chapter 11
some important omega-3 fatty acids:
- alpha-linolenate - EPA and DHA - found in fatty fish and shellfish
some characteristics of steroids:
- function as powerful hormones - facilitate the digestion of lipids in the diet - key membrane constituents
the platform on which phospholipids are built may be:
- glycerol (a three carbon alcohol) - sphingosine (an amino alcohol)
membrane lipids are primarily comprised of:
- phospholipids - glycolipids
the same number of carbon atoms, what is the melting point of saturated, trans, and cis all compared?
- saturated has the highest melting point - trans has the next highest melting point - cis has the lowest melting point
common alcohol moieties of phosphoglycerides:
- serine - ethanolamine - choline - glycerol - inositol
characteristics of membrane lipids:
- they are amphipathic molecules - they contain both a hydrophilic and hydrophobic moiety
some characteristics of triacylglycerols:
- they are hydrophobic (do not bind to water molecules) - they are stored in a nearly anhydrous form
some biochemical roles that lipids play:
- widely used to store energy - key components of membranes - involved in signal-transduction pathways
1 gram of nearly anhydrous fat v. 1 gram of hydrated glycogen:
1 gram of nearly anhydrous fat stores more than 6x as much energy as 1 gram of hydrated glycogen
phospholipids are composed of four components:
1) fatty acids (one or more) 2) platform (to which the fatty acids are attached) - glycerol 3) phosphate 4) alcohol (attached to the phosphate)
the 5 classes of lipids:
1) free fatty acids 2) triacylglycerols 3) phospholipids 4) glycolipids 5) steroids
two key roles for fatty acids:
1) fuels 2) building blocks for membrane lipids
three common types of membrane lipids:
1) phospholipids 2) glycolipids 3) steroids (cholesterol)
children affected by HGPS usually die at the age of:
13 years from severe atherosclerosis
the number of carbons in most common fatty acid is:
16 or 18
number of carbon fatty acids that is the most common:
16- and 18-carbon fatty acids
cholesterol constitutes almost...
25% of the membrane lipids in certain nerve cells, but is essentially absent from some intracellular membranes
octadecatrienoic acid has how many double bonds?
3
the polar head group of phospholipids is found at which carbon of glycerol?
C3
a hydrophobic group that is often attached to proteins, usually so the protein is able to associate with a membrane:
Farnesyl
inappropriate farnesylation has been shown to result in:
Hutchinson-Gilford progeria syndrome (HGPS) - a rare disease of premature aging
do lipids form polymers?
NO - unlike carbohydrates, amino acids, and nucleic acids, they do not
what is necessary for a protein to associate with a hydrophobic environment, such as a membrane?
a lipid must be attached to the protein
adipose tissue also serves as:
a thermal insulator to help maintain body temperature
the major site of accumulation of triacylglycerols in mammals:
adipose tissue (it's distributed under the skin and elsewhere throughout the body)
a term applied to molecules that have both hydrophilic and hydrophobic properties:
amphipathic
sphingosine:
an amino alcohol that contains a long, unsaturated hydrocarbon chain
fatty acids in biological systems usually contain _____ number of carbon atoms:
an even number - usually between 14 and 24
glycolipids are oriented in an...
asymmetric fashion in membranes with the sugar residue always on the extracellular side of the membrane
why do fats yield more energy than carbohydrates when undergoing combustion to carbon dioxide and water?
because fats are more reduced than carbohydrates - the carbon atoms are bonded to hydrogen atoms and other carbon atoms rather than to oxygen atoms, as is the case for carbohydrates
why is the concentration of free fatty acids in cells or the blood low?
because free fatty acids are strong acids - high concentrations of free fatty acids would disrupt the pH balance of the cells
natural soaps are prepared by:
boiling triacylglycerols with NaOH
how are triacylglycerols formed?
by the attachment of 3 fatty acid chains to a glycerol molecule through ester linkages (through a process known as esterification)
fatty acids are richer in energy than:
carbohydrates (they are hydrophilic - bind to water molecules)
fatty acids are ionized at physiological pH and so are referred to in their _____ form:
carboxylate
fatty acids terminate with a:
carboxylic acid group
the simplest glycolipid:
cerebroside - contains a single sugar residue, either glucose or galactose
a flat polycyclic molecule that is absent in prokaryotic membranes:
cholesterol
in addition to phospholipids and glycolipids, _______ is a major type of membrane lipid:
cholesterol
the most common steroid is:
cholesterol
the most common steroid:
cholesterol - it is the precursor to many biochemically active steroids
the configuration of the double bonds in most unsaturated fatty acids:
cis
the shorthand notation indicating that there are two cis double bonds between carbons 9 and 10, and again be tween 12 and 13:
cis, cis(delta)9,12
what are essential in our diets?
cis-polyunsaturated fatty acids (like omega-3 fatty acids) - they help protect against cardiovascular disease
in adipose cells, drops of triacylglycerols...
