chemistry of cells

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CHEMISTRY OF CELLS

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Chemistry of Cells. Objectives. Describe the distinguishing characteristics of carbohydrates Describe the important biological functions of polysaccharides Explain what distinguishes lipids from other classes of biological macromolecules - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chemistry of Cells

CHEMISTRY OF CELLS

Page 2: Chemistry of Cells

OBJECTIVES

1. Describe the distinguishing characteristics of carbohydrates

2. Describe the important biological functions of polysaccharides

3. Explain what distinguishes lipids from other classes of biological macromolecules

4. Describe the unique properties, building blocks and biological roles of fats, phospholipids and steroids

5. Distinguish proteins from the other classes of macromolecules

Page 3: Chemistry of Cells

OBJECTIVES CONT.

6. List the biological functions which proteins perform

7. Explain what determines protein conformation and why it is important

8. Define denaturation and explain how proteins may be denatured

9. Describe the characteristics that distinguish nucleic acids from the other classes of macromolecules

10. Summarize the functions of nucleic acids

Page 4: Chemistry of Cells

OBJECTIVES CONT.

11. Briefly describe the three-dimensional structure of DNA

12. Evaluate the importance of energy to living things

13. Relate energy and chemical reactions

14. Describe the role of enzymes in chemical reactions

15. Identify the effect of enzymes on food molecules

Page 5: Chemistry of Cells

MACROMOLECULES

Macro = large Molecules = 2 or more atoms covalently bonded Usually referred to as polymers

Like a chain

Made from several repeating subunits The repeated subunits are called monomers

Like links in a chain

3 of the 4 macromolecules are polymers of monomers

Page 6: Chemistry of Cells

Making or Breaking Polymers

• The chemical mechanisms that cells use to make and break polymers are similar for all classes of macromolecules.

Page 7: Chemistry of Cells

Making Polymers• Monomers are connected

by covalent bonds via a condensation reaction or dehydration reaction.– One monomer provides

a hydroxyl group and the other provides a hydrogen and together these form water.

– This process requires energy and is aided by enzymes.

Page 8: Chemistry of Cells

BREAKING DOWN POLYMERS The covalent bonds connecting

monomers in a polymer are disassembled by hydrolysis.

In hydrolysis as the covalent bond is broken a hydrogen atom and hydroxyl group from a split water molecule attaches where the covalent bond used to be.

Hydrolysis reactions dominate the digestive process, guided by specific enzymes.

Page 9: Chemistry of Cells

TYPES OF MACROMOLECULES

There are four of them.

1. Carbohydrates

2. Lipids

3. Proteins

4. Nucleic acids

☺ For each of these you will be expected to identify, describe, and differentiate between all four macromolecules.

☺You will also be expected to describe the biological importance of each macromolecule

Page 10: Chemistry of Cells

FUNCTION OF CARBOHYDRATES

1. Sugars, the smallest carbohydrates, serve as fuel and carbon sources

2. Polysaccharides, the polymers of sugars, have storage and structural roles

Page 11: Chemistry of Cells

STRUCTURE OF CARBOHYDRATES

Monosaccharides generally have molecular formulas containing C,H and O in a 1:2:1 ratio.

For example, glucose has the formula C6H12O6.

Most names for sugars end in -ose.

Monosaccharides are also classified by the number of carbons in the backbone.

Page 12: Chemistry of Cells

• Monosaccharides, particularly glucose, are a major fuel for cellular work.

• They are also building blocks for of other monomers, including those of amino acids (protein) and fatty acids (lipids).

• While often drawn as a linear skeleton, in aqueous solutions monosaccharides form rings.

Page 13: Chemistry of Cells

2. Polysaccharides, the polymers of sugars, have storage and structural roles

• Polysaccharides are polymers of hundreds to thousands of monosaccharides joined together (What is a polymer?)

• One function of polysaccharides is energy storage – it is hydrolyzed as needed.

• Other polysaccharides serve as building materials for the cell or whole organism.

Page 14: Chemistry of Cells

Starch is a storage polysaccharide composed entirely of glucose monomers

Great big chain of glucose molecules

What would this look like? (Draw it.)

Page 15: Chemistry of Cells
Page 16: Chemistry of Cells

Biological Uses of Polysaccharides• Plants store starch within plastids, including

chloroplasts.• Plants can store surplus glucose in starch and

withdraw it when needed for energy or carbon.• Animals that feed on plants, especially parts rich

in starch, can also access this starch to support their own metabolism.

• Hey, this sounds like an objective!

Page 17: Chemistry of Cells
Page 18: Chemistry of Cells

LIPIDS - DIVERSE HYDROPHOBIC MOLECULES

1. Fats store large amounts of energy

2. Phospholipids are major components

of cell membranes

3. Steroids include cholesterol and certain hormones

Page 19: Chemistry of Cells

Introduction• Lipids are an exception among macromolecules

because they do not have polymers.– Though lipid structure is easily recognized

• Lipids all have little or no affinity for water.• Lipids are highly diverse in form and function.

Page 20: Chemistry of Cells

1. Fats store large amounts of energy• Although fats are not strictly polymers,

they are large molecules assembled from smaller molecules by dehydration reactions.

