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Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic...

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Molecules of Life Chapter 3
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Page 1: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Molecules of Life

Chapter 3

Page 2: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Molecules

Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water

Organic compound Molecules of life

Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen (H) Carbon backbone

Page 3: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Carbon Chemistry

Cell is mostly water The rest of the cell consists mostly of carbon-based molecules

Carbon is a versatile atom four electrons in an outer shell that holds eight can share its electrons with other atoms to form up to four

covalent bonds

Page 4: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.
Page 5: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Organic Molecules

Many molecules of life are macromolecules(macromolecules contain many molecules joined together)

Monomers: Simple organic molecules that exist individually

Polymers: Large organic molecules form by combining monomers

Polymer Monomer

Carbohydrate Monosaccharide

Protein Amino acid

Lipids Triglycerides

Nucleic acid Nucleotide

Page 6: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.
Page 7: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.
Page 8: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Molecules of Life

4 main classes of biological molecules 1. Carbohydrates 2. Lipids 3. Proteins 4. Nucleic Acids

Page 9: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Carbohydrates

Page 10: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Carbohydrates

Some Functions: Quick fuel Short-term energy storage Structure of organisms Cell to cell recognition

Consist of C, H, and O atoms 1:2:1 ratio

“Saccharides”3 major classes:

Monosaccharides Disaccharides Polysaccharides

Page 11: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Monosaccharides

“simple sugars”; “one monomer of a sugar” Dissolve easily in water

hydrophilic

Glucose C6H12O6

Fructose Form of glucose

Page 12: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Disaccharides

Short chain of two sugar monomers

Two Monosaccharides Lactose, sucrose, maltose Lactose = glucose + galactose

Page 13: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Polysaccharide

“Complex” carbohydrate Composed of many glucose molecules

Glycogen Polysaccharide of glucose Storage form of glucose in animals

Starch Storage form of glucose in plants

Cellulose Found in the cell walls of plants

Page 14: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.
Page 15: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Lipids

Page 16: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Lipids

Cells use lipids to store energy Hydrophobic Functions:

Energy Storage Cushioning and Insulation Found in the plasma membrane

3 main types: Fats & Oils Phospholipids Steroids

Page 17: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Fats

Dietary fat consists largely of the molecule triglyceride Combination of glycerol and three fatty

acids

Page 18: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Fats

Unsaturated fatty acids Have less than the maximum number of hydrogens

bonded to the carbons

Saturated fatty acids Have the maximum number of hydrogens bonded to the

carbons Most animal fats have a high proportion of saturated fatty

acids, which can be unhealthy Example: butter

Most plant oils tend to be low in saturated fatty acids Example: corn oil

Page 19: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Phospholipids

Glycerol, two fatty acids and a phosphate group

Plasma membrane Nonpolar tail Polar heads

Page 20: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Proteins

Page 21: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Why Proteins??

VERY important functions in cells Keratin and collagen have structural roles Enzymes speed up chemical reactions of

metabolism Responsible for transport of substances within

the body Transport substances across cell membranes Hormones that regulate cellular function

Insulin

Page 22: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Proteins

Made from amino acids 20 various kinds

Amino acids linked to one another by peptide bonds Two amino acids bound

by a peptide bond is a dipeptide

Three or more is a polypeptide chain

Page 23: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Protein

Polypeptide

Peptide / Dipeptide

Amino Acids

Page 24: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Protein Structure

Protein’s final shape and chemical behavior arise from it’s primary structure Chain bends, folds, coils,

etc.

Denaturing When proteins lose their

shape

Page 25: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.
Page 26: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Nucleic Acids

Page 27: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids

Nucleic acids Can be single stranded or double stranded

DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid genetic information

RNA Ribonucleic acid used to build proteins

Page 28: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

Nucleotides and Nucleic Acids

Nucleic acids Built by nucleotides

Phosphate Pentose sugar Nitrogen-containing base

Page 29: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

DNA Composition

DNA is built from four different kinds of nucleotides One of four bases determines the

nucleotide: A - Adenine G - Guanine T - Thymine C – Cytosine

DNA consists of two strands of nucleotides twisted into a double helix

Page 30: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

GAGA….a nucleotide repeat!!

Base pairs Bases can only pair up with their corresponding “mate” 2 kinds:

A – T G – C

Amount of A = T Amount of G = C Can line up in any order

Page 31: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

DNA Composition

Nucleotides linked together by covalent bonds

Bases of one strand linked to the other by hydrogen bonds

The two strands run in opposite directions

Page 32: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

DNA into RNA

RNA a big player!! Single strand Sugar, phosphate group,

and a N-containing base Bases are:

A, C, G, and URACIL (U)

Page 33: Molecules of Life Chapter 3. Molecules Inorganic compound Nonliving matter Salts, water Organic compound Molecules of life Contains Carbon (C) and Hydrogen.

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