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Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein
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Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Dec 27, 2015

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Augusta Carson
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Page 1: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein

Page 2: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules

Page 3: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.2 The synthesis and breakdown of polymers

Page 4: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.3 The structure and classification of some monosaccharides

Page 5: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.29 The components of nucleic acids; differences between DNA and RNA

Page 6: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.3x Hexose sugars

Glucose Galactose

Page 7: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.4 Linear and ring forms of glucose

Page 8: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.5 Examples of disaccharide synthesis

Page 9: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.5x Glucose monomer and disaccharides

Glucose monomer

Sucrose

Maltose

Page 10: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.6 Storage polysaccharides

Page 11: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.7a Starch and cellulose structures 

Page 12: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.7b,c Starch and cellulose structures 

Page 13: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.7x Starch and cellulose molecular models

Glucose Glucose

Starch

Cellulose

Page 14: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.8 The arrangement of cellulose in plant cell walls

Page 15: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.x1 Cellulose digestion: termite and Trichonympha

Page 16: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.x2 Cellulose digestion: cow

Page 17: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.9 Chitin, a structural polysaccharide: exoskeleton and surgical thread

Page 18: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.
Page 19: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.10 The synthesis and structure of a fat, or triacylglycerol

Page 20: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.11x Saturated and unsaturated fats and fatty acids: butter and oil

Page 21: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.11 Examples of saturated and unsaturated fats and fatty acids 

Page 22: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.12 The structure of a phospholipid

Page 23: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.13 Two structures formed by self-assembly of phospholipids in aqueous environments   

Page 24: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

  

Page 25: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.14 Cholesterol, a steroid    

Page 26: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 8.6 The detailed structure of an animal cell’s plasma membrane, in cross section

Page 27: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 4.8 A comparison of functional groups of female (estradiol) and male (testosterone) sex hormones

Page 28: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Table 5.1 An Overview of Protein Functions

Page 29: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein

Page 30: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.15 The 20 amino acids of proteins: nonpolar

Page 31: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.15 The 20 amino acids of proteins: polar and electrically charged

Page 32: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.16 Making a polypeptide chain

Page 33: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.18 The primary structure of a protein

Page 34: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.20 The secondary structure of a protein

Page 35: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.22 Examples of interactions contributing to the tertiary structure of a protein

Page 36: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.17 Conformation of a protein, the enzyme lysozyme

Page 37: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.23 The quaternary structure of proteins

Page 38: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.19 A single amino acid substitution in a protein causes sickle-cell disease

Page 39: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

LE 5-21b

Primarystructure

Secondaryand tertiarystructures

1 2 3

Normal hemoglobin

Val His Leu

4Thr

5Pro

6Glu Glu

7Primarystructure

Secondaryand tertiarystructures

1 2 3

Sickle-cell hemoglobin

Val His Leu

4Thr

5Pro

6Val Glu

7

Quaternarystructure

Normalhemoglobin(top view)

Function Molecules donot associatewith oneanother; eachcarries oxygen.

Quaternarystructure

Sickle-cellhemoglobin

Function Molecules interact withone another tocrystallize intoa fiber; capacityto carry oxygenis greatly reduced.

Exposedhydrophobicregion subunit subunit

Page 40: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.24 Review: the four levels of protein structure

Page 41: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.25 Denaturation and renaturation of a protein

Page 42: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.26 A chaperonin in action

Page 43: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.x3 James Watson and Francis Crick

Page 44: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.28 DNA RNA protein: a diagrammatic overview of information flow in a cell

Page 45: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.29 The components of nucleic acids; differences between DNA and RNA

Page 46: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.30 The DNA double helix and its replication

Page 47: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Figure 5.x4 Rosalind Franklin

Page 48: Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein. Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules.

Table 5.2 Polypeptide Sequence as Evidence for Evolutionary Relationships