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Essentials of the Living World Second Edition Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
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Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

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Page 1: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Essentials of the Living WorldSecond EditionSecond Edition

George B. Johnson

Jonathan B. Losos

Chapter 4

Molecules of Life

Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Page 2: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.1 Polymers Are Built of Monomers

• Organic molecules are formed by living organisms

have a core based around carbon

the core has attached groups of atoms called functional groups

• the functional groups confer specific chemical properties on the organic molecules

Page 3: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.1 Polymers Are Built of Monomers

• The building materials of the body are known as macromolecules because they can be very large

• There are four types of macromolecules:1. Proteins2. Nucleic acids3. Carbohydrates4. Lipids

• Large macromolecules are actually assembled from many similar small components, called monomers

the assembled chain of monomers is known as a polymer

Page 4: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.1 Polymers Are Built of Monomers

• All polymers are assembled the same way

a covalent bond is formed by removing an hydroxyl group (OH) from one subunit and a hydrogen (H) from another subunit

because this amounts to the removal of a molecule of water (H2O), this process of linking together two subunits to form a polymer is called dehydration synthesis

Page 5: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Figure 4.2 (a) Dehydration synthesis

Page 6: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.1 Polymers Are Built of Monomers

• The process of disassembling polymers into component monomers is essentially the reverse of dehydration synthesis

a molecule of water is added to break the covalent bond between the monomers

this process is known as hydrolysis

Page 7: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Figure 4.2(b) Hydrolysis

Page 8: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Proteins are complex macromolecules that are polymers of many subunits called amino acids the covalent bond linking two amino acids together is

called a peptide bond the assembled polymer is called a polypeptide

Table 4.1 amino acids, polypeptide

Page 9: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Table 4.2 The many functions of proteins

Page 10: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Amino acids are small molecules with a simple basic structure, a carbon atom to which three groups are added

• an amino group (-NH2)• a carboxyl group (-COOH)• a functional group (R)

• The functional group gives amino acids their chemical identity

there are 20 different types of amino acids

Page 11: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Protein structure is complex

the order of the amino acids that form the polypeptide is important

• the sequence of the amino acids affects how the protein folds together

the way that a polypeptide folds to form the protein determines the protein’s function

• some proteins are comprised of more than one polypeptide

Page 12: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• There are four general levels to protein structure

1. Primary

2. Secondary

3. Tertiary

4. Quaternary

Page 13: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Primary structure – the sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide chain

• This determines all other levels of protein structure

Figure 4.5 Levels of protein structure (circle the primary structure)

Page 14: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Secondary structure forms because regions of the polypeptide that are non-polar are forced together

• The folded structure may resemble coils, helices, or sheets

Figure 4.5 Levels of protein structure (circle the secondary structure)

Page 15: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Tertiary structure – the final 3-D shape of the protein

• The final twists and folds that lead to this shape are the result of polarity differences in regions of the polypeptide

Figure 4.5 Levels of protein structure (circle the tertiary structure)

Page 16: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Quaternary structure – the spatial arrangement of proteins comprised of more than one polypeptide chain

Figure 4.5 Levels of protein structure (circle the quaternary structure)

Page 17: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Protein

• The shape of a protein affects its function

changes to the environment of the protein may cause it to unfold or denature

• increased temperature or lower pH affects hydrogen bonding, which is involved in the folding process

a denatured protein is inactive

Page 18: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Enzymes are globular proteins that have a special 3-D shape that fits precisely with another chemical

they cause the chemical that they fit with to undergo a reaction

this process of enhancing a chemical reaction is called catalysis

Page 19: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.2 Proteins

• Proteins fold specifically the folding process is helped by special proteins

called chaperone proteins

• these proteins somehow correct a misfolded protein

• defective chaperon proteins may play a role in certain genetic disorders that involve defective proteins

