the most abundant molecules on

Earth

Page 4: Macromolecules

Monosaccharides

“single sugars” general formula is

(CH2O)n

glucose (top) and ribose (bottom) are monosaccharides

O

OH

HH

H

OH

OH

H OH

H

OH

O H

OHH

OH

H

OH

H

OH

Page 5: Macromolecules

Disaccharides

“double sugars” formed by dehydration synthesis from two

monosaccharides sucrose, maltose, and lactose are all

disaccharides

Page 6: Macromolecules

Synthesis of MaltoseO

OH

HH

H

OH

OH

H OH

H

OH

O

OH

HH

H

OH

OH

H OH

H

OH

O

OH

HH

H

OH

H OH

H

OH

O

O

HH

H

OH

OH

H OH

H

OH

-glucose - glucose

maltose

Page 7: Macromolecules

Polysaccharides

straight or branched chains of monosaccharides connected by glycosidic linkages

storage (e.g. starch, glycogen) or structural (e.g. cellulose, chitin)

Page 8: Macromolecules

Polysaccharide Structure

Page 9: Macromolecules

Proteins

proteins are chains of amino acids connected by peptide linkages

order of amino acids for a particular protein is determined by the gene which codes for it

Page 10: Macromolecules

Amino Acid Structure

all amino acids have the same basic structure

“R” group is different for each amino acid

NH2

H

R

O

OH

carboxyl group

amino group

Page 11: Macromolecules

Peptide Linkages

O

NH2

SH

N

O

OHH

O

NH2

SH OH

O

NH2OH

peptide linkage

cysteine glycine

Page 12: Macromolecules

Levels of Protein Structure

Primary the specific sequence

of amino acids coded by DNA

Page 13: Macromolecules

Secondary the folding or coiling

of the amino acid chain

caused by interactions between “R” groups

-Helix -Pleated Sheet

Page 14: Macromolecules

Tertiary the unique three-

dimensional shape of the protein

enzymes are globular proteins

collagen is a fibrous protein

Page 15: Macromolecules

Quaternary interactions between

separate polypeptide chains, or “subunits”

hemoglobin is composed of four subunits

Page 16: Macromolecules

Lipids lipids are a group of hydrophobic

molecules “neutral fats” are uncharged lipids

composed of glycerol and fatty acids fats are solid at room temperature oils are liquid at room temperature steroids and phospholipids are amphiphilic

Page 17: Macromolecules

Steroid Structure

steroids all have the same basic structure of four fused hydrocarbon rings

cholesterol is used to synthesize many other steroids in the body

CH3

OH

CH3

CH3

CH3

CH3

cholesterol

Page 18: Macromolecules

Phospholipid Structure

glycerol backbone has two fatty acids and one charged inorganic phosphate group attached

primary component of cell membranes

Page 19: Macromolecules

Triglycerides triglycerides are neutral fats glycerol is the “backbone” molecule fatty acids attach to glycerol by ester

linkages saturated fatty acids have no double

bonds between carbons unsaturated fatty acids have at least one

double bond between carbons

Page 20: Macromolecules

Triglyceride Synthesis

OH

OH

OH

CH3

O

OH

CH3

O

OH

CH3

O

OH

O

O

O

O

O

O

CH3

CH3

CH3

glycerol3 fatty acids

ester linkage

triglyceride

Page 21: Macromolecules

Nucleic Acids

Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) and Ribonucleic Acid (RNA)

composed of nitrogen-containing “bases” attached to a backbone of alternating pentose sugars and inorganic phosphate

function in information storage (DNA) and transfer (RNA)

Page 22: Macromolecules

“Bases” of DNA & RNAPurines Pyrimidines

adenine thymine

guanine cytosine

uracil

N

NN

NH

NH2

N

NHN

NH

NH2

O

NH

NHCH3

O

O

NH

N

NH2

O

NH

NH

O

O

Page 23: Macromolecules

DNA deoxyribose sugar adenine, guanine, cytosine, thymine bases arranged in a double helix

Page 24: Macromolecules

RNA ribose sugar adenine, guanine, cytosine, uracil bases single-stranded

Page 25: Macromolecules

References MIT Biology Hypertextbook(1996)

http://esg-www.mit.edu:8001/esgbio/lm/sugars/sugars.html (3/9/2001)

Farabee, M.J., (2001) An Online Biology Book. Chemistry 2: Water and Organic Molecules http://gened.emc.maricopa.edu/bio/bio181/BIOBK/BioBookCHEM2.html (3/9/2002)

A.C.D. Labs (2002) ChemSketch (Freeware), available for download at http://www.acdlabs.com/. Used for molecular structure diagrams.


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