• A fat is constructed from two kinds of smaller molecules, glycerol and fatty acids.

Page 21: Chemistry of Cells

• Glycerol consists of a three carbon skeleton with a hydroxyl group attached to each.

• • A fatty acid consists of a carboxyl group attached to a long carbon skeleton, often 16 to 18 carbons long.

Page 22: Chemistry of Cells

• The many nonpolar C-H bonds in the long hydrocarbon skeleton make fats hydrophobic.

• In a fat, three fatty acids are joined to glycerol by an ester linkage, creating a triacylglycerol.

Page 23: Chemistry of Cells

• The three fatty acids in a fat can be the same or different.

• Fatty acids may vary in length (number of carbons) and in the number and locations of double bonds.

• If there are no carbon-carbon double bonds, then the molecule is a saturated fatty acid - a hydrogen at every possible position.

Page 24: Chemistry of Cells

• If there are one or more carbon-carbon double bonds, then the molecule is an unsaturated fatty acid - formed by the removal of hydrogen atoms from the carbon skeleton.

• Saturated fatty acids are straight chains, but unsaturated fatty acids have a kink wherever there is a double bond

Page 25: Chemistry of Cells

Saturated vs Unsaturated• Fats with saturated fatty acids are saturated fats.

– Most animal fats– solid at room temperature.

• Straight chains allow many hydrogen bonds– A diet rich in saturated fats may contribute to cardiovascular

disease (atherosclerosis) through plaque deposits.

• Fats with unsaturated fatty acids are unsaturated fats.– Plant and fish fats, known as oils– Liquid are room temperature.

• The kinks provided by the double bonds prevent the molecules from packing tightly together.

Page 26: Chemistry of Cells

2. Phospholipids are major components of cell membranes

• Phospholipids have two fatty acids attached to glycerol and a phosphate group at the third position.

• The “head” likes water• The “tail” hates water

Page 27: Chemistry of Cells

• The interaction of phospholipids with water is complex.– The fatty acid tails are hydrophobic, but the phosphate

group and its attachments form a hydrophilic head.

Page 28: Chemistry of Cells

• When phospholipids are added to water, they self-assemble into aggregates with the hydrophobic tails pointing toward the center and the hydrophilic heads on the outside.– This type of structure is called a micelle.

• What structure is this similar to?

Page 29: Chemistry of Cells

• At the surface of a cell phospholipids are arranged as a bilayer.– the hydrophilic heads are on the outside in contact with the aqueous

solution and the hydrophobic tails form the core.– The phospholipid bilayer forms a barrier between the cell and the

external environment.• They are the major component of cell membranes.

Page 30: Chemistry of Cells

3. Steroids include cholesterol and certain hormones• Steroids are lipids with a carbon skeleton

consisting of four fused carbon rings.– Different steroids are created by varying functional groups

attached to the rings.

Page 31: Chemistry of Cells

1. A polypeptide is a polymer of amino acids connected to a specific sequence 2. A protein’s function depends on its specific conformation

PROTEINS - MANY STRUCTURES, MANY FUNCTIONS

Page 32: Chemistry of Cells

INTRODUCTION

Proteins are instrumental in about everything that an organism does. structural support,

storage

transport of other substances

intercellular signaling

movement

defense against foreign substances

Proteins are the main enzymes in a cell and regulate metabolism by selectively accelerating chemical reactions.

Humans have tens of thousands of different proteins, each with their own structure and function.

Page 33: Chemistry of Cells

Proteins are the most structurally complex molecules known.

Each type of protein has a complex three-dimensional shape or conformation.

All protein polymers are constructed from the same set of 20 monomers, called amino acids.

Polymers of proteins are called polypeptides.

A protein consists of one or more polypeptides folded and coiled into a specific conformation

Page 34: Chemistry of Cells

A POLYPEPTIDE IS A POLYMER OF AMINO ACIDS CONNECTED IN

A SPECIFIC SEQUENCE

Amino acids consist of four components attached to a central carbon, the alpha carbon.

These components include a hydrogen atom, a carboxyl group, an amino group, and a side chain.

Polypeptides are made of amino acids

Amino acids CONTAIN NITROGEN (N)

Page 35: Chemistry of Cells

.

Page 36: Chemistry of Cells

The repeated sequence (N-C-C) is the polypeptide backbone.

Attached to the backbone are the various R groups. Polypeptides range in size from a few monomers to

thousands.

Page 37: Chemistry of Cells
Page 38: Chemistry of Cells

The structural properties of silk are due to beta pleated sheets. The presence of so many hydrogen bonds makes each silk

fiber stronger than steel.

Page 39: Chemistry of Cells

NUCLEIC ACIDS

Contain genetic information Provides instructions for making polypeptides

Each monomer is a nucleotide

Nucleotides are composed of

1. 5 carbon sugar Deoxyribose ribose

2. Phosphate group

3. Nitrogenous base Adenine (A) Thymine (T) in DNA, Uracil (U) in RNA Guanine (G) cytosine

Page 40: Chemistry of Cells

Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)

Sugar is deoxyribose

Shape is a double helix

Ribonucleic acid (RNA)

Sugar is ribose

Uses a different nitrogenous base Uracil (U) instead of thymine (T)

Shape may be a single or double helix