Adobe Scan 07 Jan 2024
Adobe Scan 07 Jan 2024
Y SCHOOLB~
AFFILIATED TO CBSE
PRACl'ICAL FILE
CLASS-XU
2023-24
CHEMISTRY
A PR_OJECT.
C
1. CERTIFICATE
2.ACl<NOWLEDCEMENT
3. BIOMOLECULES
4.TYPES OF BIOMOLECULES
4.1 MICROMOLECULES
4.1.1. AMINO ACID
4.1.2. SUGAR
4.1.3. LIPID
4.1.4. NUCLEOTIDES
4.2. MACROMOLECULES
4.21. POLYSACCARIDES
4.22. NUCLEIC ACID
4.2.3. PROTEINS
5.MONOMERS
6.METABOLIC BASIS FOR LIVING
7.THE LIVING STATE
a.IMPORTANT QUESTION AND
CONCEPT OF BIOMOLECULES
A..••m••ecu•e or ..•••••le•• m••ecu•e is a loosely
used term for molecules or more commonly ions that
are present in organisms. Biomolecules including
large macromolecules (or polyanions) such
as proteins, carbohydrates, lipids,and nucleic acids, as
well as small molecules such as
primary metabolites, secondary metabolites,
and natural products.
........,;~!Ire.:
Biology and its subsets of biochemistry and molecular
biology study biomolecules and their reactions. Most
biomolecules are organic compounds, and just
four elements-oxygen, carbon, hydrogen,
and nitrogen-mabe up 96% of the human body's
mass. But many other elements, such as the
various biometals, are present in small amounts.
IVPES OF BIOMOLEClJJlJES
MICRO MOLECULES
BIOMOLECULES (
MACROMOLECULES
M < 1000 . . . MICROMOLECULE
AMONIOACID
SUGARS
LIPIDS
NUCLEOTIDES
M>l000 . . . MACROMOLECULE
POLYSACCARIDES
NUCLEIC ACID
PROTEINS
C, C,
C,
N
~
~ ...
~
a
Amino acid contain both amino and carboxylic
acid functional groups. (In biochemistry, the term
amino acid is used when referring to those amino acids
in which the amino and carboxylate functionalities are
attached to the same carbon, plus proline which is not
actually an amino acid).
Modified amino acids are sometimes observed in
proteins; this is usually the result of enzymatic
modification after translation (protein synthesis). For
example, phosphorylation of serine by Rinases and
dephosphorylation by phosphatases is an important
control mechanism in the cell cycle. Only two amino
acids other than the standard twenty are Rnown to be
incorporated into proteins during translation, in
certain organisms:
• Selenocysteine is incorporated into some proteins
at a UGA codon, which is normally a stop codon.
• Pyrrolysine is incorporated into some proteins at a
UAG codon. For instance, in some methanogens in
enzymes that are used to produce methane.
Besides those used in protein synthesis, other
biologically important amino acids
include camitine (used in lipid transport within a
cell), ornithine, GABA and taurine.
,">---NH
I(; I
o•
CH
i' I 2
+H3 N-CH-C----O
a Ii0 r,K 1 .,,.. 2.4
SUGAR
MONOSHACCARIDES:
Simplest sugar,which cannot ne hydrolysed
further into smaller sugars
• Composed of 3-7 C atoms:
• Triose (3C)
• Tetrose ( 4C)
• Pentose (SC)
• Hexose ( 6C)
• Heptose (7C)
GLUCOSE:
CH2 0H
H OH
GLACTOSE:
- -o
H OH
LIPID
For lipids present in biological membranes, the
Lipids (oleaginous) are chiefly fatty acid esters, and
are the basic building blocl:?s of biological membranes.
Another biological role is energy storage
(e.g., triglycerides). Most lipids consist of
a polar or hydrophilic head (typically glycerol) and
one to three nonpolar or hydrophobic fatty acid tails,
and therefore they are amphiphilic. Fatty acids consist
of unbranched chains of carbon atoms that are
connected by single bonds alone (saturated fatty
acids) or by both single and double
bonds (unsaturated fatty acids). The chains are usually
14-24 carbon groups long, but it is always an even
number.
hydrophilic head is from one of three classes:
• Qlycolipids, whose heads contain
an oligosaccharide with 1-15 saccharide residues.
• Phospholipids, whose heads contain a positively
charged group that is linl:led to the tail by a
negatively charged phosphate group.
• Sterols, whose heads contain a planar steroid ring,
for example, cholesterol.