coalesce to form a large globule in the cytoplasm, which may occupy most of the cell volume
steroids function as hormones that...
control a variety of physiological functions
a type of lipid that is less resistant to hydrolysis, potentially because of the way the acyl chain is linked to the glycerol backbone:
ether-linked lipid
chains of hydrogen-bearing carbon atoms (called hydrocarbons) which terminate with carboxylic acid groups:
fats, or fatty acids
when energy is required for a fast, what happens?
fatty acids are cleaved from the triacylglycerol and carried to the cells
the simplest type of lipid that is most commonly used as a fuel:
free fatty acids
a more complex glycolipid:
ganglioside - contain a branched chain of as many as seven sugar residues
the backbone of a phospholipid:
glycerol
lipids which contain carbohydrates is/are:
glycolipid
lipids that are bound to carbohydrates and are important membrane constituents:
glycolipids
sugar-containing lipids:
glycolipids
the longer the fatty acid, the _______ the fatty acid:
higher the melting point of
structure of phosphatidate:
hydroxyl groups at C-1 and C-2 of glycerol are esterified to the carboxyl groups of the two fatty acid chains, and the C-3 hydroxyl group of the glycerol backbone is esterified to phosphoric acid
the melting point of polyunsaturated fatty acids...
is even lower than unsaturated fatty acids
the properties of fatty acids depend on:
length and degree of unsaturation
water-insoluble molecules that are highly soluble in organic solvents:
lipids
the reduction in tight packaging due to cis double bonds ______ the melting temperature of a fatty acid:
lowers
the double bonds in polyunsaturated fatty acids are separated by at least one:
methylene group
a lipid is defined as a compound soluble in:
organic solvent
polar head groups of phospholipids are esterified to which functional group?
phosphate
the simplest phosphoglyceride:
phosphatidate (diacylglycerol 3-phosphate)
membrane lipids with a glycerol backbone:
phosphoglyceride
phospholipids derived from glycerol:
phosphoglycerides - they are composed of a glycerol backbone to which are attached two fatty acid chains and a phosphorylated alcohol
a type of lipid with two acyl chains, a glycerol backbone, and a polar head group:
phospholipid
membrane lipids that consist of fatty acids that create a macromolecule with a polar head and non polar tail:
phospholipids
the major class of membrane lipids:
phospholipids
cholesterol is absent from:
prokaryotes
cholesterol is important in maintaining:
proper membrane fluidity (it increases membrane fluidity by preventing tight packing)
what are correlated with high blood levels and cardiovascular disease?
saturated and trans-unsaturated fats in the diet
fatty acids composed of single bonds only:
saturated fatty acids - every carbon atom is attached to four other atoms
soaps are the:
sodium or potassium salts of long chain fatty acids
phospholipids built on a sphingosine backbone:
sphingolipids
a common sphingolipid found in membranes:
sphingomyelin - especially rich in the myelin sheath of nerve cells
a complex amino alcohol backbone for membrane lipids:
sphingosine
glycolipids are derived from:
sphingosine
lipids that are polycyclic hydrocarbons:
steroids
all steroids have a:
tetracyclic ring structure called the steroid nucleus
the utility of triacylglycerols as an energy source is dramatically illustrated by:
the abilities of migratory birds
short chain and cis unsaturation enhance...
the fluidity of fatty acids and of their derivatives
the major phosphoglycerides are derived from phosphatidate by:
the formation of an ester linkage between the phosphoric group of phosphatidate and the hydroxyl group of one of several alcohols
triacylglycerol stores are replenished by:
the ingestion of food
longer chains offer more point of contact for van der Waals interactions and increase:
the melting points
adipose cells are specialized for:
the synthesis and storage of triacylglycerols and for their mobilization into fuel molecules that are transported to other tissues by the blood
soaps are derived from:
the treatment of triacylglycerols with a strong base (this process is known as saponification)
characteristics of glycolipids:
they are ubiquitous in all cell membranes where they play a role in cell-cell interactions
why do cis fatty acids have lower melting temperature?
they lack tight packing which limits the van der Waals interactions between chains and results in a lower melting temperature
the steroid nucleus consists of:
three cyclohexane (6 sides) rings and a cyclopentane (5 sides) ring joined together
lipid that is the storage form of fatty acids:
traicylglycerols
which fatty acid has higher symmetry - trans or cis?
trans fatty acids have higher symmetry and can pack better - they have higher melting points
the storage form of fatty acids:
triacylglycerol
fatty acids required for energy generation are stored as:
triacylglycerols (TAG)
structure of steroids:
unlike the other classes of lipids, they take on a cyclical rather than linear structure
fatty acids with one or more double or triple bonds are called:
unsaturated fatty acids
melting point of saturated v. unsaturated fatty acids:
unsaturated fatty acids have lower melting points than those of saturated fatty acids of the same length
the presence of double bonds in fatty acids limits tight packaging and the number of _____ interactions:
van der Waals