html5-img
1 / 115

The structure & function of large biological macromolecules

The structure & function of large biological macromolecules. Campbell and Reece CHAPTER 5. Macromolecules are Polymers. polymer: long molecule consisting of many similar, sometimes identical, building blocks linked by covalent bonds monomer: the smaller units that make up a polymer.

onofre
Download Presentation

The structure & function of large biological macromolecules

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. The structure & function of large biological macromolecules Campbell and Reece CHAPTER 5

  2. Macromolecules are Polymers • polymer: long molecule consisting of many similar, sometimes identical, building blocks linked by covalent bonds • monomer: the smaller units that make up a polymer

  3. Many Monomers Make a Polymer

  4. Making Polymers • 2 monomers joined by dehydration reaction

  5. Disassembling Polymers • hydrolysis reaction breaks apart 2 monomers in a polymer

  6. Diversity of Polymers • possible varieties of macromolecules infinite • only use 40 -50 monomers • small molecules common to all organisms are ordered into species unique macromolecules

  7. Carbohydrates • Simple Carbohydrates • Sugars • Monosaccharides • Disaccharides • Complex Carbohydrates • Polysaccharides

  8. Monosaccharides • multiples of the unit CH2O • glucose most common monosaccharide

  9. Monosaccharide Diversity • depending on position of the carbonyl group in a sugar it is classified as either: • aldose (aldehyde sugar) • ketose (ketone sugar)

  10. Monosaccharide Diversity • 3 to 7 carbons • hexose: 6 carbons long • pentose: 5 carbons • triose: 3 carbons

  11. Monosaccharide Diversity • most hexoses and pentoses form rings in aqueous solutions • used in cellular respiration (especially glucose) • serve as raw materials for synthesis of amino acids and fatty acids • if not immediately used in these ways used to build disaccharides or polysaccharides

  12. Forms of Glucose Alpha Glucose Beta Glucose

  13. Disaccharides • reaction: 2 monosaccharides joined in a glycosidic linkage • covalent bond formed by dehydration reaction

  14. Disaccharides • 2 glucose = maltose (malt sugar) • glucose + galactose • glucose + fructose = sucrose (table sugar) • sucrose: form plants use to transport sugars from leaves  roots & other nonphotosynthetic parts of plant

  15. Polysaccharides • polymers of hundreds to thousands of monosaccharides joined by glycosidic linkages • function determined by its sugar monomers & positions of glycosidic linkages • 2 types: • storage of monosaccharides to be used for energy when needed • building material

  16. Storage Polysaccharides • Plants store glucose (the monomers)as starch (the polymer) • represents stored energy

  17. Starch • most is made of α glucose monomers joined in 1-4 linkages • simplest form of starch (amylose) is unbranched • complex starch, amylopectin, has 1-6 linkage

  18. Storage Polysaccharides • Animals: store glucose (the monomers) as glycogen (the polymer) in 1-4 & 1-6 linkages • stored mainly in liver & muscle cells • humans store about 1 days supply of glucose this way

  19. Structural Polysaccharides • Cellulose: most abundant organic cpd on Earth • is polymer of β glucose (makes every monomer of glucose “upside down” from its neighbors)

  20. Starch & Cellulose Starch Cellulose • many are mostly helical • digested by enzymes breaking its α linkages • never branched • has –OH groups available for H-bonds • digested by enzymes breaking its β linkages

  21. Cellulose • digested by very few organisms (don’t have enzymes to do it) • in humans: passes thru GI tract abrading walls & stimulating mucus secretion along the way  smoother passage of food thru • not technically a nutrient but is important

  22. “Insoluble Fiber” = Cellulose

  23. Cellulose • Cows: have bacteria and protists in their guts that have enzymes that can digest cellulose  nutrients that can be used by cow • Termites unable to digest cellulose in wood it eats have prokaryotes & protists to break it down and so termite can use nutrients

  24. Termite Life Cycle

  25. Termites

  26. Chitin • another structural polysaccharide • used by arthropods to build exoskeletons • exoskeletons: made of chitin + calcium carbonate

  27. Chitin • also in many fungi cell walls • monomer has N group attached

  28. Lipids • large group of hydrophobic molecules • do not have true monomers • Includes: • Waxes • Steroids • Some Pigments • Oils, Fats • Phospholipids

  29. Fats • large molecules assembled from smaller molecules by a dehydration reaction • 2 parts: • Glycerol • Fatty Acid

  30. Glycerol

  31. Fatty Acids • long (16-18) chain of carbons (hydrophobic) • @ one end carboxyl group (hence fatty acid)

  32. Triglyceride • 3 fatty acids + glycerol

  33. Saturated & Unsaturated

  34. Saturated Fats • include most animal fats • most are solids @ room temperatures

  35. Unsaturated Fats • fats of plants, fish • usually liquid @ room temperature

  36. Hydrogenated Vegetable Oil • seen on some food labels • means that unsaturated fats have been synthetically converted to saturated fats to keep from separating

  37. Plaques • deposits of saturated & trans fats (hydrogenated vegetable oils with trans double bonds) in muscularis of arteries

  38. Plaques • lead to atherosclerosis (leading cause of heart attacks) by decreasing resilience of vessel & impeding blood flow

  39. Trans Fats • USDA now requires nutritional labels to include amount of trans fats • some cities & Denmark ban restaurants from using trans fats

  40. Essential Fatty Acids • cannot be synthesized in body so must be included in diet • include: omega-3 fatty acids: • required for normal growth in children • probably protect against cardiovascular disease in adults

  41. Omega-3 Fatty Acids

  42. Energy Storage • 1 g fat has 2x chemical potential energy as 1 g of polysaccharide • plants (generally immobile) can store majority of their energy in polysaccharides except vegetable oils extracted from their seeds

  43. Functions of Fat • Plants: storage of energy • Animals: • storage of energy • protect organs • insulation

  44. Phospholipids • essential component of cell membranes

  45. Phospholipids • when added to water self-assemble into lipid bilayers

  46. Steroids • lipids characterized by a carbon skeleton made of 4 fused rings • cholesterol & sex hormones have functional groups attached to these fused rings

More Related