1 / 16

Biology

Biology. Proteins and Enzymes Unit 3, Notes #3. Review. Carbon!. Organic Compound contain __________ Examples: carbohydrates, lipids, proteins. Review- Carbs. Carbohydrates are sugars (immediate NRG) C:H:O is 1:2:1 Building blocks = monosacharides Single saccharride molecules

nansen
Télécharger la présentation

Biology

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. Biology Proteins and Enzymes Unit 3, Notes #3

  2. Review Carbon! • Organic Compound contain __________ • Examples: carbohydrates, lipids, proteins

  3. Review- Carbs • Carbohydrates are sugars (immediate NRG) • C:H:O is 1:2:1 • Building blocks = monosacharides • Single saccharride molecules • Glucose, fructose, ribose, etc • Disaccharides – 2 monos combined • Sucrose (table sugar), lactose (in milk) • Block Tower = polysaccarhides • Starch (created by plants), cellulose, • Glycogen – made by muscles and liver from cellulose

  4. Review - Lipids Glycerol molecule • Lipids (Fats) • Monomer: Fatty Acid • Polymer: Lipid • Structure: Fatty Acids • bonded to compounds • such as glycerol • (carbon, hydrogen and oxygen!) • Most Common lipids: Fats, • Oils, Cholesterol, Waxes

  5. Review - Lipids • Fats and Oils = long term energy storage • Carbs can be turned into lipids to be stored as energy for much later use • Overall, they yield less energy than carbs • Saturated – animal fats, all single C-C bonds • Unsaturated – plants, at least one double C=C bond • Waxes – repel water (plants and animals can produce this) • Phospholipids – cell membranes • Cholesterol – too much is BAD

  6. Proteins

  7. Used in variety of cellular functions Made of smaller amino acids Monomer: Amino acid Polymer: Protein, held together by peptide bonds Only 20 amino acids… but thousands of proteins Exact arrangement of amino acids determines the protein Protein Basics leucine valine glycine alanine leucine leucine histi- dine aspara- gine serine proline = protein A valine leucine glycine alanine leucine leucine histi- dine aspara- gine serine proline = protein B Amino acid (monomer) leucine valine glycine alanine leucine leucine = protein C

  8. Amino Acid Structure 5 basic parts 1) Central C atom 2) Amino group (NH2) 3) H 4) Carboxyl group (COOH) 5) R group . . Only 20 amino acids… Each has different R group

  9. What differs between these 6 amino acids? Each “R” group is different

  10. Proteins • C, H, O, N, Sulfur and Phosphorous • “building blocks” of organisms • Functions of proteins: • Movement- Muscle fibers • Structure- cartilage, bones, tendons • Regulation-control chemical reactions • Transport- hemoglobin carries O2 • Defense – antibodies are proteins that fight off bacteria and viruses

  11. Review • What are the smaller monomers that make proteins called? • How many different amino acids exist? • How does each amino acid differ? • The NH2 part of the amino acid is called the ____ group. • The COOH part of the amino acid is called the ____ group.

  12. Chemical Reactions Reactants Products • Change substances into different ones by breaking and forming chemical bonds • Reactants are the substances changed during a chemical reaction. • Products are the substances made by a chemical reaction

  13. Type of Protein - enzyme • Enzyme: • Increases the speed of specific chemical reactions so they happen faster! Does this by lowering the energy it takes for the rxn to happen • Breaking down food • Build needed molecules • “catalyst” – something that speeds up a reaction • They can work inside cells and outside cells • Sensitive to pH and temperature • ex: If high fever: enzymes lose ability to work • Ex. Cooking “denatures” enzymes • Reusable • Helps to maintain homeostasis

  14. Type of Protein - enzyme • Vocab: • Catalyst – anything that speeds up a rxn • Enzyme – proteins that lower the energy it takes for a chemical rxn to happen • Substrate – compounds put together (synthesized) OR broken down by enzymes • Coenzyme – a 2nd enzyme needed to help do the job

  15. Another Enzyme Structure Lock and Key Model Analogy

  16. Review • Given the following chemical formula list the products and reactants: 6O2 + C6H12O6 6CO2 + 6H2O • Which group of proteins help to start chemical reactions? • What are the molecules called that react with enzymes? • What are the substances that are changed during a chemical reaction called? • What is another term for a catalyst? • What can cause an enzyme to stop functioning? • What do enzymes weaken between molecules?

More Related