chapter 3: carbon compounds in cells

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Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

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Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells. I. Organic Chemistry. A. What is organic? Made by Living Things (organisms)…but then Stanley Miller’s experiment. 2. Contains Carbon…but not CO 2 3. So, contains Carbon Covalently Bound to Hydrogen and Oxygen . I. Organic Chemistry. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Page 2: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

I. Organic Chemistry

A. What is organic?1. Made by Living Things (organisms)…but then

Stanley Miller’s experiment.

2. Contains Carbon…but not CO2

3. So, contains Carbon Covalently Bound to Hydrogen and Oxygen.

Page 3: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

I. Organic Chemistry

B. Carbon’s Characteristics: 1. Plentiful and Stable. 2. Forms 4 bonds (4 valence e-). 3. Will form chains and rings with other carbon atoms.

Page 4: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Carbon Ring Notation

Page 5: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

I. Organic Chemistry

C. Functional Groups: The group that often determines how a molecule will interact with another molecule.

Page 6: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

I. Organic Chemistry

C. Functional Groups Know these four functional groups:

-OH Hydroxyl (hydrogen bonding)-COOH Carboxyl-NH3 Amino-PO4 Phosphate

Page 7: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

I. Organic Chemistry

D. Types of Reactions 1. Condensation, or Dehydration Synthesis:

Two smaller molecules join to form one macromolecule and release a molecule of water.

Page 8: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

I. Organic Chemistry

D. Types of Reactions 2. Hydrolysis, or Cleavage Reaction:

A macromolecule is cleaved/split, requiring a molecule of water. The result is two smaller molecules.

Page 9: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

II. Carbohydrates

• So named as some have a ratio of 1 carbon to 1 water (thus, hydrated carbon or carbohydrate).

• Glucose = 6 carbon to 6 waters• Sucrose =C12H22O11

What is missing? Where did it go?

Page 10: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

II. Carbohydrates

A. Monomers (basic building blocks) Sugars: Monosaccharids, Disaccharides or Oligosaccharids. 1. Monosaccharides: Glucose (main energy for most living things), Fructose (common sugar in fruits) and galactose.

Page 11: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

II. Carbohydrates

2. Disaccharides: Glucose + Fructose = Sucrose (table sugar) Glucose + Galactose = Lactose (milk sugar)

Glucose + Glucose = Maltose

Page 12: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

II. Carbohydrates

B. Polymers (made of many units) are Polysaccharides: Starch, Cellulose, Fiber and Glycogen; also called Complex Carbohydrates.Starch- Many glucose molecules covalently

bonded together. Principal storage molecule for plants.

Page 13: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

II. Carbohydrates

• Glycogen – Similar to starch in that it is many glucose molecules covalently bonded together, but the molecule has different side chains. This molecule is a principle energy storage molecule for animals.

Page 14: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

II. Carbohydrates

• Cellulose – A long strand of glucose molecules, bound together in such a way that most animals are unable to digest this molecule. It is a structural molecule and gives plants their strength. Can be digested by cows due to the presence of bacteria in their stomachs.

Page 15: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

MMs and Crickets

• Chitin – Similar to cellulose, but nitrogen is added to each glucose unit. This is the primary molecule in the exoskeleton of insects and cell wall of fungi.

Page 16: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Starch

Function:

Structure:

Page 17: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Glucose

Function:

Structure:

Page 18: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Green = Carbon, White = Hydrogen, Red = Oxygen

Page 20: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Green = Carbon, White = Hydrogen, Red = Oxygen

Page 21: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Name:

NH3

OH

PO4

Page 22: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

III. LipidsA. Fats/Oils/ Waxes/Grease

1. Monomers: Fatty acids and Glycerols

Fatty Acid Chain of Carbon: Hydrogen atoms (few to no oxygen atoms)

Page 23: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

III. Lipids

B. Polymer: Triglycerids

1. Saturated Fats (maximum # of hydrogens); all single bonds; usually solid at room temperature. 2. Unsaturated Fats; one or more double bonds; usually liquid at room temperature.

Page 24: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Fig. 3.9a, p. 40stearic acid oleic acid linolenic acid

Which is mono-unsaturated? Poly-unsaturated? Saturated?

Page 25: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

III. Lipids

C. Polymer: Phospholipids. A polar phosphate head and a nonpolar fatty acid tail.

Page 26: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

III. Lipids

D. Polymer: Sterols. Fats without fatty acid chains (include steroids, cholestorol).

Page 27: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

IV. ProteinsA. Monomer: Amino Acids 1. 20 Naturally occurring AAs; 8 we must get through our diet. 2. Contain nitrogen (amino group), carboxyl group and R group.

Page 28: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

IV. Proteins

B. Polymer: Proteins, or Polypeptide Chain Two amino acids combine with peptide bonds.

Page 29: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Fig. 3.15, p. 43

newly formingpolypeptidechain

Page 30: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

IV. Proteins

C. Protein Structure: a. Primary and Secondary, formed by AA sequence b. Tertiary, due to interactions of functional groups. c. Quarternary, due to interaction of two or more separate proteins.

Page 31: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

Molecule?

Page 32: Chapter 3: Carbon Compounds in Cells

IV. Proteins

D. Denatured: Proteins can lose their shape if exposed to excess heat, pH or other conditions.

V. ATP and Nucleic AcidsSkip this reading, just know that ATP is an

important energy store in cells.