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Biological Macromolecul es Nature’s Building Blocks
33

Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Dec 21, 2015

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Beryl Wilcox
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Page 1: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Biological Macromolecul

esNature’s Building Blocks

Page 2: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Create a way to put these in order.

Describe how you put them in order! - Particles of matter

- Atoms- Elements- Ecosystems- Biospheres

- Molecules- Macromolecules- Cell organelles- Cells- Galaxies

- The Universe - Tissues

- Organs- Organisms- Populations

- Planets- Planetary Systems with Stars

Page 3: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Prior Knowledge Discussion- Particles of matter- Atoms- Elements- Molecules- Macromolecules- Cell organelles- Cells- Tissues- Organs- Systems- Organisms- Populations- Ecosystems- Biospheres- Planets- Planetary Systems with Stars- Galaxies- The Universe

Smallest to largest!All of that is possible because of atoms!

Page 4: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Prior Knowledge Discussion

• Describe the characteristics required to be considered a living organism.

1. Composed of cells2. Reproduce3. Contain DNA4. Grow and Develop5. Use and obtain energy6. Respond to their environment7. Maintain a stable internal environment

/eliminate Waste8. Evolve: change over time

Page 5: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

If everything is made of molecules,

what are molecules made of?

•Atoms!

Prior Knowledge Discussion

Page 6: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Which Elements are the Building Blocks of Life?

Almost all life forms on Earth are primarilymade up of only four basic elements:

• Carbon• Hydrogen• Oxygen• Nitrogen

(Phosphorous and Sulfur are also important in Biology)

Page 7: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Atoms are Elements!

Page 8: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Where are they Located on the Periodic

Table?

Page 9: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

What are we Learning?Benchmark: SC.912L.18.1 Describe the basic molecular

structures and primary functions of the four major categories of biological macromolecules. AA

Page 10: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Definitions • Molecule: 2 or more atoms

chemically bonded togethero Example O2

• Compound: molecules that have more than 2 different elements chemically bonded togethero Example: H2O

Page 11: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.
Page 12: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Macromolecules are polymers

constructed of many organic

molecules called monomers.

• Monomer - small molecular subunit which joins (form covalent bonds) with similar units to form a polymer.

• Polymer - consists of up to millions of repeated, covalently linked monomers. It is a relatively small, simple molecule.

Page 13: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Life’s Macromolecules

• All key components of every living cell are made of macromolecules.

“Giant Molecules”• The four kinds of macromolecules:

1. Carbohydrates2. Lipids3. Proteins4. Nucleic acids

Page 14: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

What you need to know

• For each macromolecule, you need to know:1. The elements it contains (building

blocks)2. The monomer structure (draw it)3. Important functions4. Examples

• Complete a Frayer-model for the 4 classes of macromolecules

Page 15: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Frayer Model

1. fold paper as demonstrated2. Label each tab 1 macromolecule3. Draw the structure of the macromolecule

on the front of each tab under the name4. On the inside:

o Building blockso Monomer nameo Functiono Exampleso *special notes

Page 16: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Building Blocks:

Composed of carbon (C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O) in a 1:2:1 ratio

Function:

Main source of energy for living things

Structural purposes

Examples:

Monosaccharaides like glucose, galactose, and fructose

Polysaccharides like glycogen and starch

cellulose in cell walls

Components:

Polysccharides or monosccharides (large or small units)

Carbohydrates

C6H12O

6

Page 17: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Carbohydrates (sugars)

• Composed of carbon (C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O) in a 1:2:1 ratioo Example: C6H12O6

• Made up of monomers called monosaccharide (simple sugars)

Page 18: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Carbohydrates• Basic structure: CnH2nOn

• Simple Carbs (monosaccharide) :o Glucoseo Fructoseo Galactoseo Ribose/deoxyribose

• Complex carbs (polysaccharide):o starch (bread, potatoes)o glycogen (beef muscle)o cellulose (lettuce, corn)

Page 19: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

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Carbohydrates

• Small sugar molecules to large sugar molecules.

• Examples:A. monosaccharideB. disaccharideC. polysaccharide

copyright cmassengale

Page 20: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

20

Carbohydrates

Monosaccharide: one sugar unit

Examples: glucose (C6H12O6)

deoxyriboseriboseFructoseGalactose

glucose

copyright cmassengale

Page 21: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

21

Carbohydrates

Disaccharide: two sugar unit

Examples: oSucrose

(glucose+fructose)oLactose

(glucose+galactose)oMaltose (glucose+glucose)glucoseglucose

copyright cmassengale

Page 22: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

22

CarbohydratesPolysaccharide: many sugar

unitsExamples: starch (bread,

potatoes)glycogen (beef

muscle)cellulose

(lettuce, corn)

glucoseglucose

glucoseglucose

glucoseglucose

glucoseglucose

cellulose

copyright cmassengale

Page 23: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Building Blocks:

Mostly made from carbon and hydrogen atoms, some oxygen

Function:

The most important lipids are fats, which are energy storage molecules

Examples:

Fats, steroids, oils

Components:

A fat molecule consists of fatty acids joined to a molecule of glycerol = TRIGLYCERIDE (lipid monomer)

Lipids

Joined together by NON-POLAR COVALENT bonds

Page 24: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Glycerol Fatty Acid tail TRIGLYCERIDE

Monomers of Lipids are Triglycerides

Page 25: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

ProteinsBuilding Blocks:

Proteins contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen.

Functions: Control the rate of reactions

Regulate cell processes

Form bones and muscles

Transport substances into or out of cells

Help to fight disease

Examples:

ENZYMES—Speed up reaction rates

Components:

Composed of long chains of monomer subunits called amino acids.

Page 26: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Protein Structure

1.Amino group

2.R-group

3.Carboxyl group

Monomer: AMINO ACID:

There are 20 different amino acids

Page 27: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Nucleic Acids

Building Blocks: Containing carbon, hydrogen,

oxygen, nitrogen, and phosphorus.Function: Nucleic acids store and transmit

hereditary, or genetic information.

Examples: There are two types of nucleic

acids: DNA and RNA.

Page 28: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Nucleic AcidsComponents: Assembled from

individual monomers known as nucleotides.

Nucleotides consist of three parts: Five carbon sugar Phosphate group Nitrogenous base

Nucleotides (monomers) bond together to form DNA or RNA (polymer)

Page 29: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Making Polymers from Monomers

• CARBON can make 4 bonds with adjoining atoms

• When bonding two monomers together to make a polymer, DEHYDRATION SYNTHESIS occurso Removal of 2 Hydrogen's (H)

and 1 Oxygen (O) = - H2O

Page 30: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.
Page 31: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Breaking Polymers• The opposite reaction occurs when we

break the bond between monomers

• This is called a HYDROLYSIS reaction, because the addition of H2O will split the molecule’s covalent bond

Page 32: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Dehydration synthesis (condensation reaction) and Hydrolysis are reverse reactions

Page 33: Biological Macromolecules Nature’s Building Blocks.

Building Macromolecules

Grab a lab packetGrab 2 partners (groups of 3)And listen for instructions