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Reactions that make and break polymers

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Title: Reactions that make and break polymers Author: East Irondequoit Last modified by: su Created Date: 9/19/2006 7:10:57 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Reactions that make and break polymers


1
Unit 1 Cellular Energetics
  • Part I Macromolecules
  • Part II Enzymes
  • Part III Cellular Respiration
  • Part IV DNA Replication
  • Part V Protein Synthesis

2
Part I Macromolecules
3
The questions
  • What are monomers? What are polymers?
  • How are polymers synthesized (built) and
    hydrolyzed (broken down)?

4
Dehydration Synthesis (condensation)
  • Reaction that joins molecules together by
    removing water
  • Polymerization the synthesis of a polymer
  • Polymers are built from monomers via dehydration
    synthesis

5
Hydrolysis
  • Breaks polymers into their constituent monomers
    (building blocks) by lysing (breaking) bonds
    through the addition of water.

6
1. Carbohydrates (polysaccharides)
  • Contain CHO
  • General molecular formula CH2O
  • Aldoses and Ketoses vary in location of carbonyl
    group -CO
  • Aldoses have carbonyl on ends (glucose)
  • Ketoses have carbonyl within molecule (fructose)

7
Monomer monosaccharide
8
Disaccharides (double sugars)
  • 2 monosaccharides joined by a glycosidic linkage
  • Covalent bond formed between two monosaccharides
    by dehydration synthesis

9
Examples of disaccharides
  • Maltose glucose glucose
  • Sucrose glucose fructose
  • Lactose glucose galactose

10
Polysaccharides (many sugars)
  • Long polymers of many monosaccharides
  • Architecture function determined by position of
    glycosidic linkages
  • Alpha linkages are breakable by Eukaryotes
  • Starch, glycogen
  • Beta linkages are NOT
  • Cellulose, chitin

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Types of Polysaccharides
  • A. Structural polysaccharides
  • Beta glycosidic linkages
  • Cellulose - plant cell walls, structural molecule
  • Chitin - exoskeleton in insects, arachnids,
    crustaceans

13
  • B. Food storage molecules
  • Alpha glycosidic linkages
  • Starch- food storage molecules in plants
  • Glycogen- food storage molecules in animals

14
2. Lipids
  • Group shares one common trait no affinity for
    water
  • Do NOT consist of monomers ? polymers
  • Highly varied group
  • Biologically important
  • Fats
  • Phospholipids
  • Steriods

15
A. Fats
  • Made of glycerol and 3 fatty acids
  • Saturated fatty acids (animal fats) are carbon
    chains with single bonds only
  • Ex Butter, lard solids at room temp.
  • Unsaturated fatty acids (plant fats) have at
    least one double bond (kinks in chain)
  • Monounsaturated only one double bond
  • Polyunsaturated many double bonds
  • Ex Vegetable oils liquid at room temp

16
Hydrogenated fatty acids
  • Hydrogen is artificially added to replace double
    bonds with single bonds.
  • Liquids are solidified
  • Ex peanut butter, margarine

17
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18
B. Phospholipids
  • 2 fatty acids (tails) attached to phosphate group
    head
  • When placed in water they self assemble into a
    micelle

19
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20
C. Steroids
  • Lipids characterized by carbon skeletons
    consisting of four fused rings
  • Ex. Cholesterol
  • Common component of animal cell membranes (this
    is why animal meat is higher in cholesterol)
  • Precursor from which other steroids, including
    sex hormones, are synthesized

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22
3. Proteins
  • Most diverse of all macromolecules
  • Humans have over twenty thousand proteins in
    their bodies, each performing a specific function

23
General Categories of Proteins
  • 1) Structural Spider silk
  • 2) Storage Egg white
  • 3) Transport Hemoglobin
  • 4) Hormonal Insulin
  • 5) Receptor Transport protein
  • 6) Contractile Actin myosin
  • 7) Defensive Antibodies
  • 8) Enzymatic Digestive enzymes

24
Monomers Amino Acids
  • 20 total amino acids
  • 8 essential AAs must be derived from food
  • 12 can be synthesized by body
  • THREE TYPES
  • Non-polar (8)
  • Polar (7)
  • Electrically charged (acidic, basic) (5)

25
General structure of amino acid
  • All amino acids have a carboxyl group (-COOH) on
    one end and an amino group (NH3) on the other
  • R group determines their interactions with one
    another to form secondary, tertiary, and
    quaternary structure

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27
Polymers polypeptides
  • Formed by dehydration synthesis
  • Peptide bonds bonds between adjacent amino acids

28
Protein shape determines function
  • Primary structure sequence of amino acids

29
  • Secondary Structure coiling or folding of
    polypeptide chain in repeated patterns
  • Ex Alpha helices
  • Ex Beta pleated sheets

30
  • Tertiary structure irregular contortions from
    interactions between side chains (R-groups) with
    one another
  • H-bonds
  • Disulfide bridges
  • Hydrophobic interactions

31
  • Quaternary structure 2 or more polypeptide
    chains aggregated into 1 functional molecule

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4. Nucleic Acids
  • Nucleic acids are the building blocks of both DNA
    and RNA
  • DNA directs its own replication, transmits
    genetic information to future offspring, and
    controls RNA synthesis
  • RNA controls protein synthesis

34
Nucleotides
35
Monomer Nucleotides
  • Nucleotide - building block of nucleic acids
  • Composed of three subunits
  • 1) Pentose sugar (ribose or deoxyribose)
  • 2) Phosphate groups comprise the
    sugar-phosphate backbone
  • 3) Nitrogenous bases variable portions of the
    molecule

36
DNA vs. RNA
37
Polymer polynucleotide
  • Adjacent nucleotides are joined by covalent bonds
    called phosphodiester linkages between the -OH on
    one nucleotide and the phosphate on the next
    nucleotide

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39
Complementary Base Pairing
  • Always a Pyrimidine with a Purine
  • Purines are Adenine Guanine
  • Pyrimidines are Cytosine, Thymine (DNA only), and
    Uracil (RNA only)

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41
Complementary Base Pairing
42
Why Do Bases Bond This Way?
  • Hydrogen bonds
  • A and T form two hydrogen bonds
  • G and C form three hydrogen bonds
  • Therefore, there is no way to bond inappropriately

43
Base Pairing
T
A
44
Base Pairing
C
G
45
Macro Structure of DNA
  • Double Helix- Twisted Ladder of A-T and G-C
    base pairing
  • DNA contains genes (thousands) that code for
    proteins
  • In association with proteins (histones) DNA makes
    chromosomes (46 in humans)
  • Stored in nuclei of Eukaryotic cells
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