Biological Molecules
Biological Molecules
Biological Molecules
Two glucose
molecules ...can bond together
(monomers)... to make maltose
(dimer).
Hydrolysis
Hydrolysis
Monomer or
Polymer?
Carbohydrates
One glucose molecule alone
is a monomer.
Two or more
glucose
molecules linked
together can
make a polymer.
Monomers
Simple sugars, such as
glucose, are the
monomers of complex
carbohydrates.
• Starch, a storage
polysaccharide of
plants, consists
entirely of glucose
monomers
• Plants store surplus
starch as granules
within chloroplasts
and other plastids
• The simplest form
of starch is amylose
• Glycogen is a
storage
polysaccharide in
animals
• Humans and other
vertebrates store
glycogen mainly in
liver and muscle
cells
Types of Polysaccharides: Structural
Hemp
Cotton
Rayon
Dietary
Linen “fiber”
What do you see in the structure of cellulose that tells
you that it is a carbohydrate?
Pectin
In general, how
can we describe
complex
carbohydrates?
Lipids
LIPIDS
• Are a group of naturally occurring
molecules that include fats, waxes, sterols,
fat-soluble vitamins A, D, E, and K,
glycerol and phospholipids.
Fats: Start with a Simple Little Glycerol Molecule
What process
do you see
happening here
to create these
ester bonds
between the
fatty acid chains
and the glycerol
in this
triglyceride?
Lipids that are solid
at room temperature
are composed mostly
of saturated fatty
acids.
• Hydrogenation is the
process of converting
unsaturated fats to
saturated fats by adding
hydrogen
Trans fats?
Unsaturated fats bend Trans configuration results in
because of the cis an unsaturated fatty acid that
configuration is a straight chain like a
saturated fatty acid
Phosphate
Glycerol
Hydrophobic tails
Fatty acids
Hydrophilic
head
Hydrophobic
tails
Is this a
nucleotide of
DNA or RNA?
How can you
tell?
Nucleotides link together to form nucleic acids. The
sugars bind to the phosphate groups to form the
backbone of the chain.
DNA is two strands of
nucleotides side-by-
side.
Adenosine
triphosphate, the
universal energy
carrier, is a single
nucleotide (adenine)
with two extra
phosphate groups
attached.
Try to fill in this table from memory:
Complex Starch,
Simple sugars
Carbohydrates Cellulose, etc.
Hemoglobin,
Amino acids Proteins
Keratin, etc.