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Chapter 03

Organic
Chemistry
Organic 2
Chemistry
Outline

Organic vs Inorganic
Functional Groups and Isomers
Macromolecules
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
Organic 3
Chemistry
Organic Molecules
Inorganic – Chemistry of elements other than carbon
Organic – Carbon-based chemistry
Inorganic Organic
Usually with Always contain
+ & - ions carbon and hydrogen
Usually Always
ionic bonding covalent bonding
Always with Often quite large, with
few atoms many atoms
Often associated with Usually associated
nonliving matter living systems
Carbohydrates as structural materials 4
Organic 5
Chemistry
Carbon Atom
Carbon atoms:
Contain a total of 6 electrons
Only four electrons in the outer shell
Very diverse as one atom can bond with up to
four other atoms
Often bonds with other carbon atoms to make
hydrocarbons
Can produce long carbon chains like octane
Can produce ring forms like cyclohexane
Octane & Cyclohexane 6
Organic 7
Chemistry
Functional Groups and Isomers

Functional groups:
Specific combinations of bonded atoms
Attached as a group to other molecules
- Always react in the same manner, regardless of
where attached
- Determine activity and polarity of large organic
molecules

Many functional groups, but only a few are of


major biological importance
Organic 8
Biologically Important Chemistry
Functional Groups
Group Structure Compound Significance
Hydroxyl R OH Alcohols Polar, forms H-bonds; some sugars
and amino acids Example: Ethanol

O
Polar, formsRH-bonds; some sugars
Polar; some sugars
C Aldehydes
and amino acids;HExample: Ethanol Example: Formaldehyde

Carbonyl O some sugars Polar; some sugars


Polar; Ketones Example: Acetone
Example:
R CR Formaldehyde
O
Polar; Carboxylic
some sugarsPolar, acidic; fats and amino acids
Carboxyl R CExample:AcidsAcetoneExample: Acetic acid
OH
Polar, acidic;
R H and amino acids
fats
N Polar, basic; amino acids
Amino H Amines Example: Tryptophan
Example: Acetic
Polar, acidic; acidamino acids
some
Sulfhydryl R
Polar,SHbasic; Thiols
amino
Example: Adenosine triphosphate
Disulfide Bonds; some amino acids
acids
Example: Ethanethiol
Example:
Disulfide Bonds;
O someTryptophan
amino acids
Example: Ethanethiol Organic Polar,
R C R Phosphates acidic; some amino acids
Phosphate Example: Adenosine triphosphate

OH
Organic 9
Chemistry
Isomers

Isomers - organic molecules that have:


Identical molecular formulas, but
Differing internal arrangement of atoms
Organic 10
Chemistry
Macromolecules
Some molecules called macromolecules because of
their large size
Usually consist of many repeating units
Resulting molecule is a polymer (many parts)
Repeating units are called monomers
Some examples:
Category Example Subunit(s)
Lipids Fat Glycerol & fatty acids
Carbohydrates Polysaccharide Monosaccharide
Proteins Polypeptide Amino acid
Nucleic Acids DNA, RNA Nucleotide
Common Foods 11
Organic 12
Chemistry
Dehydration and Hydrolysis
Dehydration - Removal of water molecule
Used to connect monomers together to make
polymers
Polymerization of glucose monomers to make
starch
Hydrolysis - Addition of water molecule
Used to disassemble polymers into monomer
parts
Digestion of starch into glucose monomers
Specific enzymes required for each reaction
Accelerate reaction
Are not used in the reaction
Synthesis and Degradation 13
of Polymers
Organic 14
Four Classes of Organics: Chemistry
1 - Carbohydrates
Monosaccharides:
Single sugar molecule
Glucose, ribose, deoxyribose
Disaccharides:
Contain two monosaccharides joined during
dehydration reaction
Sucrose
Polysaccharides:
Polymers of monosaccharides
Starch, cellulose, chitin
Popular Models for Representing 15
Glucose Molecules
Synthesis and Degradation 16
of Maltose, a Disaccharide
Organic 17
Carbohydrates Examples: Chemistry
Monosaccharides

