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CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules)
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CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Dec 27, 2015

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Page 1: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

CH 3 Biological Molecules

(Biomolecules)

Page 2: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Biochemistry Review

Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance

They are composed of atoms which are the smallest units of matter (recall the levels of organization)

Page 3: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Biochemistry Review

An atom is composed of a nucleus, an electron cloud, and 3 subatomic particles: Protons (p+) Neutrons (n0) Electrons (e-)

Protons and neutrons are located in the nucleus of an atom and electrons in the electron cloud

p+

n0

e-

Nucleus

Electron cloud

Page 4: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Section 3.1Carbon in Biomolecules

Page 5: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Carbon & Biomolecules

Molecules are particles composed of atoms (from elements) held together by chemical bonds Classified as organic and inorganic

Organic molecules are important because they are general types of molecules that all living organisms synthesize and use; they are essential for life

Page 6: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Carbon & Biomolecules

The term “organic” describes molecules that contains the element carbon (C) and some hydrogen atoms

“Inorganic” molecules are all molecules that do not contain carbon, with the exception of carbon dioxide (CO2)

Page 7: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Carbon & Biomolecules

Although they have a common structure and function, the tremendous variety of organic molecules contributes to the diversity of structures within an individual organism and even individual cells

The reason for this? Carbon’s structure is very versatile when it

comes to forming bonds with other atoms

Page 8: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Carbon & Biomolecules

Macromolecules – large molecules composed of similar repeating units

There are 4 main groups of macromolecules that compose living things:

1. Carbohydrates2. Lipids3. Proteins4. Nucleic Acids

Page 9: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Section 3.2 Synthesizing Organic

Molecules

Page 10: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Modular Approach

The modular approach involves building organic molecules piece by piece (like a train with individual cars): Monomer: individual subunits (car) Polymer: long chains of monomers (train)

Mono- means “one” Poly- means “many”

Page 11: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Biomolecules & Water

Biomolecules are joined together or broken apart by removing or adding water:Water can break apart polymers

(biomolecule), freeing up the monomers

OR…When polymers (biomolecules) are

formed, water is often produced as a by-product

Page 12: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Biomolecules & Water

Dehydration synthesis reactions: when monomers are joined together by removing water to make biomolecules (polymers)

A H+ is removed from one monomer and an OH- from the other…they will form water

The spaces left open allow the monomers to bond together, creating a biomolecule (polymer)

Page 13: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Dehydration Synthesis

Page 14: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Biomolecules & Water

Hydrolysis reactions: when molecules are broken apart by water Water is added to a molecule (polymer),

causing it split back into the original monomers

Page 15: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

CH 3.3What are Carbohydrates?

Page 16: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Carbohydrates

Page 17: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

OH

OH

H

H

HO

CH2OH

HH

H

OH

O

Carbohydratesenergy

molecules

Page 18: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Carbohydrates-Sugars

Composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen (1:2:1)

Overall function: used by organisms for short term energy and structural support

Page 19: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Monosaccharides

1 sugar molecule (monomer) Function: mainly used to form

polymers or for cell activities Most common: glucose C6H12O6

Others: Fructosefruits Galactoselactose RiboseRNA DeoxyriboseDNA

Page 20: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Disaccharides

2 sugar molecules linked together Function: mainly used for short-term

energy Examples:

Sucroseglucose + fructose Lactoseglucose + galactose Maltoseglucose + glucose

Page 21: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Polysaccharides

Many sugar molecules linked together Function: used for long-term energy storage Examples:

Starch: found in plant seeds & roots (FYI: 1000 to ½ million glucose)

Glycogen (animals): found in animal muscles & liver (much smaller than starch)

Cellulose: found in plant cell walls Animals can’t digest it, has to be broken down by

microbes so its usually just roughage/fiber for us Chitin: found in exoskeletons and fungi cell walls

Page 22: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Cellulose Structure & Location

Page 23: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Chitin Structure & Location

Page 24: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Section 3.4What are Lipids?

