1 / 45

Molecules of Life

Molecules of Life. Kathy Huschle Northland Community and Technical College. Why Chemistry in a Microbiology Class?. the science of the interaction between atoms and molecules is chemistry the metabolic activities of microorganisms involve complex chemical reactions. Molecules of Life .

eamon
Télécharger la présentation

Molecules of Life

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. Molecules of Life Kathy Huschle Northland Community and Technical College

  2. Why Chemistry in a Microbiology Class? • the science of the interaction between atoms and molecules is chemistry • the metabolic activities of microorganisms involve complex chemical reactions

  3. Molecules of Life • all matter, air, rock or a living organism – is made up of atoms • a single type of atom is called an element C – carbon H – hydrogen O – oxygen N - nitrogen Carbon Hydrogen Oxygen Nitrogen

  4. MOLECULES • atoms interact to form molecules H2O – water CO2 – carbon dioxide • molecules interact to form macromolecules which include proteins, polysaccharides, lipids, nucleic acid

  5. Atoms • atoms are made up of • electrons, protons, neutrons • # of protons, which have a positive charge equals the number of electrons, which have a negative charge • neutrons, found in the nucleus of the atom along with the protons, are neutral particles • electrons move about he nucleus in regions called electronic shells

  6. Elements • there are 92 naturally occurring elements • 4 elements; carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, make up 99% of all living material, by weight • phosphorus and sulfur make up another 0.5% of the elements of living systems

  7. Atoms

  8. Chemical Bonds • molecules are made up of 2 or more atoms • to be stable an atom needs a maximum number of electrons in the electron shell • electrons are gained from atoms, or lost to other atoms • to gain or lose an electron, atoms form molecules: held together by a chemical bond

  9. Types of Chemical Bonds • ionic • covalent • hydrogen

  10. Ionic Bond • a positively or negatively charged atom is called an ion • the chemical attraction between ions of opposite attraction is an ionic bond • one ion is an electron donor, the other ion is an electron acceptor

  11. Covalent Bond • atoms share pairs of electrons • stronger than ionic bonds • more common in organisms

  12. Hydrogen Bonds • weak bonding resulting from intermolecular forces of attraction • results when a hydrogen bonded to a O or N in one molecule and is attracted to a O or N in another molecule

  13. Hydrogen Bond • water is a good example of hydrogen bonding • the water molecule is constantly being formed and broken at room temperature • ice forms with 4 hydrogen bonds, making the structure more rigid

  14. Chemical Compounds of the Cell • water • over 70% of living organisms by weight • H bonding is important in the properties of water • universal solvent of life

  15. Water

  16. pH • potential hydrogen • degree of acidity of the solution • narrow range for microbial survival is near neutral

  17. pH

  18. pH

  19. pH

  20. Small Molecules • inorganics: makes up about 1% of the dry weight of microbes • sodium, potassium, magnesium, calcium iron, chloride, phosphate, sulfate

  21. Small Molecules • organics: are the result of the cells metabolism of sugar • amino acids, purines, pyrimidines sugars • all are considered precursor metabolites: converted to the building blocks of large molecules

  22. Small Molecules • ATP: adenosine triphosphate • storage form of energy for the cell • broken bonds release energy

  23. Macromolecules • very large molecules – several thousand atoms each • 4 major classes • proteins, polysaccharides, nucleic acids, and lipids • differ from each other in their chemical structure

  24. Macromolecules • common feature of macromolecules • all are polymers • formed by the joining of small molecules (subunits)

  25. Proteins • 50% of the dry weight of cells • most versatile: bacterial cells contain 600-800 different proteins such as • enzymes: proteins that speed up bio-chemical reactions • bacteriocins: proteins produced by some bacteria for killing of other bacteria • toxins: proteins produced by disease-causing microorganisms

  26. Proteins • microbial world proteins are responsible for • all reactions required for life • structure and shape • cell movement • bringing in nutrients • turning genes on and off • critical to properties of cell membrane

  27. Proteins

  28. Proteins • made up of a combination of 20 major amino acids • amino acids consist of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and sometimes sulfur

  29. Proteins • protein properties depend mainly on its shape • dependent on arrangement of amino acids • held together with peptide bonds • type of covalent bonding

  30. Protein A PROTEIN MUST HAVE ITS PROPER SHAPE TO FUNCTION

  31. Proteins • denaturation: the process by which a protein loses its characteristic shape • denaturing can occur many ways including • high temperature • increase or decrease of pH • solvent • peptide bonds are broken • protein no longer functions in its proper role • in some cases denaturing is reversible, in others it is not • Protein Folding Problem • probable cause of many neurodegenerative diseases • research for Alzheimer's disease is studying denatured proteins in regard to prions (small particle of protein)

  32. Denatured Protein

  33. Carbohydrates • all carbohydrates contain C, H, O • approximate ratio of 1:2:1 • include sugars and starches • classified as • monosaccharides • disaccharides • polysaccharides

  34. Carbohydrates • monosaccharide • classified by the # of carbon atoms they contain • 5 carbon sugars ribose and deoxyribose are found in RNA and DNA

  35. Carbohydrates • disaccharides • 2 monosaccharides joined by a covalent bond • lactose and sucrose

  36. Carbohydrates • polysaccharides • cellulose: the most abundant organic molecule on Earth • glycogen: carb storage product of animals and some bacteria

  37. Carbohydrates • polysaccharides • dextran: synthesized by bacteria as a storage product

  38. Nucleic Acids • carry genetic info in all cells • genetic info found in nucleic acid is decoded into the sequence of amino acids then passed on to the protein molecule • 2 types of nucleic acid • DNA – deoxyribonucleic acid • RNA – ribonucleic acid

  39. Nucleic Acid hydrogen bond covalent bond • DNA • master molecule of the cell • all cell properties are determined by DNA • coded • made up of two complementary strands held together by hydrogen bonding

  40. Nucleic Acid • RNA • decodes DNA information into amino acid sequence for protein molecules • single stranded

  41. Lipids • indispensable to the cell • structure of all membranes • gatekeepers of the cells • keep cell’s internal contents inside • allows for quick uptake of nutrients • very slight solubility in water

  42. Lipids • simple lipids • contain only carbon, hydrogen, oxygen • fats: made up of fatty acids & glycerol • saturated: solid • unsaturated: liquid

  43. Lipids • compound • contain elements other than C, H, O • phospholipids • contain phosphate molecule in addition to fatty acids and glycerol compound lipid

  44. Lipids • phospholipids • tail of the phospholipid is hydrophobic (water repelling) • head of the phospholipid is hydrophilic (water attracting

  45. Lipids • phospholipids are key structures in the cell membrane

More Related