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Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

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Page 1: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Chapter 5 notes

The structure and function of

Macromolecules

Page 2: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.1

Polymer: a long molecule consisting of similar or identical building blocks- like a train with many cars- monomers: repeating units that are the building blocks

Diversity of life is based around 40 or 50 polymers

Page 3: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.1

Monomers are connected together by dehydration synthesis (anabolic)- covalent bond w/ the loss of H2O

Polymers are broken down by hydrolysis (catabolic)- reverse rxn. of dehydration synthesis- “break with water”

Page 4: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.1

Dehydration removes a watermolecule, forming a new bond

Short polymer Unlinked monomer

Longer polymerDehydration reaction in the synthesis of a polymer

HO

HO

HO

H2O

H

H

H

4321

1 2 3

(a)

Page 5: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.1

Hydrolysis adds a watermolecule, breaking a bond

HO

HO HO

H2O

H

H

H321

1 2 3 4

Page 6: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

Carbohydrates: include sugars and polymers

Monosaccharides (monos = single; sacchar = sugar)- molecular formula is CH2O

- ex. Glucose (C6H12O6)

- most sugars are rings when aqueous

Page 7: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

(a) Linear and ring forms (b) Abbreviated ring structure

Page 8: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

Disaccharide: two monosaccharides joined by a glycosidic linkage- formed by dehydration synthesis- glucose + glucose = maltose + H2O

- glucose + fructose = sucrose + H2O

Page 9: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

(b) Dehydration reaction in the synthesis of sucrose

Glucose Fructose Sucrose

MaltoseGlucoseGlucose

(a) Dehydration reaction in the synthesis of maltose

Page 10: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

Polysaccharides: polymers w/ few hundred to a few thousand monomers-fcn. of a polysaccharide is determined by monomers and positions of glycosidic linkages

Page 11: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

Storage polysaccharides- starch: found in plants; consists only of glucose monomers (1-4 linkage); how plants store glucose (chloroplasts)- glycogen: polymer of glucose found in animals; stored in liver and muscle cells

Page 12: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

Structural polysaccharides- cellulose: major component of plant cell walls- note: 2 ring structures of glucose (alpha and beta )- cellulose is composed of all glucose- cellulose = “insoluble fiber”

Page 13: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

(a) and glucose ring structures

Glucose Glucose

Page 14: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

Page 15: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

Glucosemonomer

Cellulosemolecules

Microfibril

Cellulosemicrofibrilsin a plantcell wall

0.5 µm

10 µm

Cell walls

Page 16: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Carbohydrates

Structural polysaccharides (cntd.)- chitin: carbohydrate used by arthropods to build exoskeletons

- also used to make decomposable surgical thread

Page 17: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.2

The structureof the chitinmonomer.

(a) (b) (c)Chitin forms theexoskeleton ofarthropods.

Chitin is used to makea strong and flexiblesurgical thread.

Page 18: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

Lipids: little or no affinity for water; consist mostly of hydrocarbons- 3 families: fats, phospholipids, steroids

Fat: composed of 2 parts- glycerol: 3 carbon alcohol w/ hydroxyl - fatty acids: long carbon skeletons w/ carboxyl groups

Page 19: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

Fatty acid(palmitic acid)

(a) Dehydration reaction in the synthesis of a fat

Glycerol

Page 20: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

Fatty acids can vary in length and in the number and location of double bonds- “saturated”: no double bonds; most animal fats; solid at room temp.- “unsaturated”: has one or more double bonds which removes H atoms; plants and fish; liquid at room temp.

Page 21: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

(a) Saturated fat

Structuralformula of asaturated fatmolecule

Stearic acid, asaturated fattyacid

Page 22: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

(b)Unsaturated fat

Structural formulaof an unsaturatedfat molecule

Oleic acid, anunsaturatedfatty acid

cis doublebond causesbending

Page 23: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

The major fcn. of fats is energy storage.- 1g of fat stores more than twice as much energy as 1g of a polysaccharide- mammals stock food reserves in adipose cells

Page 24: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

Phospholipids: similar to fats but have only 2 fatty acid tails; 3rd hydroxyl group joins to a phosphate group- show ambivalent behavior to water

