chapter 2 molecules of life. the atom fundamental unit of matter nucleus protons: positive charge;...
TRANSCRIPT
Chapter 2
Molecules of Life
The Atom•Fundamental unit of matter
•Nucleus
•Protons: Positive charge; mass of 1
•Neutrons: No charge; mass of 1
•Electrons•Spin around the nucleus in
orbitals (shells)•Negative charge; No mass
•Electrically negative: # of protons = # electrons
http://www.yourdictionary.com/ahd/a/a0501900.html
Electrons•Electrons carry energy. How??
•Electrons are negatively charged as such, they are attracted to the positive charge in the nucleus. Meanwhile, electrons repel other electrons.
REMEMBER… OPPOSITES ATTRACT and SAME REPELS
•Electrons spin around the nucleus at various levels. They are attracted to the nucleus but repel each other, therefore it takes work to keep them in orbit.
•Example is an apple in your hand.
• Volumes of space that surround the
•nucleus
• Electrons move in orbitals
Electron shells and electron orbitals
Constants:
The 1st shell in any atom can hold 2 electrons
The 2nd shell in any atom can hold 8 electrons
The 3rd shell in any atom can hold 8 electrons
Shell # of electrons each shell can
hold
First shell 2
Second shell 8
Third shell 8
P + N
Electron Movement•Electron shells = energy levels
•Electron orbital = Volume of space around a nucleus where an electron is most likely to be found
Useful Analogy:
planets (electrons) ORBITING around the sun (nucleus)
Why is it necessary to understand how electron orbitals work? This isn’t a
Chemistry class, right??
Electrons and the energy they posses (their energy state) determine the
chemical behavior of atoms thus, the losing, gaining or sharing of electrons is the BASIS FOR CHEMICAL REACTIONS IN WHICH CHEMICAL BONDS FORM
(chemical bonds include hydrogen bonding, ionic bonding and covalent
bonding).
If electrons couldn’t lose or gain other electrons, or share with other electrons,
chemical bonds would NOT form!
Example, H2O
Elementa substance that cannot be reduced into a simpler component substance through a chemical process
http://cougar.slvhs.slv.k12.ca.us/~pboomer/chemlectures/textass2/secondsemass.html
How to Read the Periodic Table•Elements are arranged: LEFT to RIGHT and
TOP to BOTTOMin order of increasing atomic
mass.
•Rows are arranged in periodsEx. H and He are in period 1
C and O are in period 2
The period number of an element = highest energy level an electron in that element occupies in an unexcited state
Therefore,
H and He have 1 electron shell
C and O have 2 electron shells
•Columns represent groups and families.
•Each element symbol has 2 numbers listed: atomic number and atomic mass.
C6
Atomic Number
12
Atomic Mass
Number of protons in the nucleus
Number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus
Carbon
Carbon Facts:
•6 protons (Atomic # is 6)
•6 neutrons (Atomic mass is 12…so, how do you get 6?)N = Atomic Mass - P
•6 electrons (Atomic # is 6)
4
•Is the first electron shell full (inactive)?
•Is the second electron shell full?
•How many unpaired orbitals does C have?
Yes
No
Carbon
Carbon Facts:
•How many chemical bonds can Carbon form with other atoms?
4
Can an element ever have a variable number
of neutrons?
Isotopes•Same atom but with a different # of neutrons, thus a different atomic massAtomic number = # protons in the nucleus
Atomic mass = # protons + # neutrons
•Having a different number of neutrons in the nucleus DOES NOT change the chemical properties of an element BUT it DOES change the stability of the element!!
Atomic # # protons # protons # protons
6 6 6Atomic Mass # P + # N #P + # N # P + # N
6 + 6 = 12
6 + 7 = 13
6 + 8 = 14
Medical Uses of Radioactive Isotopes
•Short-lived isotopes are used clinically to diagnose pathological abnormalities/disease
•Ex. Use of 99Tc for renal scan
• 99 Tc (tracer) is introduced through your bloodstream
•Kidney cells take up the radioactive tracer (isotope of Tc = 99Tc)
•A camera detects emissions from the tracer and records them.
