Biochemistry Notes
Biochemistry Notes
Lipids
✓ Consist of a heterogeneous group of compounds that are insoluble in water and are soluble in non-
polar solvents (chloroform, ether, benzene)
Classification of Lipids:
1. Saponifiable lipids – produce fatty acid salts upon treatment with NaOH
a. Triacylglycerols
b. Waxes
c. Phospholipids
• Glycerophospholipid
• Sphingolipid
d. Glycolipids
2. Non-saponifiable lipids
a. Steroids
b. Terpenes
Fatty Acids
Fatty acids are monocarboxylic acids that typically contain hydrocarbon chains of variable
lengths (between 12 and 20 carbons)
an acid group at one end (carboxylic acid, -COOH) and hydrogen atoms attached all along their
length
usually contain an even number of carbons
Those fatty acids that are not synthesized in the body but required for normal body growth and
maintenance. These fatty acids are to be supplied through diet.
Waxes
are esters of long chain saturated and unsaturated fatty acids with long chain alcohol.
serve as protective coatings on leaves, stems, and fruits of plants.
contain hydrocarbons, alcohols, fatty acids, aldehydes, and sterols.
Phospholipids
A lipid consisting of a water-soluble head (phosphate) and a fat-soluble tail (fatty acids)
Contain phosphorous
Serve as emulsifiers (allow fats and water to mix and travel in and out of cells into watery
fluid on both sides)
Types of Phospholipids:
Phosphoglycerides/Glycerophospholipids
Sphingomyelins
contain sphingosine instead of glycerol
also classified as sphingolipids
Sphingolipids have:
a polar head group (X) than contains a
two non-polar tails
lack a glycerol core and have only one fatty acid that is
connected by an amide linkage.
Glycolipids
The ceramides are also precursors for the glycolipids, sometimes referred to as the
glycosphingolipids
In glycolipids a monosaccharide, disaccharide, or oligosaccharide is attached to a ceramide
through an O-glycosidic linkage
Differ from sphingomyelin in that it contains no phosphate
characteristic structure of sterol is their steroid nucleus consisting of four fused rings, three with
six carbons (Phenanthrene) and one with five carbons (cyclopentane).
Steroid nucleus is nearly planar and relatively rigid (cholesterol in bilayers stiffens the
membrane)
Cholesterol is the most abundant sterol in animals
Terpenes
They are hydrocarbons or hydrocarbon derivatives constructed from recurring isoprene units
Biological Membrane
1. Membrane Fluidity
2. Selective Permeability
3. Self-sealing capacity
4. Asymmetry
Amino Acids, Peptides and Proteins
Proteins
are the most abundant biological macromolecules, occurring in all cells and all parts of cells
All proteins are constructed from the same ubiquitous set of 20 amino acids
Cells
o can produce proteins with strikingly different properties and activities by joining the
same 20 amino acids in many different combinations and sequences
Types of Proteins
Structural
• Contractile
• Transport
• Storage
• Hormonal
• Enzyme
• Protection
Amino Acids