Single sugar molecules


Quite soluble and sweet to taste
Examples
Glucose (blood), fructose (fruit) and galactose
- Hexoses - Six carbon atoms
- Isomers of C6H12O6
Ribose and deoxyribose (in nucleotides)
- Pentoses – Five carbon atoms
- C5H10O5 & C5H10O4
Organic 18
Carbohydrates Examples: Chemistry
Disaccharides
Contain two monosaccharides joined by
dehydration reaction
Soluble and sweet to taste
Examples
Sucrose
- Table sugar, maple sugar
- One glucose and one fructose joined by
dehydration
Maltose
- Malt sugar
- Two glucoses joined by dehydration
Organic 19
Carbohydrates Examples: Chemistry
Polysaccharides (1)
Polymers of monosaccharides
Low solubility; not sweet to taste
Examples
Starch
-Polymer of glucose
-Used for short-term energy storage
 Plant starch
Often branched chain
Amylose, corn starch
 Animal starch
Unbranched
Glycogen in liver and muscles
Organic 20
Carbohydrates Examples: Chemistry
Polysaccharides (2)
More polysaccharide examples
Cellulose
- Long, coiled polymer of glucose
- Glucoses connected differently than in starch
- Structural element for plants
- Main component of wood and many natural
fibers
- Indigestible by most animals
Chitin
- Polymer of glucose
- Each glucose with an amino group
- Very resistant to wear and digestion
- Arthropod exoskeletons, cell walls of fungi
Starch 21
Structure and Function
Glycogen 22
Structure and Function
Cellulose 23
Structure and Function
Organic 24
Four Classes of Organics: Chemistry
2 - Lipids
Insoluble in water
 Long chains of repeating CH2 units
 Renders molecule nonpolar
Types of Lipids

Type Organismal Uses Human Uses


Long-term energy storage &
Fats thermal insulation in animals Butter, lard
Long-term energy storage in
Oils plants and their seeds Cooking oils
Component of plasma
Phospholipids membrane No-stick pan spray
Component of plasma
Steroids membrane; hormones Medicines

Waxes Wear resistance; retain water Candles, polishes


Blubber 25
Types of Lipids: 26
Triglycerides
Organic 27
Types of Lipids: Chemistry
Triglycerides (1)
Triglycerides (Fats)
Long-term energy storage
Backbone of one glycerol molecule
- Three-carbon alcohol
- Each has an OH- group
Three fatty acids attached to each glycerol
molecule
- Long hydrocarbon chain
 Saturated- no double bonds between carbons
 Unsaturated - 1 double bonds between carbons
- Carboxylic acid at one end
- Carboxylic acid connects to –OH on glycerol in
dehydration reaction
Dehydration Synthesis of Triglyceride 28
from Glycerol and Three Fatty Acids
Organic 29
Types of Lipids: Chemistry
Phospholipids (2)
Phospholipids
Derived from triglycerides
Glycerol backbone
Two fatty acids attached instead of three
Third fatty acid replaced by phosphate group
- The fatty acids are nonpolar and hydrophobic
- The phosphate group is polar and hydrophilic
Molecules self arrange when placed in water
Polar phosphate “heads” next to water
Nonpolar fatty acid “tails” overlap and
exclude water
Spontaneously form double layer & a sphere
Phospholipids Form Membranes 30
Organic 31
Types of Lipids: Chemistry
Steroids & Waxes (3)

Steroids
Cholesterol, testosterone, estrogen
Skeletons of four fused carbon rings
Waxes
Long-chain fatty acid bonded to a long-chain
alcohol
- High melting point
- Waterproof
- Resistant to degradation
Steroid Diversity 32
Waxes 33
Organic 34
Four Classes of Organics: Chemistry
3 -Proteins

