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Learning Objectives. DefineEssential amino acids (and list all 9 of them)PhytoalexinContrastPrimary vs. secondary metabolitesList:Examples of the 3 classes of secondary metabolites. The 9 Essential Amino Acids. Our cells need 20 amino acidsWe make 11Other 9 we must get from dietTherefore, t
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1. Lecture 5 Biology 2500
Chapter 2: Secondary Metabolites
2. Learning Objectives Define
Essential amino acids (and list all 9 of them)
Phytoalexin
Contrast
Primary vs. secondary metabolites
List:
Examples of the 3 classes of secondary metabolites
3. The 9 Essential Amino Acids Our cells need 20 amino acids
We make 11
Other 9 we must get from diet
Therefore, they are “essential”
Meat, eggs, dairy have all 20
4. Malnutrition Can occur when people don’t get all 9
In developing countries, often only 1 staple grain is available
Corn or wheat or rice
These are lacking in some amino acids
Example: in Southern U.S., corn was staple
Often the only food
Severe medical condition occurred
5. Balanced Vegetarian Diets Some cultures have developed balanced diet through trial and error
Beans and corn together have complete nutrition!
All 9 essential a.a.’s are covered
Traditional diet of Mexico
Corn tortillas
Beans
6. Primary Metabolites Found within all plants
Necessary for the life of the plant
Ex:
Simple sugars
Amino acids
Proteins
Nucleic acids
7. Secondary Metabolites Not necessarily in all plants
Not necessarily in all tissues
Functions:
Can serve as chemical signals
Protection against herbivores, pathogens, competitors
Three classes (alkaloids, terpenoids, phenolics)
8. Alkaloids Medicinally the most important
Generally, taste bitter (have alkaline, or basic chemical properties)
9. Examples of Alkaloids Morphine
1st to be isolated
Analgesic, derived from opium poppies
Cocaine
From the coca plant
An anesthetic, Incas use to alleviate hunger, pain
Caffeine
Stimulant in coffee, tea, cocoa
Lethal to insects, fungi, nearby seedlings
10. More Examples of Alkaloids Nicotine
Highly toxic, derived from tobacco
Acts as a phytoalexin, produced when herbivores attack leaves
Atropine
Well-known pupil dialator
Cleopatra used it
Medieval Europeans known to derive from deadly nightshade plants (F: Solanaceae—why interesting?)
Cardiac stimulant
11. Terpenoids Largest class of secondary metabolites
All are built of isoprenes (C5H8)
Isoprene is exuded by plants in large quantities
Bluish haze over forests
12. Mints Have large amounts of monoterpenoids, sequiterpenoids
Highly volatile
Contribute to fragrance
13. Taxol A diterpenoid, has anti-cancer properties
Chemotherapy: like radiation disrupts cell division, but more cleverly
Freezes the spindle fibers, so they cannot pull the chromosomes
Particularly effective against some breast and ovarian cancers
Like radiation, there can be some side-effects
14. Taxol Websites Bristol-Meyers Squibb website
Oregon State University website
15. 7th Inning Stretch
16. Chemotherapy and Conservation Taxol was discovered in Pacific yew bark
Loggers cannot use it
After clear-cutting, they plant only trees they consider “useful”—not Pacific yew
Saving wild places may help to save people too!
17. Rubber The largest terpenoid
Contains 400 to 100,000 isoprene units
Latex comes from a tropical tree
Milky, sticky, “drowns” any attacking insects
Harvested by indigenous peoples using knives, cups
A renewable resource!
18. Cardiac Glycosides A class of terpenoids which can cause heart attacks
We can use them to regulate heartbeat!
Monarch butterfly uses these!
Eat milkweed (rich in these terpenoids)
Birds that eat a monarch eventually vomit
19. Phenolics ALL of these have a 6 carbon ring with hydroxyl group
Include flavonoids, tannins, lignins
20. Flavonoids Water-soluble pigments, found in red wine, grape juice
Intensely studied for cholesterol-reduction
21. Tannins Have a bad taste! Defends against herbivores
Bind and modify protein structure
Reduce proteins available to herbivores
Used in leather tanning process
Ex:
Acorns must be soaked, dried before native Americans would grind into flour
Apparently, not poisonous to mice, deer, squirrels
22. Lignins Add strength to cell wall
Waterproof
23. Aspirin Greeks and native Americans used bark of willows (Genus: Salix) as analgesic