Congratulations For Reaching The Last Module
Congratulations For Reaching The Last Module
Congratulations For Reaching The Last Module
Biomolecules are carbon containing compounds which are of biological importance because they make
up and carry out by their chemical reactions the needs of the living organism where they are found.
1. Carbohydrate
o Monosaccharide
It comprise the simplest group of carbohydrates.
They cannot be hydrolyzed or split into other carbohydrates of less carbon
content.
Subclassified as trios, tetrose, pentose, hexoses or heptoses according to
the number of carbon atoms that exists as the monomer unit
They are usually crystalline, have a sweet taste
The common pentoses are arabinose, xylose and ribose
o Arabinose comes from gum Arabic and the gum of cherry
tree
o Xylose is the component of wood, straw, corn cobs and
bran.
o Pentoses that are important in human metabolism are
ribose and deocyribose
The important hexoses (C6H12O6) are
o Glucose
It occurs free in many fruit and plant juices.
It is known also as grape sugar. Another name given
to It is dextrose and is given intravenously when a
person is unable to take food by mouth.
It is called blood sugar because it is a normal
constituent of the blood and tissue fluids of the
human body.
Glucose is found in three forms in water solution.
An open-chain form and two cyclic or ring forms
T
he placement of the H and OH group on carbon 1
differentiates the two ring form of glucose. If the
OH group is below the plane of the ring, it is the
alpha or cis form; if it is above the ring, it is the beta
or trans form
o Fructose
Galacatose
Oligosaccharides
o Most of the di and tri saccharides are soluble in water and crystalline quite readily
1. Sucrose
Polysaccaharides
o In the classification that includes the oligosaccharides, the poly in the name
polysaccharide refers to more than ten.
o As a rule they are not sweet, not soluble in water and not readily obtained in crystalline
form. They may be subclassified according to the characteristic monosaccharide or
element they contain such as :
Pentosan- are present in straw, oat hulls, corn cobs, wheat bran, most words
and certain gums
1. Starch
- It is the most important source of carbohydrates, an essential part of the human diet
- The most common form of starch are mixture of amylose. They are two distinct substance
but both yield glucose on hydrolysis.
- Amylopectin is similar to amylose but has much larger molecule and has alpha 1,6 branches
every 20-24 glucose unit
2. Cellulose
- The glucose unit are held together by glycosidic linkages between carbon 1 and the beta
position on the first glucose and carbon 4 on the second glucose called beta (1,4) glycosidic
bond
3. Glycogen
- It is the major glucose storage molecule of animals, that is why it is sometime called animal
starch
1. Reducing Property
- All mono and disaccharides containg potentially free aldehyde or ketone group are reducing
- When heated with excess phennylhydrazine, sugars containing the potentially free aldehyde
and ketone groups form characteristic osazone crystal with definite melting point
- When heated with stron alkali reducing sugar turn yello to brown lberating the odor of
caramel. This becomes more marked upon acidification
- Disaccharides and other higher carbohydrates combine more readily with acids due to the
fact that during the polymerization, their acid property is depressed and they become more
alkaline
5. Esterification
- Some carbohydrates undergo esterification. Due to the presence of the primary alcohol
group in the sugar molecule, it can react with an oxyacid to form an ester
6. Fermentation
- This is a process which involves the decomposition of carbohydrates brought about by the
action of microorganism like yeast, bacteria, etc., forming ethyl alcohol and liberating
carbon dioxide.
7. Hydrolysis
8. Optical activity
Protein
- The word protein is derived from the greek word meaning “of first importance”
- The protein are divided into three large divisions according to different in component units
and physical properties.
- Conjugated protenins are made up of proteins combined with some other compound which
are non protein
- Derived proteins are those formed by the partial hydrolysis of naturally occurring proteins.
Physical Properties
NOTE: The iso electric point is the PH at which protein molecule is electrically neutral and will
not move in electric field
Chemical Properties
- Proteins are ampotheric due to the presence of both the amino and carboxyl groups n their
amino acid components
- Proteins are affected at varying degrees by heat. Solutions of proteins when heated may
undergo intramolecular rearrangement rendering them insoluble but more readily digestible
- Proteins are denatured by acid, alcohol, salts of heavy metals and alkaloidal reagent
- Proteins are hydrolyzed by acid, alkali or enzymes and are broken intro fragments of
diminishing complexity
Amino Acids
- Proteins are built from amino acids, which in some cases contain complex R substituents.
The amino acids are of the alph form
- Depending on the number of amino and carboxyl groups present in the molecule the amino
acid may be classified as
- Essential amino acids are thos indispensable for biological needs of the body. They cannot
be synthesized by the body in sufficient amount so they much ne supplied from food source
3. The tertiary structures refers to the characteristic conformation of protein molecule which
results from bending and folding due to interactions between amino acids which are
significantly part on the chain
4. The quarternary structures of the protein refers to the shape of the entire complex molecule
with two or more subunits held together by interactions between the chains.
- Nucleic acid are so named because the first ones identified came from cell nuclei.
- Three fundamental process: replication transcription and translation take place in the
copying or duplication transfer and use of genetic information