Other lipids
include prostaglandins and leul:?otrienes which are
both 20-carbon fatty acyl units synthesized
from arachidonic acid. They are also l:lnown as fatty
acids
o HHHH ~ HHHH
f ):- ~- ~-¢-¢-~-¢- ~-C-~- H
H- - o k HHHHHH HH
H-
O~~
- 0'
-~
-¢-~
-¢-¢-{:J-~
Ii-H
H H H H H H H
Lipid Structure
• Fats, Oils, Waxes
• Provide energy for cells, cell
structure, insulation
- Lipids & Proteins compose the cell
membrane
- Cholesterol: gives cell membrane
flexibility
• Structure (2 parts):
- "Head" = glycerol
- "Tails" = fatty acids
• Monomer: Fatty Acid
• Polymer: Lipid
NUCLIOIIDII
Nucleotlclet are organic molecules that serve as
the monomer units for forming the nucleic
acid polymers deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
and ribonucleic acid(RNA), both of which are
essential biomolecules in all life-forms on Earth.
Nucleotides are the building blocRS of nucleic acids;
they are composed of three subunit molecules:
a nitrogenous base a five-carbon
sugar (ribose or deoxyribose), and at least
one phosphate group. They are also l:?nown
as phosphataiucleotides.
A nucleoside is a nitrogenous base and a 5-carbon
sugar. Thus a nucleoside plus a phosphate group yields
a nucleotide.
Nucleotides also play a central role in life-form
metabolism at the fundamental, cellular level. They
carry pacl:?ets of chemical energy-in the form of
the nucleoside
triphosphates ATP, OTP, CTP and UTP-throughout
the cell to the many cellular functions that demand
energy, which include synthesizing amino
acids, proteins and cell membranes and parts; moving
the cell and moving cell parts, both internally and
intercellularly; dividing the cell.
-N
0 /~ ~ )
II
H0 - ~-07-
,
-J N
~
0
o·
OH
Purine-: A/ GJ
Pyrimdine: C /U}RNA
Nitrogenous
base
Phosphate
group 3 2'
5-carbon In RN.A: Ribose Sugar
sugar In DNA,Deo~--yribose Sugar
MACROMOLECULE
hl!ftt11che1,idet
Polysaccharides are polymerized monosaccharides, or
complex carbohydrates. They have multiple simple
sugars. Examples are starch, cellulose, and glycogen.
They are generally large and often have a comple><
branched connectivity. Because of their size,
polysaccharides are not water-soluble, but their many
hydroxy groups become hydrated individually when
exposed to water, and some polysaccharides form
thicb colloidal dispersions when heated in
water. Shorter polysaccharides, with 3 -10 monomers,
are called oligosaccharides .A fluorescent indicator-
displacement molecular imprinting sensor was
developed for discriminating saccharides. It successfully
discriminated three brands of orange juice
beverage. The change in fluorescence intensity of the
sensing films resulting is directly related to the
saccharide concentration.
HO
Polysaccharides
~:~ 1 0
n
N■cleic •cicl
Nucleic acids are biopolymers, or large biomolecules,
essential to all bnown forms of life. They are composed
of monomers, which are nucleotides made of three
components: a s-carb on sugar, a phosphate group
and a nitrogenous base. If the sugar is a simple ribose,
the polyme r is RNA (ribonucleic acid); if the sugar is
derive d from ribose as deoxyribose, the polyme r
is DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid).
Nucleic acids are the most import ant of all
biomolecules. They are found in abund ance in all
living things, where they functio n to create and
encode and then store inform ation in the nucleus of
every living cell of every life-for m organism on Earth.
In turn, they functio n to transm it and express that
inform ation inside and outside the cell nucleu s-to the
interio r operations of the cell and ultima tely to the
next genera tion of each living organism. The encoded
inform ation is contained and conveyed via the nucleic
acid sequence, which provides the 'ladder-step'
orderin g of nucleotides within the molecules of RNA
and DNA.
NH2
~N 0✓,~
OH
I
HO- P - 0
II0
'cH:1 NJlN~
DNA AND RNJA JIRIJCIIIJRE
DNA structure is dominated by the well-
1:?nown double helix formed by Watson-Cricl:? base-
pairing of C with C and A with T. This is Rnown as 8-
form DNA, and is overwhelmingly the most
favourable and common state of DNA; its highly
specific and stable base-pairing is the basis of reliable
genetic information storage. DNA can sometimes
occur as single strands (often needing to be stabilized
by single-strand binding proteins) or as A-form or z-
form helices, and occasionally in more complex 30
structures such as the crossover at Holliday
junctions during DNA replication.
Cytosine ■
~
Guanine ■ Guanine ■
0
(Q-N
>-:r_.,
Base patr
~ >-~.
