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The Chemistry
       of Life
Heartlife 2012-2013
   Teacher: Julie Pen



   Science is Organized Knowledge
Elements of Life


• 96% of the human body is made up of:
    – Oxygen
    – Carbon
    – Hydrogen
    – Nitrogen

• Calcium, phosphorus, sulfur,
   potassium, and other elements               in trace
   amounts
Organic Molecules


• Organic Compounds
  – molecules within living things or arising from
    previously living organisms
  – contain Carbon
  – ALSO contain C-H bonds
     •   nucleic acids
     •   fats (lipids)
     •   sugars (carbohydrates)
     •   proteins (+ enzymes)
     •   many fossil fuels
                                             Carbon Atom
Carbon Bonding


• With four valence electrons,
  carbon wants to form four
  covalent bonds to become
  stable (octet rule).
   – many different bonding
     configurations are possible
       • straight chains
       • rings
       • branched chains
   – many different molecule sizes
       • 1 or 2 carbon atoms
       • hundreds or thousands of carbon
         atoms in a single molecule
Four Groups of Organic Molecules

• Carbohydrates
  – fuel for cell functions

• Lipids
  – stored energy and
    membrane structure

• Nucleic Acids
  – genetic information

• Proteins
  – many cell functions
Carbohydrates

• Fuel for cell functions
• Made up of saccharides (sugars)
   –   Glucose
   –   Sucrose
   –   Dextrose
   –   Maltose
   –   Lactose
   –   Fructose
   –   Amylose
   –   Cellulose,
 ...and many more
Carbohydrates

                                             I
            Base          (CH2O)n     or H - C - OH
          Structure:                         I

 Monosaccharides - simple sugars
  made up of 3 to 6 carbons

 Disaccharides - 2 monosaccharides
  covalently linked.

 Polysaccharides - polymers
  consisting of chains of
  monosaccharide or disaccharide
  units.
Monosaccharides

Monosaccharides are simple sugars made up
of 3 to 6 carbons.

                • The free ends of a straight
   H
       C
           O    monosaccharide chain often bond to
                form a cyclic molecular structure
  H    C   OH

 HO    C   H

  H    C   OH

  H    C   OH

       CH2OH

   D-glucose
Disaccharides


Disaccharides are two monosaccharides covalently
linked.
• Maltose is made when starch is broken down – it is
simply two linked glucoses.

                          6 CH2OH                        6 CH2OH

                          5         O                    5         O
                     H                       H       H                         H
                          H                              H
                                         1           4                     1
                    4     OH        H                    OH        H
                     OH                          O                             OH
                              3     2                        3         2

                          H         OH       maltose     H         OH
Common Disaccharides


Other common disaccharides include:

Sucrose
(common
  table sugar)



                                 Lactose
                                 (milk sugar)
Plant Polysaccharides
     CH 2OH                         6 CH OH                   CH2OH                    CH2OH                    CH 2OH

H             O        H       H    5
                                        2
                                            O     H       H           O    H       H           O    H       H            O    H
                                                                                                                                   Amylose often
     H
     OH       H    1
                                    H
                                   4 OH     H 1
                                                              H
                                                              OH      H
                                                                                       H
                                                                                       OH      H
                                                                                                                H
                                                                                                                OH       H         has 300 – 600
                           O                          O                        O                        O                     OH
OH
                                        3   2
                                                                                                                H        OH
                                                                                                                                   linked glucose
     H        OH                    H       OH                H       OH               H       OH
                                                              amylose                                                              molecules

Plants store glucose as amylose or amylopectin, (commonly
called starch). Amylose is a glucose polymer.

    • Cellulose (found in plant
    roots, seed, fruits and tubers)
    consists of long linear chains of
    glucose.
          –         Cellulose provides strength
                   and rigidity to plant cell walls
                   and is not digestible by most
                   organisms (dietary fiber).
Animal Polysaccharides

                    CH2OH                            CH2OH
           H                    O                                O
                                                                                                                             glycogen
                                     H       H                         H
                 H                                H
                 OH             H                 OH             H      1
                                         O
           OH
                                                                       O
                    H           OH                   H           OH

      CH2OH                          CH2OH                            6 CH2                         CH2OH                    CH2OH
H               O       H       H                O       H       H    5       O        H       H            O    H       H           O    H
      H                              H                                  H                            H                       H
      OH        H                    OH          H                      OH    H    1               4 OH     H                OH      H
                                                                 4                         O                         O
                            O                                O                                                                            OH
OH                                                                             2
                                                                        3
      H         OH                   H           OH                    H      OH                    H       OH               H       OH




    Glycogen is the glucose storage polymer in animals.