•What makes 99Tc specific for kidney cells?
The isotope is specific for a protein unique to kidney cells.
Remember, electrons are the basis for chemical reactions!!
So… if 99Tc has a different number of neutrons in its nucleus, the stability of the electrons in the other shell of that 99Tc atom are changed.
There are 43 isotopes of Technitium!
It just so happens that the particular stability of 99Tc seeks to form a chemical bond with this unique kidney protein.
Matter•Any substance in the universe that has mass and occupies space
•Matter is transformed through chemical bonding
• Conservation of Matter = Matter cannot be created or destroyed but… it can be transformed
•Use of an equation to show how matter is transformed:
• Reactants Products
•Sodium + Chloride Sodium chlorideNa+ + Cl-
NaCl
Important Bonds in Biological Membranes
•Way in which atoms link to one another to form molecules
•Links are formed through the exchange of electrons
•Atoms are driven to react to become more stable
•Atomic stability is achieved by filling an outer electron shell
•Non-reactive elements have full outer shells = INACTIVE
•Types of chemical bonding
•Ionic bonding
•Covalent bonding
•Hydrogen bonding
Ionic Bonding•Creates ions (charged atoms): one atom loses electrons and becomes a (+) charged ion while another gains electrons and becomes (-) charged
•Note: in charged atoms, the # of protons DOES NOT equal the # of electrons!!!!
# Protons = # Electrons
•Formed when atoms are attracted to each other by opposite electrical charges (i.e. magnet)
•Two key properties of ionic bonding:
•They are strong bond (although NOT the strongest)
•They are non-directional
Ionic BondingExample: Table salt
Reactants:Sodium atom has 1 lone electron in its outer orbital (Ax)
+Chloride atom has 7 electrons in its outer orbital (Ax)
Products:Sodium ION that has given up an electron from its outer shell
+Chloride ION that has accepted an electron from Sodium and has included it in its outer shell
Fig. 3.8
Both the sodium ion and the chloride ion are electrically attracted because of the opposite
charges incurred by the altered electron orbitals.
This electrical attraction results in the formation of an elaborate matrix resulting in a crystal of
table salt.
Covalent Bonds•Electrons are shared between atoms
•Two key properties of covalent bonding:
•VERY STONG!!! (strongest type of bond)
•Directional
•Carbon ALWAYS forms a covalent bond!!!!!
•2 types:
•Non-polar Covalent: electrons are equally shared
•Generates hydrophobic molecules (“water hating”)
•Polar Covalent: electrons are unequally shared
•Generated hydrophilic bonds (”water loving”)
H
H H
H
Non-Polar Covalent Bond: Methane (CH4)
H
H H
H
Non-Polar Covalent Bond: Methane (CH4)
Polar Covalent Bonding: H2O
Hydrogen Bonding
•Links a polar covalent molecule to another polar covalent molecule
•Results in VERY WEAK bonding BUT because so many are formed, the complex as a whole is VERY STONG
Hydrogen Bonding
Solutions•A homogenous mixture of 2 or more substances
•Solute = ingredient being dissolved
•Solvent = substance that does the dissolving
Example. You make a solution of water and salt. Which is the solute and which is the solvent?
Solute = SaltSolvent = Water
•Components of solutionsAcids
BasesSalts
pH
Components of Solutions, continued
Acids
•A substance that puts hydrogen ions (H+ )into a solution
•Example: Hydrochloric Acid placed in water
HCl + H2O Cl- + H+
Water HCl dissolved in water
H
H
H
HH
H
H
H
Components of Solutions, continued
Bases
•A substance that puts hydroxide ions (OH-) into solution
•Example: Sodium Hydroxide dissolved in water
NaOH + H2O Na+ + OH-
Water NaOH dissolved in water O
HOH
OH
OH O
H
OH
OH
OH
Components of Solutions, continued
Salts
•A substance that puts other ions into solution (ions other than H+ and OH-)
•Example: Sodium chloride dissolved in water
NaCl + H2O Na+ + Cl- + H2O
Cl
Cl
Cl
ClCl
Cl
Cl
ClNa
NaNa
Na
NaNa
NaNa
•Salts are formed when acids and bases are added to each other; this results in neutralization of the acid and base.