Functions
 Support – Collagen
 Enzymes – Almost all enzymes are proteins
 Transport – Hemoglobin; membrane proteins
 Defense – Antibodies
 Hormones – Many hormones; insulin
 Motion – Muscle proteins, microtubules
Organic
35
Protein Subunits: Chemistry
The Amino Acids
Proteins are polymers of amino acids
Each amino acid has a central carbon atom
(the alpha carbon) to which are attached
 a hydrogen atom,
 an amino group –NH2,
 A carboxylic acid group –COOH,
 and one of 20 different types of –R
(remainder) groups
There are 20 different amino acids that make
up proteins
All of them have basically the same structure
except for what occurs at the placeholder R
Structural Formulas for the 36
20 Amino Acids
Organic 37
Proteins: Chemistry
The Polypeptide Backbone
Amino acids joined together end-to-end
 COOH of one AA covalently bonds to the NH2
of the next AA
 Special name for this bond - Peptide Bond
- Two AAs bonded together – Dipeptide
- Three AAs bonded together – Tripeptide
- Many AAs bonded together – Polypeptide
 Characteristics of a protein determined by
composition and sequence of AA’s
 Virtually unlimited number of proteins
Synthesis and Degradation of a Peptide 38
Organic 39
Protein Molecules: Chemistry
Levels of Structure
Primary:
 Literally, the sequence of amino acids
 A string of beads (up to 20 different colors)
Secondary:
 The way the amino acid chain coils or folds
 Describing the way a knot is tied
Tertiary:
 Overall three-dimensional shape of a polypeptide
 Describing what a knot looks like from the outside
Quaternary:
 Consists of more than one polypeptide
 Like several completed knots glued together
Levels of Protein Organization 40
Examples of Fibrous Proteins 41
Organic 42
Chemistry
Protein-folding Diseases

Assembly of AA’s into protein extremely


complex
Process overseen by “chaperone” molecules
 Inhibit incorrect interactions between R
groups as polypeptide grows
 Defects in these chaperones can corrupt the
tertiary structure of proteins
 Mad cow disease could be due to mis-folded
proteins
Organic 43
Four Classes of Organics: Chemistry
4 -Nucleic Acids

Polymers of nucleotides
Very specific cell functions
DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)
- Double-stranded helical spiral (twisted ladder)
- Serves as genetic information center
- In chromosomes
RNA (ribonucleic acid)
- Part single-stranded, part double-stranded
- Serves primarily in assembly of proteins
- In nucleus and cytoplasm of cell
Organic 44
The Nucleotides of Chemistry
Nucleic Acids
Three components:
- A phosphate group,
- A pentose sugar (ribose or deoxyribose), and
- A nitrogenous base (4 kinds in DNA, 3 kinds in
RNA, 3 common to both
Nucleotide subunits connected end-to-end to
make nucleic acid
Sugar of one connected to the phosphate of
the next
Sugar-phosphate backbone
Nucleotides 45
DNA Structure 46
RNA Structure 47
Organic 48
Chemistry
Comparison of DNA & RNA

Table 3.4
Feature DNA RNA
Sugar Deoxyribose Ribose
Cytosine, guanine; Cytosine, guanine;
Bases adenine, thymine adenine, uracil
Double-stranded;
Strands Pairing across strands Mostly single stranded
Helix Yes No

Function Heredity; cellular


control center
Interprets genetic info;
protein synthesis
Chromosomes of cell Cell nucleus and
Where nucleus cytoplasm
Organic 49
Chemistry
Other Nucleic Acids

ATP (adenosine triphosphate) is composed of


adenine, ribose, and three phosphates
In cells, one phosphate bond is hydrolyzed –
Yields:
The molecule ADP (adenosine diphosphate)
An inorganic phosphate molecule pi
Energy
Other energy sources used to put ADP and pi
back together again
ATP 50
Organic 51
Chemistry
Review

Organic vs Inorganic
Functional Groups and Isomers
Macromolecules
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
Ending Slide Chapter 03

Organic
Chemistry

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