Page 25: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Lipids: Fats & Oils

Page 26: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Lipidsenergy storage

Page 27: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Lipids

Composed of mainly carbon and hydrogen

Have nonpolar regions that make them insoluble in water (meaning they won’t dissolve)

Types of lipids: Fats Oils Waxes Phospholipids Steroids

Page 28: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Oils, Fats, and Waxes

Triglyceride: the chemical name of fats and oils

Difference between fats & oils: Fats are solid, oils are liquid

Page 29: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Saturated Fats

Saturated fats are made of mainly hydrogen so the FA chains are “saturated” in hydrogen

Where we get them from: butter, bacon fat, steak; tends to come from animals

Page 30: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Unsaturated Fats

Unsaturated fats have a smaller amount of hydrogen in their FA chains

Where we get them from: the seeds of plants (they’re stored for the embryo) such as corn oil, peanut oil, etc.

Page 31: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

FYI: Unsaturated fats

Unsaturated fats can be converted to a fat by breaking some of the double bonds and adding some hydrogens…this is known as a “hydrogenated oil” (allows margarine to be solid at room temp)

Partial hydrogenation creates trans fats which are also solid at room temperature Read Health Watch: Cholesterol-Friend or Foe

on pg. 45

Page 32: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

FYI: Saturated & Unsaturated Fats

Saturated

Unsaturated

Page 33: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Waxes

Function: used as a waterproof covering for: plant leaves and stems mammalian fur insect exoskeletons to construct beehives

FYI: Chemically similar to fats, but they aren’t a food source because we and most other animals don’t have the enzymes necessary to break them down

Page 34: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Fats & Waxes

Page 35: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Phospholipids

Make up the plasma (cell) membrane

Head is hydrophilic or “water loving”

Tail is hydrophobic or “water fearing”

Page 36: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Steroids

Structurally different from all other lipids because it is a ring while the others were chains

Common steroid: cholesterol Component of animal cell

membranes

Page 37: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Section 3.5What are Proteins?

Page 38: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Proteins

Page 39: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Amino Acids and Proteins

Monomer: amino acids (AAs); there are 20 different AAs in all

Polymer: protein (chains of AAs)

Bond between the AAs when they are making polymers is known as a peptide bond

Page 40: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Amino Acids and Proteins

Peptide: short chains of AAs (FYI: 2-49 AAs)

Polypeptide: long chains, aka a protein (FYI: 50 or more AAs)

Page 41: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Protein Structure

1. Primary structure (1o)-the chain of AAs that make up the protein

2. Secondary structure (2o)- when the protein takes on a coiled or pleated shape

Page 42: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Primary/Secondary Level

Primary

Secondary

Page 43: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Protein Structure

Tertiary structure (3o)-the 3-D shape a polypeptide becomes (like balling up a piece of paper)

Quaternary structure (4o)-when polypeptide chains link together

Page 44: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Tertiary/Quaternary Levels

Tertiary

Quaternary

Page 45: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Types of Proteins

Can be classified as functional or structural

Functional: Enzymes: proteins that speed up almost all

chemical reactions that occur inside the cell Albumin (egg white) & Casein (milk):

provides AAs for developing young animals Some hormones such as insulin & growth

hormone Antibodies

Page 46: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Types of Proteins

Structural Elastin: gives skin its

elasticity Keratin: main protein

found in hair, nails, horns, scales, and feathers

Gossamer: the silk protein in spiders and silk moth cocoons

Page 47: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Section 3.6What are Nucleic Acids?

Page 48: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Nucleic AcidsInformation

storage

Page 49: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Nucleic Acids

Monomers: nucleotides

Polymers: nucleic acids (NAs)

2 types of nucleic acids: DNA-deoxyribonucleic acid RNA-ribonucleic acid

Page 50: CH 3 Biological Molecules (Biomolecules) Biochemistry Review Elements are substances that cannot be broken down or converted into another substance They.

Other Nucleotides

Not all nucleotides are part of NAs Cyclic nucleotides: used as intracellular

messengers

Adenosine triphosphate (ATP): energy molecule found in all organisms

Coenzymes: assist enzymes in promoting and chemical reactions