H
"
Adenine ~ Adenine ~
t1J
~
ti)
n
Uracil
¢:0
Nucleoboses
ot RNA
■
.,___
hebof
/
wgu .phosphatesE;== -- -~*
Thymine ■
Nucleobases
of DNA
RNA DNA
Rlboouclelc ilCld Deoxyribonucleic acid
PROTEINS
P,otelnt are large biomolecules, or macromolecules,
consisting of one or more long chains of amino
acid residues. Proteins perform a vast array of
functions within organisms, including catalysing
metabolic reactions, DNA replication, responding to
stimuli, and transporting molecules from one location
to another. Proteins differ from one another primarily
in their sequence of amino acids, which is dictated by
the nucleotide sequence of their genes, and which
usually results in protein folding into a specific three-
dimensional structure that determines its activity.
STRUCTURE OF PROTEIN
The particular series of amino acids that form a
protein is l:?nown as that protein's primary structure.
This sequence is determined by the genetic mal:?eup of
the individual. It specifies the order of side-chain
groups along the linear polypeptide "bacl:?bone".
Proteins have two types of well-classified, frequently
occurring elements of local ,s tructure defined by a
particular pattern of hydrogen bonds along the
bacl:?bone: alpha helix and beta sheet. Their number
and arrangement is called the secondary structure of
the protein. Alpha helices are regular spirals stabilized
by hydrogen bonds between the bacl:?bone CO group
(carbonyl) of one amino acid residue and the
bacl:?bone NH group (amide) of the i+4 residue. The
spiral has about 3.6 amino acids per turn, and the
amino acid side chains sticb out from the cylinder of
the helix. Beta pleated sheets are formed by
bacbbone hydrogen bonds between individual beta
strands each of which is in an "extended", or fully
stretched-out, conformation.
Heme
- Ppolypeptide
c) Tertlay etruct\n
Cl polypeptide
'
(•) Primary structu,.
lsoenap•••
lsoenzymes, or isozymes, are multiple forms of an
enzyme, with slightly different protein sequence and
closely similar but usually not identical functions. They
are either products of different genes, or else different
products of alternative splicing. They may either be
produced in different organs or cell types to perform
the same function, or several isoenzymes may be
produced in the same cell type under differential
regulation to suit the needs of changing development
or environment. The relative levels of isoenzymes in
blood can be used to diagnose problems in the organ
of secretion.
MONOMERS
A 111onome, is a molecule that, as a
unit, binds chemically or supramolecularly to other
molecules to form a supramolecular polymer. Large
numbers of monomer units combine to form polymers
in a process called polymerization. Molecules of a small
number of monomer units (up to a few dozen) are
called oligomers. The term "monomeric protein" may
also be used to describe one of the proteins mal:?ing up
a multiprotein complex.
Blopot,111e, 9,011pln9t, ancl lhe ••P•t of
111ono111e,t lhal c,eale the111.
• For lipids (Diglycerides, triglycerides), the
monomers are •••••••I ancl fall• aclclt.
• For proteins (Polypeptides), the monomers
are a111lno aclclt.
• For Nucleic acids (DNA/RNA), the monomers
are nucleollclet, each of which is made of a
pentose sugar, a nitrogenous base and a
phosphate group.
• For carbohydrates (Polysaccharides specifically
and disaccharides-depends), the monomers
are 111onotaccha,lcles.
G
Monomer
...
Polymer
NIIABOLIC BASIi FOR
LIVING
Metabolic pathways can lead to a more complex
structure from a simpler structure (for example, acetic
acid becomes cholesterol) or lead to a simpler
structure from a complex structure (for example,
glucose becomes lactic acid in our sReletal muscle).
The former cases are called biosynthetic pathways
or •••lt•llc pathways. The latter constitute
degradation and hence are
called c•l•ll•l•c pathways. Anabolic pathways, as
expected, consume energy. Assembly of a protein from
amino acids requires energy input. On the other hand,
catabolic pathways lead to the release of energy. For
example, when glucose is degraded to lactic acid in
our sbeletal muscle, energy is liberated. This metabolic
pathway from glucose to lactic acid which occurs in 10
metabolic steps is called glycolysis. Living organisms
have learnt to trap this energy liberated during
degradation and store it in the form of chemical
bonds. As and when needed, this bond energy is
utilized for biosynthetic, osmotic and mechanical worb
that we perform. The most important form of energy
currency in living systems is the bond energy in a
chemical called • ..••••••• l•lph••Ph•le (ATP).
THI LIVING IIAII
• Thousand of chemical compound in a living
organism, otherwise called metabolities or
biomolecules are present at concentration
characterstics of each of them. For example the
blood concentration of glucose in a normal
healthy individual is 4.5-5.0 mm while that
hormone would be nanograms/ml
• The most important fact of biological system is
that all living organism exist in a steady-stale
characterised by concentration of each of these
molecule
• These biomolecules are in metabolic flux
• Any chemical or physical process move
simultaneously to equilibrium. The steady state is
1
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•NCERT CLASS 12