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Chapter 4 Lecture Outline

Chapter 4 Lecture Outline Chemical Building Blocks Atoms and Molecules Big fleas have little fleas Upon their backs to bite ‘em Little fleas have littler fleas And so ad infinitum Atoms and Elements Physical world composed of 92 elements Simplest building blocks

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Chapter 4 Lecture Outline

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  1. Chapter 4Lecture Outline Chemical Building Blocks © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  2. Atoms and Molecules Big fleas have little fleas Upon their backs to bite ‘em Little fleas have littler fleas And so ad infinitum © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  3. Atoms and Elements • Physical world composed of 92 elements • Simplest building blocks • Atom - smallest unit of an element © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  4. Periodic Table of the Elements © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  5. Atomic Components • Atoms are composed of 3 subatomic particles • Electrons – negatively charged • Protons – positively charged • Neutrons – no charge (neutral) • Protons & neutrons are contained in the nucleus • Electrons orbit the nucleus • Gain or loss of an electron: ion © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  6. Atomic and Mass Numbers • Atomic Number: Number of Protons • Determines the element’s properties • Mass Number: Number of Protons + Number of Neutrons • Isotopes: different numbers of neutrons • Unstable isotopes: Radioisotopes © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  7. Covalent Bonds • Electrons are held in shells • Atoms are stable when its shells are filled • Atoms share electrons to fill these shells © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  8. Covalent Bonds – Examples of Molecules © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  9. Noncovalent Bonds • Link molecules together (intermolecular) • Much weaker than covalent • Much more prevalent • Hydrogen bonds: very common in biology • Attraction between partial charges • Hold biological molecules together • Ionic bonds: form between charged particles (Ions) © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  10. Hydrogen and Ionic Bonds Ionic bonds form between Na+ and Cl- Hydrogen bonds form between water molecules © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  11. Hydrogen bonds: Water © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  12. Hydrogen bonds are like Velcro © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  13. Velcro and H Bonds form weak, temporary bonds • Each Velcro link is weak • Each H bond is weak • Many Velcros are strong • Many H bonds are strong © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  14. Ionic Bonds: Salt crystals • Form between atoms of opposite charge • Weak in aqueous conditions • Strong in dry conditions • Ions are bound by polar water molecules © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  15. Water molecules break up salt © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  16. Rearranging Atoms in Molecules • Chemical reactions: • Breaking covalent bonds • Forming new bonds • Require energy 3 H2 + N2 2 NH3 © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  17. Acids and Bases • Acid: releases H+ in water HCl + H2O  Cl- + H30+ • Base: accepts H+ from water NH3 + H20 NH4+ + OH- © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  18. pH • A measure of H+ concentration • The scale pH is from 0 to 14 • Scale is 10X • More than 7 is basic • Less than 7 is acidic Coke © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  19. Buffers Control pH • Buffer - weak acid or base • Maintains pH within very narrow limits • Accepts H+ when pH is low • Releases H+ when pH is high AH + H2O  A- + H3O © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  20. STOP HERE • To be Continued……….. © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  21. Carbon-based Molecules • Biomolecules are mainly C and H • Carbon chains can be very long • O, S, P, and N are also present • These comprise functional groups • Functional groups allow molecules to interact • Biomolecules are combined to form polymers © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  22. Carbohydrates Sugar Starch Cellulose Fats Lipids Fatty acids Cell membranes Proteins Amino acids Collagen Fibrin Nucleic Acids DNA RNA What are Biological Molecules? © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  23. Carbohydrates: Simple Sugars • Sugars are carbohydrate monomers • Used to store and release energy • Glucose plays a key role • Dehydration synthesis: combining sugars • What other kinds of sugars to you know? © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  24. Other kinds of sugars: Glucose Fructose Lactose © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  25. Carbohydrates – Complex Sugars • Monosaccharides – one sugar molecule • Disaccharides – two sugar molecules • Oligosaccharides – a few sugar molecules • Polysaccharides – many sugar molecules Don’t ask me to define “few” or “many” © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  26. Branched Chain Polysaccharide Very complex Indeed! © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  27. Carbohydrates: Polymers Cellulose: Structure Starch: Energy storage © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  28. Nucleic Acids: Nucleotides • Made of three parts • Sugar (ribose), phosphate, and nitrogen base • Monomers can be used as “energy currency” ATP Energy Energy © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  29. Nucleic Acids: DNA and RNA • Information storage molecules Phosphate Group Bases Nucleotide Adenine (A) Thymine (T) Sugars Ribose Guanine (G) Cytosine (C) Uracil (C) Deoxyribose © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  30. Proteins: Amino Acids • There are 20 amino acids • They all have: • Central C • Amino group (nitrogen) • Carboxyl Group • R group • Each amino acid differs in its R group • Amino acids link together to form proteins © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  31. Kinds of R Groups © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  32. Proteins: Polypeptides • Amino acids are covalently linked • Peptide bonds C to N • Primary structure: sequence of amino acids • This determines folding of the protein NOT!! © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  33. Proteins: 3D Structure Telephone cord © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  34. Lipids: Fatty Acids Charged polar end • Long hydrocarbon chains • Very hydrophobic • Oil and water don’t mix • Used for energy storage • Very high energy • Long-term storage Lipid tail end © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  35. Lipids: Structure • Fats are bonded to glycerol with phosphate • Produces hydrophobic and hydrophilic parts • Forms a bilayer in water • Structure of cell membrane Lipid bilayer: © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  36. Concept Quiz What types of intermolecular bonds are formed between biological molecules and hold them together? • Hydrogen bonds • Covalent bonds • Ionic bonds • All of the above • A & C © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  37. Concept Quiz What determines the folding pattern of a peptide into a completed protein? • The amino acid sequence (primary structure) • The source of the amino acids • The absorption of light • The size of the ribosomes used © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  38. Concept Quiz _________ bonds are the strongest bonds formed between molecules. • Hydrogen • Covalent • Ionic • Non-polar © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  39. Concept Quiz The main difference between the 20 amino acids is the • central carbon. • amine group. • acid group. • side chain. © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

  40. Process Animation 4.1Formation of Covalent Bonds Macintosh Windows © 2006 W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. DISCOVER BIOLOGY 3/e

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