chapter 5 organic chemistry - weebly

6
1 Chapter 5 The Structure and Function of Macromolecules Some believe Primitive Earth provided inorganic precursors from which organic molecules could have been synthesized due to the free energy and absence of a significant quantity of oxygen In turn, these molecules served as building blocks for the formation of more complex molecules Fig. 4-2 Water vapor H 2 NH 3 AtmosphereElectrode Condenser Cold water Cooled water containing organic molecules Sample for chemical analysis H 2 O seaEXPERIMENT CH 4 1953 – Miller set up a closed system to simulate conditions though to have existed on early Earth These complex reaction sets could have occurred in solution (organic soup) or as reactions on solid reactive surfaces Introductory Terms Macromolecule Monomer Example: Lego block letters Polymer Example: Lego castle words Reaction Types Hydrolysis** Dehydration** Endergonic Exergonic Redox (OIL RIG) Macromolecular Reactions Dehydration Synthesis: Hydrolysis:

Upload: others

Post on 08-Feb-2022

10 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Chapter 5 Organic Chemistry - Weebly

1

Chapter 5 The Structure and Function of Macromolecules

Some believe…

¢ Primitive Earth provided inorganic precursors from which organic molecules could have been synthesized due to the free energy and absence of a significant quantity of oxygen

¢  In turn, these molecules served as building blocks for the formation of more complex molecules

Fig. 4-2

Water vapor

H2 NH3

“Atmosphere”

Electrode

Condenser

Cold water

Cooled water containing organic molecules

Sample for chemical analysis

H2O “sea”

EXPERIMENT

CH4

•  1953 – Miller set up a closed system to simulate conditions though to have existed on early Earth

•  These complex reaction sets could have occurred in solution (organic soup) or as reactions on solid reactive surfaces

Introductory Terms

¢  Macromolecule ¢  Monomer

l  Example: •  Lego block •  letters

¢  Polymer l  Example:

•  Lego castle •  words

Reaction Types

¢ Hydrolysis** ¢ Dehydration** ¢ Endergonic ¢ Exergonic ¢ Redox (OIL RIG)

Macromolecular Reactions J

¢  Dehydration Synthesis:

¢  Hydrolysis:

Page 2: Chapter 5 Organic Chemistry - Weebly

2

4 Macromolecules (polymers) fall into 4 major groups

1.  Carbohydrates 2.  Lipids 3.  Proteins 4.  Nucleic Acids

Carbohydrates

¢ Structure: l C:H:O in a 1:2:1 Ratio l Example: C6H12O6

¢ Functions: l Short-term energy storage

•  Pasta dinner before the big race, game, etc.

l Structural Support

Carbohydrate Types

¢ Monosaccharide ¢ Disaccharide ¢ Polysaccharide ¢ Pentose ¢ Polysaccharide Structural molecules

Carbohydrates

¢  Monosaccharides: l  “one sugar” l  C:H:O Ratio =

1:2:1 l  Simple ring

sugars l  Examples:

•  Glucose and fructose

Carbohydrates

¢  Disaccharides: l  “double sugar” l  2 monosaccharides

joined together by dehydration synthesis

l  Example: •  Sucrose •  Lactose

Carbohydrates

¢  Polysaccharides l  Polymers – lots of

monosaccharides are linked together

l  Starch and glycogen are examples

Page 3: Chapter 5 Organic Chemistry - Weebly

3

Pentose - carbs ¢  5 carbon sugars

Structural Carbohydrates

¢  Structural Polysaccharides l  Cellulose l  Chitin

Lipids - Fats ¢  Structure:

l  C, H, O l  Hydrophobic (insoluble)

¢  Functions: l  Insulation and long-term energy storage

¢  Types: l  Fats & Oils l  Waxes l  Phospholipids l  Steroids

Fats ¢ Structure:

dehydration synthesis

Lipids

¢ Examples l Glycerol l Triglycerol

Lipids – saturated vs. unsaturated

Page 4: Chapter 5 Organic Chemistry - Weebly

4

Lipids - phospholipids Phospholipids in water

Lipids - steroids

2005-2006

From Cholesterol → Sex Hormones ¢  What a big difference a little atom can make!

Proteins

¢  Most of a cell is made up of proteins ¢  Instrumental in almost everything

organisms do ¢  Structure:

l All proteins are created from unique combinations

l C,H,O,N l Amino acids

•  Peptide bonds

Proteins - function ¢  Major Functions:

l  Structure (keratin in hair & nails) l  Motion (actin & myosin in muscles) l  Transport (hemoglobin transports oxygen) l  Signaling (hormones can signal cells to

respond) l  Defense (antibodies) l  Enzymes (speed up chemical reactions by

lowering activation energy)

l  **(Energy (last resort for humans) 4 Cal/g)**

Page 5: Chapter 5 Organic Chemistry - Weebly

5

¢  A protein is one or more polypeptides precisely twisted, folded and coiled into a molecule of unique shape (3-D)

¢  4 shapes l Primary l Secondary l Tertiary l Quaternary

Protein structure Protein - structure

Proteins ¢  Denaturation:

l  When pH, salt concentration, extreme heat, and/or other environmental factors are altered, the protein may unravel and lose its shape

l  Biologically inactive l  Structure + function l  (A change in

structure alters function)

protein denatured video

Nucleic Acids

Informational polymers made of : l  Nucleotides:

1.  Sugar 2.  Phosphate 3.  Nitrogen base (A, T, G, C, U*)

l  CHNOPS

Page 6: Chapter 5 Organic Chemistry - Weebly

6

Nucleic Acids Nucleic Acids - differences

¢  RNA is single stranded; DNA is double stranded

¢  RNA has uracil instead of thymine ¢  RNA has ribose sugar, & DNA has

deoxyribose sugar. Functions: DNA serves as the genetic code for production

of proteins. RNA- DNA’s helper