HCl + NaOH NaCl + H2O
(Acid) (Base) (Salt) (Water)
Components of Solutions, continued
pH
•A logarithmic scale that measures the acidity of alkalinity (basicity) of a solution
•Note: the difference between 2 units on the pH scale is 10, therefore, the difference between 3 pH units is…100•pH scale
•Neutral : pH = 7
•Acidic : pH < 7
•Basic : pH > 7•Buffers keep pH within normal limits
pH scale
Acidic
Neutral
Basic
The Importance of Water to Life•Three quarters of the Earth’s surface is water
•Two thirds of the human body is composed of water
•All organisms require water
•Since water is an essential part of life, it’s surprising that the bond that 2 atoms of H make with 1 atom of O is so weak. Actually, the bond that forms a single H20 molecule (which is what type of bond??) lasts only 1 / 100,000,000,000 of a second!
•However, water molecules form extensive lattices with other water molecules. This occurrence leads to the important physical properties of water!
Water1.Water is a polar covalently bonded
molecule that forms hydrogen bonds with other polar covalently bonded water molecules.
2.Universal solvent
3.Ice (solid water) is less dense than liquid ice.
Ex. Ice floats in liquid water
4. Water has a high capacity to store heat. Water stabilizes Earth’s temperature (Remember, water comprises ¾ Earth’s surface.
5. Adhesion and cohesion
Properties of Water
•Bonds to hydrophilic substances and repels hydrophobic ones
•Stabilizes temperature
•Expands when it freezes
•Cohesive
•Dissolves substances
CohesionSince water is polar, it is attracted to other polar molecules. Cohesion occurs when the other polar molecule is water.
Surface Tension
Created by cohesion and due to the strong hydrogen bonding between the polar water molecules.
Forming Macromolecules•Organic molecule
•Formed by living organisms
•Carbon-based core with functional groups attached
•Functional group
•Groups of atoms with special chemical properties
•Confer specific chemical properties on the molecules that posses them
•Ex.
•Macromolecules
•Potentially large molecules (Macro-) that are the building materials of cells. They are the material that makes up the body of cells and the machinery that runs within cells
•Thousands of different types in an organism BUT the body is made of 4 types (protein, nucleic acid, carbohydrates, lipids)
Five Principle Functional Groups
Figure 3.17
More on MacromoleculesPolymer: a molecule made of MANY chains of a similar
subunit
Monomer: a single molecule that is the BASIC building block of a macromolecule Monomers can combine to form a polymer
View animation on Polymer formation http://science.nhmccd.edu/biol/dehydrat/dehydrat.html
Dehydration SynthesisThe process of FORMING a macromoleculeForms a COVALENT bond between two subunits:
A hydroxyl (OH) group is removed from one subunitA hydrogen (H) is removed from the other subunit
• Small molecule + small molecule large molecule + H20
• View animation
Hydrolysis Reactions•The BREAKING up of a polymer
•Adds a water molecule (H20)
•H20 comes in and…
•A hydrogen becomes attached to one subunit
•A hydroxyl (OH) becomes attached to the other subunit
•Results in the BREAKING of the covalent bond that previously held the macromolecule (polymer) together
•Large molecule + H20 2 small molecules
•View animation
CarbohydratesContain C, H, O atoms (1:2:1 ratio)# Carbon atoms = # Oxygen atomsHydrophilicExcellent for energy storage
Why?? The C-H bonds store energy. When an organism requires an energy source, C-H bonds are the ones most often broken. This results in the release of stored energy.