- head= polar (hydrophilic); tail= nonpolar (hydrophobic)

- arranged in a bilayer, or double layer

Page 25: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

(b)Space-filling model(a) (c)Structural formula Phospholipid symbol

Fatty acids

Hydrophilichead

Hydrophobictails

Choline

Phosphate

Glycerol

Hyd

rop

ho

bic

tai

lsH

ydro

ph

ilic

hea

d

Page 26: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

Steroids: lipids with a carbon skeleton consisting of 4 fused rings- differ in functional groups attached to rings- Cholesterol: found in animal cell membranes; precursor for other steroids

Page 27: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.3

Page 28: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Proteins: account for more than 50% of the dry weight of most cells- used for structural support, storage, transport, signaling, movement, and defense

Page 29: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Proteins are polymers constructed from the same set of 20 amino acids- called polypeptides- consist of one or more polypeptides folded and coiled into specific conformations

Page 30: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins- carbon is bonded to an animo group, a carboxyl group, a hydrogen atom, and a variable (R)- grouped according to side chains (nonpolar, polar, acidic, basic)

Page 31: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Page 32: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Page 33: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Amino acids are bonded together by a peptide bond- carboxyl group of one amino acid connects w/ the amino group of another (dehydration synthesis)

Page 34: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Page 35: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Four levels of protein structure- primary structure: unique sequence of amino acids- even a slight change can affect a proteins conformation and ability to function

- ex. Sickle-cell disease

Page 36: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Page 37: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

- secondary structure: coils or folds that are a result of hydrogen bonds at regular intervals

- helix: delicate coil held together by hydrogen bonding between every fourth amino acid

- pleated sheets: two or more regions lie parallel to each other

Page 38: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Page 39: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

- tertiary structure: irregular contortions from interactions between side chains (R groups)

- hydrophobic interactions: nonpolar side chains cluster in the core, away from water

- van der Waals interactions help hold them together

Page 40: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

- disulfide bridges: covalent bond between two cysteine monomers (have sulfhydryl groups)

- ionic bonds and hydrogen bonds also contribute

Page 41: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Page 42: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

- quaternary structure: overall protein structure resulting from combining of multiple subunits

The unique conformation endows each protein with a specific function

Page 43: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Page 44: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

Page 45: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.4

The unique conformation endows each protein with a specific function- denaturation: protein unravels and losses its conformation

- pH, [salt], temperature

Page 46: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.5

Compounds that are responsible for determining the amino acid sequence of a polypeptide.

Two types of nucleic acids- deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)- ribonucleic acid (RNA)

Flow of genetic information: DNA RNA Protein

Page 47: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.5

mRNA

Synthesis ofmRNA in thenucleus

DNA

NUCLEUS

mRNA

CYTOPLASM

Movement ofmRNA into cytoplasmvia nuclear pore

Ribosome

AminoacidsPolypeptide

Synthesisof protein

1

2

3

Page 48: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.5

Nucleotides are the monomers (building blocks) of nucleic acids-nucleotide = nitrogenous base + pentose (5-carbon sugar) + phosphate

Page 49: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.55 end

Nucleoside

Nitrogenousbase

Phosphategroup Sugar

(pentose)

(b) Nucleotide

(a) Polynucleotide, or nucleic acid

3 end

3C

3C

5C

5C

Nitrogenous bases

Pyrimidines

Cytosine (C) Thymine (T, in DNA)Uracil (U, in RNA)

Purines

Adenine (A) Guanine (G)

Sugars

Deoxyribose (in DNA) Ribose (in RNA)

(c) Nucleoside components: sugars

Page 50: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.5

Two families of nitrogenous bases:- pyrimidines: single ring; cytosine (C), thymine (T), and Uracil (U)

- purines: double ring; adenine (A), and guanine (G)

Page 51: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.5

Difference between DNA and RNA is in the sugar. DNA lacks an oxygen atom attached to its number 2 carbon

Polynucleotide: nucleotides are joined by phosphodiester linkage

Page 52: Chapter 5 notes The structure and function of Macromolecules

Concept 5.5

DNA molecules have two polynucleotides that form a double helix.- Watson and Crick (1953)- A binds to T; C binds to G; forms two complementary strands