1 / 45

Understanding Organic Compounds: Functions, Structure, and Enzymes

Explore the functions and structures of organic compounds found in living things, including carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids. Learn about the important role of enzymes in chemical reactions.

rederr
Download Presentation

Understanding Organic Compounds: Functions, Structure, and Enzymes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding Organic Compounds Research Biology

  2. Objective • What are the functions of each group of organic compounds?

  3. Interest Grabber Life’s backbone Section 2-3 • Most of the compounds that make up living things contain carbon. In fact, carbon makes up the basic structure, or “backbone,” of these compounds. Each atom of carbon has four electrons in its outer energy level, which makes it possible for each carbon atom to form four bonds with other atoms. • As a result, carbon atoms can form long chains. A huge number of different carbon compounds exist. Each compound has a different structure. For example, carbon chains can be straight or branching. Also, other kinds of atoms can be attached to the carbon chain.

  4. Isooctane Methane Acetylene Butadiene Benzene

  5. Macromolecules “giant molecules” • Formed by a process called polymerization

  6. Monomers • Smaller units

  7. Polymers • Linked up monomers

  8. Carbohydrates • Compounds made up of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen atoms usually in a ratio of 1:2:1 • Main source of energy • The monomers of starch are sugars

  9. Single sugar molecules are called monosaccharides • The large macromolecules formed from monosaccharides are known as polysaccharides

  10. Starch Glucose

  11. Lipids • Made mostly from carbon and hydrogen atoms • Used to store energy

  12. Lipid Glycerol Fatty Acids

  13. Proteins • Macromolecules that contain nitrogen as well as carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen • Proteins are polymers of molecules called amino acids

  14. Carboxyl group General structure Alanine Serine Amino Acids

  15. More than 20 different amino acids, can join to any other amino acid • The instructions for arranging amino acids into many different proteins are stored in DNA • Each protein has a specific role • The shape of proteins can be very important

  16. Proteins Amino Acids

  17. Nucleic Acids • Macromolecules containing hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, carbon, and phosphorus Double Helix

  18. Nucleotides • Consists of 3 parts: 5-carbon sugar, phosphate group and nitrogen base Nitrogen Base Phosphate group 5-Carbon Sugar

  19. 2 kinds of nucleic acids • RNA (ribonucleic acids) – contains sugar ribose • DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) – contains sugar deoxyribose

  20. Organic CompoundReview Questions

  21. Name four groups of organic compounds found in living things carbohydrate, lipid, protein, nucleic acids 2. Describe at least one function of each group of organic compounds carbohydrates – energy lipids – store energy proteins – form tissue nucleic acids – transmit hereditary information

  22. 3. Compare the structures and functions of lipids and starches Lipids are made from carbon and hydrogen. Starches are made of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. They both can be used to store energy

  23. Understanding Enzymes Notes

  24. Objectives • What happens to chemical bonds during chemical reactions? • How do energy changes affect whether a chemical reaction will occur? • Why are enzymes important to living things?

  25. The Big Idea • Living things are made up of chemical compounds • Everything that happens to an organism is based on chemical reactions

  26. Chemical Reactions • A process that changes or transforms one set of chemicals into another

  27. Reactants • Elements or compounds that enter into a reaction

  28. Products • Elements or compounds produced by a chemical reaction

  29. Example Reaction: Getting rid of carbon dioxide • In the blood • In the lungs CO2 + H20  H2CO3 (carbonic acid) H2CO3 CO2 + H2O Released as you breathe

  30. Energy-Releasing Reaction Energy-Absorbing Reaction Activation energy Products Activation energy Reactants Reactants Products Energy in reactions

  31. Activation Energy • The energy that is needed to get a reaction started

  32. Enzymes • Some chemical reactions are too slow or have activation energies that are too high to make them practical for living tissue • These chemical reactions are made possible by catalysts

  33. Catalyst • Substance that speeds up the rate of chemical reactions • Work by lowering a reactions activation energy

  34. Enzyme • Biological catalysts • Speed up reactions in cells • Very specific • Named for the reaction is catylzes • Enzyme names always end in -ase

  35. Reaction pathway without enzyme Activation energy without enzyme Reactants Activation energy with enzyme Reaction pathway with enzyme Products

  36. Substrates • The reactants of enzyme catalyzed reactions • The active site of the enzyme and the substrate have complementary shapes • Fit like a lock and key

  37. Enzyme Action Enzyme – substrate complex

  38. Enzyme (hexokinase) Glucose ADP Substrates Products ATP Glucose-6- phosphate Active site Products are released Substrates bind to enzyme Enzyme-substrate complex Substrates are converted into products

  39. Regulation of Enzyme Activity • Enzymes are affected by any variable that affects chemical reactions • pH • Temperature • Concentration of enzyme

  40. Understanding Enzymes Review Questions

  41. What happens to chemical bonds during chemical reactions Bonds are broken in reactants and new bonds are formed in products 2. Describe the role of energy in chemical reactions some chemical reactions release energy, and other chemical reactions absorb energy. Energy changes determine how easily a chemical reaction will occur

  42. 3. What are enzymes, and how are they important to living things? Enzymes are biological catylasts. Cells use enzymes to speed up virtually every important chemical reaction that takes place in cells

  43. 4. Describe how enzymes work, including the role of the enzyme substrate complex Substrates, the reactants of an enzyme-catylzed reaction, attach to the enzyme at an active site and form an enzyme – substrate complex. Once the complex is formed, the enzyme helps convert substrate into product

  44. 5. A change in pH can change the protein. How might a change in pH affect the function of an enzyme such as hexokinase (hint: think about the analogy of the lock and key) A change in pH could change the shape of hexokinase. This change would diminish the ability of glucose and ATP to bind to the active site of the enzyme.

More Related