    • The highly branched structure permits rapid release of
    glucose from glycogen stores, e.g., in muscle during
    exercise.
    • The ability to rapidly mobilize glucose is more essential
    to animals than to plants.
Lipids

• Formed from fatty acids
• Non-polar (hydrophobic) compounds
• Functions:
   – Stored energy & insulation
       • Triglycerides
   – Cell membrane structure
       • Phospholipids
   – Steroids
       • cholesterol
       • testosterone
       • estrogen
       • bile acids
       • Vitamin D
       ...and many more
Fatty Acids


Most fatty acids, the simplest lipids, are non-polar
           acids
and thus repel water.
                            • If every carbon atom in a fatty
                            acid chain is joined to another
                            carbon atom by a single bond
                            (and 2 H atoms), it is said
                            to be saturated.
                                   saturated
                                • from animals


                            • If a pair of carbon atoms is
                            joined by a double bond, it is
                            said to be unsaturated.
                                        unsaturated
                                • vegetable and fish
Stored Energy Lipids


• Triglycerides are the
  main form of lipid used
  to store energy in the
  body.
• They have a glycerol
  backbone with three
  fatty acid tails.
• When lipids are
  metabolized (broken
  down for use), they
  produce LOTS of energy
Cell Membrane Lipids


Cell membrane lipids are amphipathic, having a non-polar
                         amphipathic
(hydrophobic) end and a polar (hydrophilic) end.

                                              Phospholipids
                                              have a
                                              phosphate
                                              group plus two
                                              fatty acid tails.
                                              Hydrophobic
                                              tails hover
                                              together while
                                              the polar
                                              heads align to
                                              form a cell
                                              membrane.
Steroids




                           HO
                                           Cholesterol

• Steroids have a four fused carbon rings and a short branched
  hydrocarbon tail.
• Cholesterol is a steroid found in membranes, and is the
  precursor for synthesis of hormones (testosterone, estrogen,
  etc.), bile acids and vitamin D.
Nucleic Acids

 • Store, carry, and aid in the transmission of genetic information


• Only 2 types:

   – deoxyribonucleic
     acid (DNA)

   – ribonucleic acid
     (RNA)

• Made from
  chains of
  nucleotides
Nucleotide Structure

• Each nucleotide has three parts:
   – Nitrogen base
       •   Adenine
       •   Cytosine
       •   Guanine
       •   Thymine or Uracil

   – 5-carbon sugar
       • Ribose or Deoxyribose

   – Phosphate group

     Sugar-Phosphate Backbone
DNA


Deoxyribonucleic acid
   – Double-stranded helix

   – Has the sugar Deoxyribose

   – Forms chromosomes
      • carry genetic information

   – Uses four nucleotide bases
      •   Adenine
      •   Guanine
      •   Cytosine
      •   Thymine
RNA


Ribonucleic acid
   – single stranded (usually)
   – Has the sugar Ribose
   – Transcribes DNA to
     make proteins
   – Four nucleotide bases
      •   Adenine
      •   Guanine
      •   Cytosine
      •   Uracil (instead of Thymine)
Proteins

• Made from 20 different amino acids
• Seven major functions (S3CDET):
   – Storage: iron, amino acid storage
     (seeds, milk & egg whites)
   – Structural proteins: support and shape
     (collagen in hair/nails,
     microtubules/microfilaments)
   – Signaling: membrane receptor proteins &
     chemical messengers
   – Contractile: cell movement
     (cilia/flagella/pseudopodia, muscle)
   – Defensive: against foreign substance and
     disease-causing organisms (antibodies)
   – Enzymes: biological catalysts
   – Transport: hemoglobin
Amino Acids


• Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.
Protein Structure

• Each protein is made from a specific sequences of amino acids
  joined together by peptide bonds.
    – There are 1,000s of different proteins!
• The sequence of amino acids will determine the physical
  structure of the protein (how it folds).


   A single substitution
    may result in a
    protein that is not
    folded properly
    (sickle-cell anemia)

