Transcript
Page 1: Figure 5.0  Spider’s web made of protein

Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein

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Figure 5.1 Building models to study the structure and function of macromolecules

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Figure 5.2 The synthesis and breakdown of polymers

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Figure 5.3 The structure and classification of some monosaccharides

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Figure 5.29 The components of nucleic acids; differences between DNA and RNA

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Figure 5.3x Hexose sugars

Glucose Galactose

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Figure 5.4 Linear and ring forms of glucose

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Figure 5.5 Examples of disaccharide synthesis

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Figure 5.5x Glucose monomer and disaccharides

Glucose monomer

Sucrose

Maltose

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Figure 5.6 Storage polysaccharides

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Figure 5.7a Starch and cellulose structures 

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Figure 5.7b,c Starch and cellulose structures 

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Figure 5.7x Starch and cellulose molecular models

Glucose Glucose

Starch

Cellulose

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Figure 5.8 The arrangement of cellulose in plant cell walls

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Figure 5.x1 Cellulose digestion: termite and Trichonympha

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Figure 5.x2 Cellulose digestion: cow

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Figure 5.9 Chitin, a structural polysaccharide: exoskeleton and surgical thread

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Figure 5.10 The synthesis and structure of a fat, or triacylglycerol

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Figure 5.11x Saturated and unsaturated fats and fatty acids: butter and oil

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Figure 5.11 Examples of saturated and unsaturated fats and fatty acids 

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Figure 5.12 The structure of a phospholipid

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Figure 5.13 Two structures formed by self-assembly of phospholipids in aqueous environments   

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Figure 5.14 Cholesterol, a steroid    

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Figure 8.6 The detailed structure of an animal cell’s plasma membrane, in cross section

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Figure 4.8 A comparison of functional groups of female (estradiol) and male (testosterone) sex hormones

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Table 5.1 An Overview of Protein Functions

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Figure 5.0 Spider’s web made of protein

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Figure 5.15 The 20 amino acids of proteins: nonpolar

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Figure 5.15 The 20 amino acids of proteins: polar and electrically charged

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Figure 5.16 Making a polypeptide chain

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Figure 5.18 The primary structure of a protein

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Figure 5.20 The secondary structure of a protein

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Figure 5.22 Examples of interactions contributing to the tertiary structure of a protein

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Figure 5.17 Conformation of a protein, the enzyme lysozyme

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Figure 5.23 The quaternary structure of proteins

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Figure 5.19 A single amino acid substitution in a protein causes sickle-cell disease

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LE 5-21b

Primarystructure

Secondaryand tertiarystructures

1 2 3

Normal hemoglobin

Val His Leu

4Thr

5Pro

6Glu Glu

7Primarystructure

Secondaryand tertiarystructures

1 2 3

Sickle-cell hemoglobin

Val His Leu

4Thr

5Pro

6Val Glu

7

Quaternarystructure

Normalhemoglobin(top view)

Function Molecules donot associatewith oneanother; eachcarries oxygen.

Quaternarystructure

Sickle-cellhemoglobin

Function Molecules interact withone another tocrystallize intoa fiber; capacityto carry oxygenis greatly reduced.

Exposedhydrophobicregion subunit subunit

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Figure 5.24 Review: the four levels of protein structure

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Figure 5.25 Denaturation and renaturation of a protein

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Figure 5.26 A chaperonin in action

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Figure 5.x3 James Watson and Francis Crick

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Figure 5.28 DNA RNA protein: a diagrammatic overview of information flow in a cell

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Figure 5.29 The components of nucleic acids; differences between DNA and RNA

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Figure 5.30 The DNA double helix and its replication

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Figure 5.x4 Rosalind Franklin

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Table 5.2 Polypeptide Sequence as Evidence for Evolutionary Relationships


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