Comprise 1-2% of a cells mass2 types: simple carbohydrates
complex carbohydrates
Simple CarbohydratesMonosaccharide
Simple sugar Consists of one subunit;
smallest carbs Ex. Glucose (C6H12O6) Also, fructose, ribose,
deoxyribose See Figure 3.29
Disaccharide Result of linkage of two
monosaccharides Ex. Sucrose, lactose, maltose See Figure 3.30
Complex CarbohydratesPolysaccharides
Long chain polymers of sugars
The body converts soluble sugars into insoluble forms (polysaccharides). These polysaccharides are then deposited throughout the body in specific storage areas.
Preferred form of energy storagePlants: starch = glucose
polysaccharide that plants use to store energy
Animals: glycogen = highly insoluble macromolecule formed of glucose and polysaccharides that serves as stored energy
•Utilized by plants and animals as structural polysaccharides (chitin and cellulose); linkage is unique such that the chains are not recognized by enzymes that normally break polysaccharide bonds.
Lipids
Contain C, H, and OHydrophobic (held together by non-polar covalent
bonds)Used as long term storageContains MORE energy-rich C-H bonds than carbs
LipidsI. Triglycerides (Fat)•Fats are synthesized from 2 components:
1. Fatty acid: long chain C and H atoms ending in a COOH group
2. Glycerol: a three C molecule; note, glycerol is an alcohol
•Glycerol forms a backbone to which 3 fatty acids are attached via a dehydration reaction fat molecule•Provides long term energy storage, insulation
Lipids, continuedTriglycerides
Saturated Fatty acids with ALL internal
carbon atoms forming covalent bonds with two hydrogen atoms
Animal source Solid at room temperature
and body temp (37C)
Unsaturated Fats with fatty acids that
have double bonds between 1 or more pairs of carbon atoms
Plant source Kink imparts a 30° bend:
Liquid at room temperature Low melting point
Why are unsaturated fats good while saturated fats are bad for your health?
The C C bond in unsaturated fats creates a negative charge that causes the fat molecules to repel each other rather than stick together
(as they do in long chain saturated fats).
HydrogenationExample: MargarineMargarine is formed from heating oil (unsaturated
triglycerides) in the presence of a metal catalyst (aluminum) and hydrogen. That environment breaks the C C and replaces it with two hydrogen atoms producing very hard, saturated fats. Chemists vary the degree of time that hydrogenation occurs resulting in a product that is soft and spreadable (partially hydrogenated).
N.B. Margarine is 10-50% trans fatty acids = BAD Margarine has been found to be contaminated with
aluminum. Al is a causative agent in AD
What is a trans-fatty acid?Trans fatty acids have
hydrogen atoms on opposite sides of the double bonded carbons
Cis fatty acids have hydrogen atoms that on the same side with each other
The enzymes that metabolize fat can only metabolize cis fatty acids
Butter is a saturated triglyceride.Why does butter soften as it melts, why
doesn’t it instantly melt?
Because the fatty acid chains that come off the glycerol backbone differ. Each different
fatty acid has a different melting point.
Common fatsSaturated
Palmitic acid
UnsaturatedOmega-3
Types of LipidsII. Phospholipid
• Glycerol + 2 fatty acids + phosphate group
• Polar group at one end (glycerol and phosphate) and highly nonpolar group at other end (fatty acid tails)
• Ex. Cell membrane
III. Steroid• 4-interlocking rings• Found in cell membranes• Ex. Cholesterol, hormones
Basic structure of a triglyceride
Basic structure of a phospholipid
Phospholipid Bilayer
Hydrophobic
Hydrophobic
Hydrophilic
ProteinComprises 10-30% cell massFunctional roles (enzymes) and structural roles
(collagen, keratin)All proteins are a long polymer chain of amino
acid subunitssmall molecules, 20 totalall 20 have a basic structure of a central
carbon atom to which the 4 following are attached: hydrogen atom
amino group (-NH2)carboxyl group (-COOH)
an “R” group
Amino AcidsNonpolar
Hydrophobic
Polar Ionizable (Acidic)
Hydrophilic
Polar Uncharged
Hydrophilic
Polar Ionizable (Basic)
Hydrophilic
How to make a proteinLink specific amino
acids together in a particular orderPeptide bond =
covalent bond that links 2 amino acids together
Polypeptides = long chains of amino acids liked by peptide bonds
Protein StructureStructure determines functionWhat determines protein structure?
