1 / 95

Organic Compounds

Organic Compounds. AP Biology. The Chemistry of Carbon. The Uniqueness and Variety of Carbon.

zeus-bruce
Download Presentation

Organic Compounds

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. Organic Compounds AP Biology

  2. The Chemistry of Carbon

  3. The Uniqueness and Variety of Carbon

  4. Don’t forget the structure and function relationship. The shape of a molecule is important because structure often determines function (or, if you prefer, the shape probably evolved for a particular function). See page 41 in text.

  5. Chemical Groups

  6. Functional Groups; take place in the chemical reactions.

  7. Smaller organic molecules join together to form larger molecules (macromolecules) • 4 major classes of macromolecules: • Carbohydrates • Lipids • Proteins • Nucleic acids Macromolecules

  8. Long molecules built by linking a chain of repeating smaller units together • polymers • monomers = repeated small units • Held together by covalent bonds (shared pairs of electrons) Polymers

  9. Condensation reaction • Dehydration synthesis • Joins monomers by “taking” H2O out • 1 monomer provides OH • the other monomer provides H • together these form H2O • requires energy & enzymes How to build a polymer

  10. Hydrolysis • Use H2O to break apart monomers • Reverse of condensation reaction • H2O is split into H and OH • H & OH group attach where the covalent bond used to be • ex: Hydrolysis is used in digestion to break down large macromolecules How to break down a polymer

  11. Carbohydrates

  12. Carbohydrates are composed of C, H, O • carbo - hydr - ate CH2O (CH2O)x C6H12O6 • Function: • energy u energy storage • raw materials u structural materials Monomer: simple sugars (monosaccharides) • ex: sugars & starches

  13. What functional groups? carbonyl aldehyde ketone hydroxyl

  14. Most names for sugars end in -ose • Classified by number of carbons • 6C = hexose (glucose) • 5C = pentose (fructose, ribose) • 3C = triose (glyceraldehyde) Sugars

  15. 5C & 6C sugars form rings in aqueous solutions (in cells). Sugar structure Notice carbons are numbered

  16. C 6' C O 5' C C 4' 1' Numbered carbons C C 3' 2'

  17. Monosaccharides • simple 1 monomer sugars • glucose • Disaccharides • 2 monomers • sucrose • Polysaccharides • large polymers • starch Simple & complex sugars

  18. Disaccharide formed by dehydration synthesis. Two monosaccharides joined by a glycosidic linkage.

  19. Dehydration synthesis disaccharide monosaccharides Building sugars | glucose | maltose | glucose glycosidic linkage

  20. Dehydration synthesis monosaccharides disaccharide | glucose | fructose | sucrose structural isomers glycosidic linkage

  21. Polymers of sugars • costs little energy to build • easily reversible = release energy • Function: • energy storage • starch (plants) • glycogen (animals) • building materials = structure • cellulose (plants) • chitin (arthropods & fungi) Polysaccharides

  22. Branched vs linear polysaccharides

  23. Molecular structure determines function Polysaccharide diversity • isomers of glucose • How does structure influence function???

  24. Digesting starch vs. cellulose

  25. Most abundant organic compound on Earth Cellulose

  26. Which food will get into your blood more quickly? • apple • rice cakes • corn flakes • bagel • peanut M&M Glycemic index

  27. Ranking of carbohydrates based on their immediate effect on blood glucose (blood sugar) levels • Carbohydrate foods that breakdown quickly during digestion have the highest glycemic indices. Their blood sugar response is fast & high. Glycemic index

  28. Which food will get into your blood more quickly? • apple 36 • rice cakes 82 • corn flakes 84 • bagel 72 • peanut M&M 33 Glycemic index

  29. Lipids

  30. Lipids are composed of C, H, O • long hydrocarbon chain • Diverse group • fats • phospholipids • steroids • Do not form polymers • big molecules made of subunit smaller molecules • not a continuing chain

  31. Structure: • glycerol (3C alcohol) + fatty acid • fatty acid = long HC “tail” with COOH group at “head” Fats dehydration synthesis

  32. Triacylglycerol • 3 fatty acids linked to glycerol • ester linkage = between OH & COOH Fat

  33. Dehydration synthesis

  34. Long HC chain • polar or non-polar? • hydrophilic or hydrophobic? • Function: • energy storage • very rich • 2x carbohydrates • cushion organs • insulates body • think whale blubber! Fats

  35. All C bonded to H • No C=C double bonds • long, straight chain • most animal fats • solid at room temp. • contributes to cardiovascular disease (atherosclerosis) = plaque deposits Saturated fats

  36. C=C double bonds in the fatty acids • plant & fish fats • vegetable oils • liquid at room temperature • the kinks made by double bonded C prevent the molecules from packing tightlytogether Unsaturated fats

  37. Structure: • glycerol + 2 fatty acids + PO4 • PO4 negatively charged • other small molecules may also be attached • adenine (ATP) Phospholipids

  38. Hydrophobic or hydrophilic? • fatty acid tails = hydrophobic • PO4 = hydrophilic head • dual “personality” Phospholipids • interaction with H2O is complex • & very important!

  39. Hydrophilic heads attracted to H2O • Hydrophobic tails “hide” from H2O • self-assemble into aggregates • micelle • liposome • early evolutionary stage of cell? Phospholipids in water

  40. Phospholipids define outside vs. inside • Where do we find phospholipids in cells? • cell membranes Why is this important?

  41. Phospholipids of cell membrane • double layer = bilayer • hydrophilic heads on outside • in contact with aqueous solution • hydrophobic tails on inside • form core • forms barrier between cell & external environment Phospholipids & cells

  42. ex: cholesterol, sex hormones • 4 fused C rings • different steroids created by attaching different functional groups to rings cholesterol Steroids

  43. Diversity in steroids

  44. What a big difference a little atom can make! From Cholesterol  Sex Hormones

  45. Important cell component • animal cell membranes • precursor of all other steroids • including vertebrate sex hormones • high levels in blood may contribute to cardiovascular disease Cholesterol

  46. helps keep cell membranes fluid & flexible Cholesterol

More Related