 Protein Folding Video
Proteins

• Proteins have many different jobs
   • function is often dictated by shape
        • shape is determined by the amino
         acid sequence that affects folding
   • Examples: hemoglobin, flagella,
   membrane receptors, hair, antibodies
Summary
•   Carbohydrates
     –   Easy-access (fast) fuel for cell functions
     –   Formed from simple “sugars” or saccharides
     –   Glucose, Sucrose, Dextrose, Maltose, Lactose, Fructose,
         Cellulose, Amylose
•   Lipids
     –   Formed from fatty acids
     –   Mainly non-polar (hydrophobic) compounds
     –   Functions:
             •   Triglycerides - stored energy & insulation
             •   Phospholipid bilayer – cell membranes
             •   Steroids – cholesterol, estrogen, bile acids, Vitamin D, etc.
•   Nucleic Acids
     –   Store, carry, and aid in the transmission of genetic information
     –   DNA & RNA - made from (chains of) nucleotides
     –   Each nucleotide has three parts:
             •   Phosphate group
             •   Nitrogen
             •   5-carbon sugar (Ribose or Deoxyribose)
•   Proteins
     –   Made from amino acids
     –   Seven major functions (S3CDET):
             •   Storage, Structure, Signaling, Contractile, Defensive,
                 Enzymes and Transport
Week 4 Lab

Microscope Orientation
   Proper Use and Care
 Newsprint wet mount
           Salt crystals

