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Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.
Chapter 3
Molecules
Of Life
3.1 Building Big Molecules
Carbon can share electrons with as many as FOUR other atoms
Organisms consist mainly of oxygen, hydrogen, and carbon
3-2
Macromolecules Carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids
are called macromolecules because of their large size
The largest macromolecules are polymers because they contain many subunits called monomers that are connected to each other.
3-3
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3.2 Proteins Important for structure and
function
50% of dry weight of most cells
Several functions
Some proteins are enzymes all enzymes are proteins
enzymes increase the rate of a reaction
Support
Keratin, collagen 3-4
Proteins cont.
Contractile muscle cells use protein to
contract
Transport
channels, carriers, hemoglobin
Defense antibodies and clotting
proteins
Some hormones are proteins insulin, growth hormone
3-5
Amino Acids
Proteins are macromolecules with amino acid subunits
20 different amino acids
Identical backbones
Different side chains (R group)
Peptide bonds (covalent bonds) hold the amino acids together
3-6
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Amino acid diversity.
Variety is due to the R group
3-7
Protein Structure & Shape
Primary structure
order of amino acids
Secondary structure
coiled or folded shape
hydrogen bonds between negative C=O and positive N-H groups
Protein Shape 2 Tertiary structure further folding and
bending into globular and fibrous shapes
Quaternary structure associations of two
or more separate polypeptide chains
only some proteins have a quaternary structure such as hemoglobin
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Denaturation Denaturation - the irreversible change of protein shape
caused by heat or pH
causes the loss of 2o and 3o
structure
enzyme can no longer function
3-10
Protein Structure Determines Function
Proteins must have the correct shape for them to function.
Enzymes have a shape that is specific for a given molecule.
They must fit each other like a key in a lock.
The protein must be made
right for it to take its final shape correctly. 13-11
3.3 Nucleic Acids
These are long chains of nucleotides
Nucleotides are made of a sugar, a nitrogen- containing base, and a phosphate
DNA – deoxyribonucleic acid
The genetic material
RNA – ribonucleic acid
A copy of DNA used to make proteins
3-12
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5.6 ATP: The Energy Currency of the Cell, pg 100
Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP)
A nucleotide with the base adenine and the
sugar ribose making a compound adenosine
Is broken down to release energy and form adenosine
diphosphate (ADP) 3-13
3.4 Carbohydrates
3-14
Used as an immediate energy source
Hydrophilic molecules
Simple sugars
Major monosaccharides
glucose glc
galactose gal
fructose frc
glucose is blood sugar
Disaccharides
Sugar molecule composed of 2 monosaccharides
Major disaccharides sucrose = table sugar
glucose + fructose
Lactose = sugar in milk
glucose + galactose
Maltose = grain products
glucose + glucose
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Complex Carbohydrates
Polymers of monosaccharides
Used for short-term or long-term energy storage
Plants store glucose as starch
Animals store glucose as glycogen
1 lbs glycogen has 4 lbs of water associated with it
3-16
Complex carbohydrates provide structural support
Some are used for structure
Cellulose is used by plants
structural – tree trunk is mostly cellulose
humans can’t digest
fiber in diet
protozoans in termites can digest
Chitin is used in animals and fungi
found in the shell 3-17
3.5 Lipids
Hydrophobic organic molecule
not soluble in water
composed of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen
Three primary types in humans
triglycerides, phospholipids, and steroids
Functions of fat
high caloric compound, good at storing calories (no water stored, hydrophobic)
insulation
protection (behind eyeball, surrounds spinal cord)
3-18
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Triglyceride
Triglycerides are the fats and oils.
Triglycerides are made up of glycerol (orange balls) and 3 fatty acids (long chains).
Saturated fats have no double bonds They are saturated with
hydrogens
Unsaturated fats have double bonds They are not saturated with
hydrogens 3-19
Saturated Fat
Fat is solid at room temperature
saturated fats from animals
also palm and coconut oil
causes your body to make more cholesterol
Unsaturated Fat
Oils are liquid at room temperature
the double bonds cause kinks in the structure
pushes the fatty acids from each other
often polyunsaturated fats from plants
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Other lipids
Phospholipids are found in plasma membranes
Cholesterol is a steroid
Steroid hormones come from cholesterol
estrogen
testosterone
3-22
Anabolic Steroids in Sports
Synthetic forms of testosterone
Stimulates protein synthesis
Inhibits protein breakdown
Side Effects
Stop growing in height
Liver cancer
High blood pressure
Low sperm count
Balding
13-23
Type Intramolecular e- polar Example
of bond Intermolecular
Ionic NaCl
shared unequally
no C-
C-
Intermolecular water
Types of Bonds
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Organic Molecules Organic Building Examples Function
Molecule Blocks Carbohydrates Sugars
Lipids Store energy
Hormones
Cell membrane
Amino Structural Acids Enzymes
DNA ATP