– Cystic fibrosis

– Alzheimer’s

Page 20: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.3 Nucleic Acids

• Nucleic acids are very long polymers that store information

comprised of monomers called nucleotides• each nucleotide has 3 parts

1. a five-carbon sugar

2. a phosphate group

3. an organic nitrogen-containing base

there are five different types of nucleotides• information is encoded in the nucleic acid by

different sequences of these nucleotides

Page 21: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.3 Nucleic Acids

• There are two types of nucleic acids Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) Ribonucleic acid (RNA)

• RNA is similar to DNA except that it uses uracil instead of thymine it is comprised of just one strand it has a ribose sugar

Page 22: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.3 Nucleic Acids

• The structure of DNA is a double helix because there are only two base pairs possible

• Adenosine (A) pairs with thymine (T)• Cytosine (C) pairs with Guanine (G)

the bond holding together a base pair is hydrogen bond

a sugar-phosphate backbone comprised of phosphodiester bonds gives support

Page 23: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Figure 4.12 The DNA double helix

Page 24: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.3 Nucleic Acids

• The structure of DNA helps it to function

the hydrogen bonds of the base pairs can be easily broken to unzip the DNA so that information can be copied

• each strand of DNA is a mirror image so the DNA contains two copies of the information

having two copies means that the information can be accurately copied and passed to the next generation

Page 25: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.4 Carbohydrates

• Carbohydrates are monomers that make up the structural framework of cells and play a critical role in energy storage

a carbohydrate is any molecule that contains the elements C, H, and O in a 1:2:1 ratio

the sizes of carbohydrates varies• simple carbohydrates – made up of one or two monomers• complex carbohydrates – made up of polymers

Page 26: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.4 Carbohydrates

• Simple carbohydrates are small

monosaccharides consist of only one monomer subunit

• an example is the sugar glucose (C6H12O6)

disaccharides consist of two monosaccharides • an example is the sugar sucrose, which is formed by joining

together two monosaccharides, glucose and fructose

Page 27: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.4 Carbohydrates

• Complex carbohydrates are long polymer chains

because they contain many C-H bonds, these carbohydrates are good for storing energy

• these bond types are the ones most often broken by organisms to obtain energy

the long chains are called polysaccharides

Page 28: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.4 Carbohydrates

• Plants and animals store energy in polysaccharide chains formed from glucose plants form starch animals form glycogen

• Some polysaccharides are structural and resistant to digestion by enzymes plants form cellulose cell walls some animals form chitin for exoskeletons

Page 29: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Insert Table 4.3 Carbohydrates and their function

Page 30: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.5 Lipids

• Lipids – fats and other molecules that are not soluble in water lipids are non-polar molecules lipids have many different types

• fats• oils• steroids• rubber• waxes• pigments

Page 31: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.5 Lipids

• Fats are converted from glucose for long-term energy storage

fats have two subunits1. fatty acids2. glycerol

fatty acids are chains of C and H atoms, known as hydrocarbons• the chain ends in a carboxyl (-COOH) group

Page 32: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Figure 4.17(a) Saturated and unsaturated fats

Because there are 3 fatty acids attached to a glycerol, another name for a fat is triglyceride

Page 33: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.5 Lipids

• Fatty acids have different chemical properties due to the number of hydrogens that are attached to the non-carboxyl carbons

if the maximum number of hydrogens are attached, then the fat is said to be saturated

if there are fewer than the maximum attached, then the fat is said to be unsaturated

Page 34: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Figure 4.17(b,c) Saturated and unsaturated fats

Page 35: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

4.5 Lipids

• Biological membranes involve lipids phospholipids make up the two layers of the

membrane cholesterol is embedded within the membrane

Figure 4.16 Lipids are a key component of biological membranes

Page 36: Essentials of the Living World Second Edition George B. Johnson Jonathan B. Losos Chapter 4 Molecules of Life Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.

Inquiry & Analysis

• Which of the three pH values represents the highest concentration of hydrogen ions?

• How does pH affect the release of oxygen from hemoglobin?

pH effects on protein function