Chapter 2- Inorganic and Organic Compounds
Lipids
(fat) contain carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen but because they have less oxygen than carbohydrates they do not approx to 1:2:1
Base
(proton acceptor) any substance that removes H+ from the solution. Many bases dissociate in solution to release H+
Acid
(proton donor) any substance that breaks apart in solution to release H+
Protein Functions
1. Support 2. Movement 3. Transport 4. Buffering 5. Metabolic Regulation 6.Coordination, communication, and control 7. Defense
Building blocks of proteins
Amino Acids
Examples of Lipids
Fatty Acids, Fats, Steroids, and Phospholipids
Fats
Individual fatty acids are attached to glycerol to be able to make fat. Fat deposits under the skin to serve as insulation. Can provide protection around organs to create a cushion. Saturated - solid at room temperature, Unsaturated - liquid at room temperature
Steroids
Large lipid molecules contains four connected rings of carbon atoms
Nucleic Acids
Large organic molecules composed of C, H, O, N, and P. Nucleic acids store and process information at the molecular level. Made of nucleotides which are made of a sugar, phosphate group, and nitrogenous base.
Carbohydrate structures
Monosaccharides, Disaccharides, Polysaccharides.
Inorganic Compounds
Small molecules that do not contain carbon or hydrogen
Organic Compounds
always contain the elements carbon, hydrogen, and generally oxygen
Large organic molecules:
carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids.
The most important inorganic substances in the human body include:
carbon dioxide, oxygen, water, inorganic acids, bases, and salts.
Phospholipids
consist of glycerol and two fatty acids linked to a non-lipid group by phosphate group. The nonlipid portion is soluble in water, whereas fatty acid portion is relatively insoluble.
Carbohydrate
contains carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. (1:2:1) C, H, O. They are important energy sources.
DNA
determines inherited traits and carries the code of life (codes for proteins)
RNA
helps to make the protein by using information from DNA
Fatty Acids
long carbon atoms w/ attached hydrogen atoms that end in carboxyl. When fatty acids are put in a solution the carboxyl dissolves. Can be saturated and unsaturated
Proteins
most abundant organic component of the human body. All contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. Long chains of amino acids.