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The Chemistry of Life

  • 1. The Chemistry of Life Heartlife 2012-2013 Teacher: Julie Pen Science is Organized Knowledge
  • 2. Elements of Life • 96% of the human body is made up of: – Oxygen – Carbon – Hydrogen – Nitrogen • Calcium, phosphorus, sulfur, potassium, and other elements in trace amounts
  • 3. Organic Molecules • Organic Compounds – molecules within living things or arising from previously living organisms – contain Carbon – ALSO contain C-H bonds • nucleic acids • fats (lipids) • sugars (carbohydrates) • proteins (+ enzymes) • many fossil fuels Carbon Atom
  • 4. Carbon Bonding • With four valence electrons, carbon wants to form four covalent bonds to become stable (octet rule). – many different bonding configurations are possible • straight chains • rings • branched chains – many different molecule sizes • 1 or 2 carbon atoms • hundreds or thousands of carbon atoms in a single molecule
  • 5. Four Groups of Organic Molecules • Carbohydrates – fuel for cell functions • Lipids – stored energy and membrane structure • Nucleic Acids – genetic information • Proteins – many cell functions
  • 6. Carbohydrates • Fuel for cell functions • Made up of saccharides (sugars) – Glucose – Sucrose – Dextrose – Maltose – Lactose – Fructose – Amylose – Cellulose, ...and many more
  • 7. Carbohydrates I Base (CH2O)n or H - C - OH Structure: I  Monosaccharides - simple sugars made up of 3 to 6 carbons  Disaccharides - 2 monosaccharides covalently linked.  Polysaccharides - polymers consisting of chains of monosaccharide or disaccharide units.
  • 8. Monosaccharides Monosaccharides are simple sugars made up of 3 to 6 carbons. • The free ends of a straight H C O monosaccharide chain often bond to form a cyclic molecular structure H C OH HO C H H C OH H C OH CH2OH D-glucose
  • 9. Disaccharides Disaccharides are two monosaccharides covalently linked. • Maltose is made when starch is broken down – it is simply two linked glucoses. 6 CH2OH 6 CH2OH 5 O 5 O H H H H H H 1 4 1 4 OH H OH H OH O OH 3 2 3 2 H OH maltose H OH
  • 10. Common Disaccharides Other common disaccharides include: Sucrose (common table sugar) Lactose (milk sugar)
  • 11. Plant Polysaccharides CH 2OH 6 CH OH CH2OH CH2OH CH 2OH H O H H 5 2 O H H O H H O H H O H Amylose often H OH H 1 H 4 OH H 1 H OH H H OH H H OH H has 300 – 600 O O O O OH OH 3 2 H OH linked glucose H OH H OH H OH H OH amylose molecules Plants store glucose as amylose or amylopectin, (commonly called starch). Amylose is a glucose polymer. • Cellulose (found in plant roots, seed, fruits and tubers) consists of long linear chains of glucose. – Cellulose provides strength and rigidity to plant cell walls and is not digestible by most organisms (dietary fiber).
  • 12. Animal Polysaccharides CH2OH CH2OH H O O glycogen H H H H H OH H OH H 1 O OH O H OH H OH CH2OH CH2OH 6 CH2 CH2OH CH2OH H O H H O H H 5 O H H O H H O H H H H H H OH H OH H OH H 1 4 OH H OH H 4 O O O O OH OH 2 3 H OH H OH H OH H OH H OH Glycogen is the glucose storage polymer in animals. • The highly branched structure permits rapid release of glucose from glycogen stores, e.g., in muscle during exercise. • The ability to rapidly mobilize glucose is more essential to animals than to plants.
  • 13. Lipids • Formed from fatty acids • Non-polar (hydrophobic) compounds • Functions: – Stored energy & insulation • Triglycerides – Cell membrane structure • Phospholipids – Steroids • cholesterol • testosterone • estrogen • bile acids • Vitamin D ...and many more
  • 14. Fatty Acids Most fatty acids, the simplest lipids, are non-polar acids and thus repel water. • If every carbon atom in a fatty acid chain is joined to another carbon atom by a single bond (and 2 H atoms), it is said to be saturated. saturated • from animals • If a pair of carbon atoms is joined by a double bond, it is said to be unsaturated. unsaturated • vegetable and fish
  • 15. Stored Energy Lipids • Triglycerides are the main form of lipid used to store energy in the body. • They have a glycerol backbone with three fatty acid tails. • When lipids are metabolized (broken down for use), they produce LOTS of energy
  • 16. Cell Membrane Lipids Cell membrane lipids are amphipathic, having a non-polar amphipathic (hydrophobic) end and a polar (hydrophilic) end. Phospholipids have a phosphate group plus two fatty acid tails. Hydrophobic tails hover together while the polar heads align to form a cell membrane.
  • 17. Steroids HO Cholesterol • Steroids have a four fused carbon rings and a short branched hydrocarbon tail. • Cholesterol is a steroid found in membranes, and is the precursor for synthesis of hormones (testosterone, estrogen, etc.), bile acids and vitamin D.
  • 18. Nucleic Acids • Store, carry, and aid in the transmission of genetic information • Only 2 types: – deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) – ribonucleic acid (RNA) • Made from chains of nucleotides
  • 19. Nucleotide Structure • Each nucleotide has three parts: – Nitrogen base • Adenine • Cytosine • Guanine • Thymine or Uracil – 5-carbon sugar • Ribose or Deoxyribose – Phosphate group Sugar-Phosphate Backbone
  • 20. DNA Deoxyribonucleic acid – Double-stranded helix – Has the sugar Deoxyribose – Forms chromosomes • carry genetic information – Uses four nucleotide bases • Adenine • Guanine • Cytosine • Thymine
  • 21. RNA Ribonucleic acid – single stranded (usually) – Has the sugar Ribose – Transcribes DNA to make proteins – Four nucleotide bases • Adenine • Guanine • Cytosine • Uracil (instead of Thymine)
  • 22. Proteins • Made from 20 different amino acids • Seven major functions (S3CDET): – Storage: iron, amino acid storage (seeds, milk & egg whites) – Structural proteins: support and shape (collagen in hair/nails, microtubules/microfilaments) – Signaling: membrane receptor proteins & chemical messengers – Contractile: cell movement (cilia/flagella/pseudopodia, muscle) – Defensive: against foreign substance and disease-causing organisms (antibodies) – Enzymes: biological catalysts – Transport: hemoglobin
  • 23. Amino Acids • Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins.
  • 24. Protein Structure • Each protein is made from a specific sequences of amino acids joined together by peptide bonds. – There are 1,000s of different proteins! • The sequence of amino acids will determine the physical structure of the protein (how it folds).  A single substitution may result in a protein that is not folded properly (sickle-cell anemia) Protein Folding Video
  • 25. Proteins • Proteins have many different jobs • function is often dictated by shape • shape is determined by the amino acid sequence that affects folding • Examples: hemoglobin, flagella, membrane receptors, hair, antibodies
  • 26. Summary • Carbohydrates – Easy-access (fast) fuel for cell functions – Formed from simple “sugars” or saccharides – Glucose, Sucrose, Dextrose, Maltose, Lactose, Fructose, Cellulose, Amylose • Lipids – Formed from fatty acids – Mainly non-polar (hydrophobic) compounds – Functions: • Triglycerides - stored energy & insulation • Phospholipid bilayer – cell membranes • Steroids – cholesterol, estrogen, bile acids, Vitamin D, etc. • Nucleic Acids – Store, carry, and aid in the transmission of genetic information – DNA & RNA - made from (chains of) nucleotides – Each nucleotide has three parts: • Phosphate group • Nitrogen • 5-carbon sugar (Ribose or Deoxyribose) • Proteins – Made from amino acids – Seven major functions (S3CDET): • Storage, Structure, Signaling, Contractile, Defensive, Enzymes and Transport
  • 27. Week 4 Lab Microscope Orientation Proper Use and Care Newsprint wet mount Salt crystals

Editor's Notes

  1. Only about 0.85% is composed of another five elements: potassium, sulfur, sodium, chlorine, and magnesium. All are necessary to life. ~70% water
  2. NOT referring to "Organically Grown" foods
  3. Bottom illustration is of ponderosa pine, showing very strong microfibrils formed from cellulose chains. You can now see why burning a pine log releases so much heat – there are a lot of energy-releasing covalent bonds there!
  4. S3CDET