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UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia 8A
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UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Jan 04, 2016

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Page 1: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES

Miss Sabia 8A

Page 2: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Essential Question

How do organic and inorganic

compounds compare?

Page 3: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

First things first…• Element: a pure substance that

consists entirely of one type of atom• Compound: chemical substance

formed by the combination of 2 or more elements in definite proportions

• For example, H2O is made of 2 hydrogen atoms and 1 oxygen atom

Page 4: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

First things first• A chemical formula tells us the

type of elements that are in a compound and the ratio in which those atoms combine

• Glucose, C6H12O6

Page 5: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Some quality bonding time…

• Hydrogen Bonds: weak bonds of attraction between the partially charged H atom and another partially charged atom– Between water molecules

Page 6: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Some quality bonding time…

Ionic Bonds• Electron transfer due

to electrical attraction between ions

• Form cations (+) and anions (-)

Covalent Bonds• Electron sharing• Can be polar (unequal

sharing) or nonpolar (equal sharing)

Electronegativity: “greediness” for electrons; attraction of an atom for electrons in a covalent bond

Page 7: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Organic Compounds• CONTAIN CARBON!!• Most also contain hydrogen• Associated with living things

Page 8: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Why is carbon so special?

• Think of carbon as the jack-of-all-trades

• Has potential to form many kinds and combinations of bonds with many different atoms—able to form 4 covalent bonds

Page 9: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Essential Question

What are the four classes of organic

molecules?

Page 10: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

The Macromolecules• Carbohydrates• Nucleic Acids• Proteins• Lipids

Page 17: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Activity• You will make a placemat about the 4

types of carbon molecules. Include:• 1. a picture of a food that contains each

type of molecule (you may not be able to find one for nucleic acids, which is fine).

• 2. For each molecule, include a description, as well as a drawing of what the actual carbon molecule looks like.

• 3. Your placemats will be laminated and ready for you to use!

Page 18: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Do Now• Name as many functions of a protein

as you can…

Page 19: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Essential Question

•How is a protein’s function determined?

Page 20: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

How do we get these macromolecules?

• When we eat, large organic food molecules such as proteins and starches must initially be broken down to enter cells

• Proteins amino acids• Starches simple sugars• These nutrients can now enter the

cell and be used as building blocks of compounds needed for life

Page 21: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Vocabulary• Monomer: single unit• Polymer: many monomers

Page 22: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Reactions• Dehydration synthesis: joining

molecules together, results in loss of water

• Hydrolysis: breakdown of polymers through the addition of water

Page 23: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

A closer look at Proteins

• SHAPE DETERMINES FUNCTION!!!!!!• 4 levels of protein structure– 1. primary– 2. secondary– 3. tertiary– 4. quaternary

Page 24: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Primary Structure• Amino acid sequence

Page 25: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Secondary Struture• Coiling or folding of the a.a.

sequence due to hydrogen bonds

Page 26: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Tertiary Structure• Irregular contortions from

interactions between side chains (aka R groups)

• This involves…– Hydrogen bonding– Ionic bonding– Hydrophobic interactions

Page 27: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Tertiary Structure

Page 28: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Quaternary Structure

• Grouping of polypeptide chains

Page 29: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

SHAPE DETERMINES FUNCTION

INSULIN

Page 30: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

How is the structure determined?

• Structure depends on the environment– pH– Temp– Salt []

Page 31: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Denaturation• A poor environment may result in

denaturation (breaking of a protein)– Cooking an egg– Getting a fever

Page 32: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

It all comes down to amino acids

•What do you think happens if you change the sequence of amino acids?

Page 33: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Essential Question•What is the role of enzymes in a chemical reaction?

Page 34: UNIT 3: BIOCHEMISTRY/ENZYMES Miss Sabia8A. Essential Question How do organic and inorganic compounds compare?

Essential Question• What factors affect the rate of

enzymatic reactions?