Amino acid sequence of the protein
Four levels of protein structure:
Primary
Secondary
Tertiary
Quaternary
All levels of protein structure are ultimately determined by amino acid sequence!!
Primary Structure of ProteinThe sequence of
amino acids of a polypeptide chain
Initial folding of the polypeptide chain caused by formation of hydrogen bonds
Can result in sheets (Beta sheets) or coils (alpha helices) of polypeptides
Because some AAs are polar and some are nonpolar, a polypeptide folds in solution: nonpolar regions are forced together (forced by the polar groups and their attraction to water resulting in the polar groups repulsion of nonpolar amino acids)
Secondary Structure of a Protein
http://kvhs.nbed.nb.ca/gallant/biology/biology.html
Tertiary Structure of a Protein
A folded and twisted molecule
Repulsion by water forces nonpolar amino acids towards the interior leaving polar amino acids exposed to the exterior
Quaternary Structure of a ProteinSpatial
arrangement of several component polypeptide chains
http://www.chemsoc.org/exemplarchem/entries/2004/durham_mcdowall/images/1a3n-4-struct.png
DenaturationWhat influences how a polypeptide folds in solution?
The polar nature of the environment
When the polar nature of the environment changes (↑ temp or ↓ pH), hydrogen bonding may be altered which may then cause unfolding of the protein, or denaturation.• Ex. Frying an egg
Nucleic AcidsLong polymers of nucleotides that serve as
information storage devices of cellsNucleotides have 3 components:
A five carbon sugar A phosphate group (PO4) An organic nitrogen-containing base
• Polynucleotide chains
- Chain of nucleic acids in which sugars are linked in a line by the phosphate groups
…SUGAR – P – SUGAR – P - SUGAR – P …
Nucleic AcidsDNA and RNADNA (deoxyribonucleic acid)
Possible nucleotides: Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, THYMINE
Structure: 2 nucleotide strands = double helixRNA (ribonucleic acid)
Possible nucleotides: Adenine, Guanine, Cytosine, URACILLong, single strand
How do nucleic acids function as information storage devices?
Each nucleotide serves as a letter and each nucleic acid has different nucleotides (letters)
Nucleotides
Everyday Science•Lactose Intolerance – the inability to digest foods containing milk due to a lack of the lactase enzyme (enzyme, a protein that disrupts chemical bonds in other molecules allowing reactions to occur or preventing their occurrence).
•Normally, milk sugar (lactose) is digested by the lactase enzyme. Lactase binds to lactose in milk and breaks the chemical bonds that are responsible for holding the sugar together. This allows the broken down sugars to pass through the bloodstream and be utilized by the body.
•LI people lack the lactase enzyme, thus they cannot digest milk protein. This leads to a buildup of leading to nausea, cramps and bloaing.
Milk Protein
Lactase
Lactose Glucose + Galactose Glucose _____Galactose
BloodstreamGI tract
EnergyLI symptoms
Normal Lactose Metabolism
AB
Questions
1.What is the strongest type of single bonded molecule?Covalent bond (both polar and non-polar
types)2. Isotopes have a different measure of stability when compared to their ‘parent’ element on the periodic table. True or False True3. You can determine the number of neutrons present in an atom by subtracting the number of protons from the ____.Atomic mass4. When preparing a solution, you accidentally add too much of an acidic component. This creates an excess of _____. The desired pH is 8; the pH you measure is 6. You decide that it shouldn’t make too much of a difference, you’re only 2 units off. What is wrong with this logic? H+, or Hydrogen ions
A difference of 2 units on the pH scale correlates to a 100 fold more acidic solution. Therefore, your solution has 100 times more Hydrogen ions then the desired solution concentration.
•Websites for additional info from today’s lecture:
www.webelements.com Interactive periodic tablehttp://web.buddyproject.org/web017/web017/pertab.html