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Organic Molecules

Organic compounds are those that have carbon atoms. In living systems, large organic molecules, called macromolecules, may consist of hundreds or thousands of atoms. Most macromolecules are polymers, molecules that consist of a single unit (monomer) repeated many times.

Four of carbon's six electrons are available to form bonds with other atoms. Thus, you will always see four lines connecting a carbon atom to other atoms, each line representing a pair of shared electrons (one electron from carbon and one from another atom). Complex molecules can be formed by stringing carbon atoms together in a straight line or by connecting carbons together to form rings. The presence of nitrogen, oxygen, and other atoms adds additional variety to these carbon molecules.

Four important classes of organic molecules—carbohydrates, lipids, proteins, and nucleic acids—are discussed in the following sections.

Carbohydrates

Carbohydrates are classified into three groups according to the number of sugar (or saccharide) molecules present.

Lipids

Lipids are a class of substances that are insoluble in water (and other polar solvents), but are soluble in nonpolar substances (like ether or chloroform). There are three major groups of lipids.

Proteins

Proteins represent a class of molecules that have varied functions. Eggs, muscles, antibodies, silk, fingernails, and many hormones are partially or entirely proteins. Although the functions of proteins are diverse, their structures are similar. All proteins are polymers of amino acids; that is, they consist of a chain of amino acids covalently bonded. The bonds between the amino acids are called peptide bonds, and the chain is a polypeptide, or peptide. One protein differs from another by the number of arrangement of the 20 different amino acids. Each amino acid consists of a central carbon bonded to an amino group (-NH2), a carboxyl group (-COOH), and a hydrogen atom (Figure 5 ). The fourth bond of the central carbon is shown with the letter R, which indicates an atom or group of atoms that varies from one kind of amino acid to another. For the simplest amino acid, glycine, the R is a hydrogen atom. For serine, R is CH2OH. For other amino acids, R may contain sulfur (as in cysteine) or a carbon ring (as in phenyalanine).





Figure 5

Examples of amino acids.


There are four levels that describe the structure of a protein:

Nucleic acids

The genetic information of a cell is stored in molecules of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). The DNA, in turn, passes its genetic instructions to ribonucleic acid (RNA) for directing various metabolic activities of the cell.

DNA is a polymer of nucleotides (Figure 7 ). A DNA molecule consists of three parts—a nitrogen base, a five-carbon sugar called deoxyribose, and a phosphate group. There are four DNA nucleotides, each with one of the four nitrogen bases (adenine, thymine, cytosine, and guanine). The first letter of each of these four bases is often used to symbolize the respective nucleotide (A for adenine nucleotide, for example).





Figure 7

The molecular structure of nucleotides.


Figure 8 shows how two strands of nucleotides, paired by weak hydrogen bonds between the bases, from a double-stranded DNA. When bonded in this way, DNA forms a two-stranded spiral, or double helix. Note that adenine always bonds with thymine and cytosine always bonds with guanine.





Figure 8

Two-dimensional illustrations of the structure of DNA.


    RNA differs from DNA in the following ways:

  • The sugar in the nucleotides that make an RNA molecule is ribose, not deoxyribose as it is in DNA.

  • The thymine nucleotide does not occur in RNA. It is replaced by uracil. When pairing of bases occurs in RNA, uracil (instead of thymine) pairs with adenine.

  • RNA is usually single-stranded and does not form a double helix as does DNA.

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