Essentials of Ecology

(Darren Dugan) #1

S42 SUPPLEMENT 6


Figure 7 Straight-chain and ring structural formulas of glucose, a simple sugar that can be
used to build long chains of complex carbohydrates such as starch and cellulose.


Glucose (C 6 H 12 O 6 )

General structure Chain of glucose units Starch

CH 2 OH

CH 2 OH

C

H
OH H

HOH

HO


HH

OH

HO

H OH

H C OH

HO C H

H C OH

C

O

Amino
group

Carboxyl
group

R side group
(20 kinds, each with
distinct properties)
Amino acid

Valine

General structure
of amino acid

Chain of amino acids Protein

O–

R O

+H N C C

H

H

H

O–

HC

+H N C CO

CH 3

CH 3

H

H

H

Figure 8 General structural formula of amino acids and a specific structural formula of one of
the 20 different amino acid molecules that can be linked together in chains to form proteins
that fold up into more complex shapes.


They account for many of water’s unique prop-
erties (Science Focus, p. 67). Hydrogen bonds
also form between other covalent molecules or
portions of such molecules containing hydrogen
and nonmetallic atoms with a strong ability to
attract electrons.


Four Types of Large Organic
Compounds Are the Molecular
Building Blocks of Life


Larger and more complex organic compounds,
called polymers, consist of a number of basic
structural or molecular units (monomers) linked
by chemical bonds, somewhat like rail cars
linked in a freight train. Four types of macro-


Phosphate 5-Carbon sugar Nucleotide base

Deoxyribose in DNA
Ribose in RNA

Figure 9 Generalized structures of the nucleotide
molecules linked in various numbers and sequences
to form large nucleic acid molecules such as various
types of DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (ri-
bonucleic acid). In DNA, the 5-carbon sugar in each
nucleotide is deoxyribose; in RNA it is ribose. The
four basic nucleotides used to make various forms
of DNA molecules differ in the types of nucleotide
bases they contain—guanine (G), cytosine (C), ad-
enine (A), and thymine (T). (Uracil, labeled U, occurs
instead of thymine in RNA.)

molecules—complex carbohydrates, proteins,
nucleic acids, and lipids—are molecular building
blocks of life.
Complex carbohydrates consist of two
or more monomers of simple sugars (such as
glucose, Figure 7) linked together. One example
is the starches that plants use to store energy
and also to provide energy for animals that feed
on plants. Another is cellulose, the earth’s most
abundant organic compound, which is found in
the cell walls of bark, leaves, stems, and roots.
Proteins, are large polymer molecules
formed by linking together long chains of
monomers called amino acids (Figure 8). Living
organisms use about 20 different amino acid
molecules to build a variety of proteins, which

play different roles. Some help to store energy.
Some are components of the immune system that
protects the body against diseases and harm-
ful substances by forming antibodies that make
invading agents harmless. Others are hormones
that are used as chemical messengers in the
bloodstreams of animals to turn various bodily
functions on or off. In animals, proteins are also
components of hair, skin, muscle, and tendons.
In addition, some proteins act as enzymes that
catalyze or speed up certain chemical reactions.
Nucleic acids are large polymer molecules
made by linking hundreds to thousands of four
types of monomers called nucleotides. Two nucleic
acids—DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA
(ribonucleic acid)—participate in the building
of proteins and carry hereditary information
used to pass traits from parent to offspring. Each
nucleotide consists of a phosphate group, a sugar
molecule containing fi ve carbon atoms (deoxy-
ribose in DNA molecules and ribose in RNA
molecules), and one of four different nucleotide
bases (represented by A, G, C, and T, the fi rst let-
ter in each of their names, or A, G, C, and U in
RNA; see Figure 9). In the cells of living organ-
isms, these nucleotide units combine in different
numbers and sequences to form nucleic acids such
as various types of RNA and DNA (Figure 10).
Hydrogen bonds formed between parts of the
four nucleotides in DNA hold two DNA strands
together like a spiral staircase, forming a double
helix (Figure 10). DNA molecules can unwind
and replicate themselves.
The total weight of the DNA needed to
reproduce all of the world’s people is only about
50 milligrams—the weight of a small match. If
the DNA coiled in your body were unwound,
it would stretch about 960 million kilometers
(600 million miles)—more than six times the
distance between the sun and the earth.
The different molecules of DNA that make
up the millions of species found on the earth are
like a vast and diverse genetic library. Each spe-
cies is a unique book in that library. The genome
of a species is made up of the entire sequence
of DNA “letters” or base pairs that combine to
“spell out” the chromosomes in typical members
of each species. In 2002, scientists were able to
map out the genome for the human species by
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