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Lipid Structure and Function
Course: Biochemistry/Lab (CHEM 3650)
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Students shared 163 documents in this course
University: Nova Southeastern University
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Lipid Structure and Function Lecture Notes
(Can be used for MCAT review too)
Lipids as a class are characterized by insolubility in water and solubility in non-polar
organic solvents.
Structural Lipids
Lipids are the major component of the phospholipid bilayer
oThis separates the cell interior from the surrounding
Each membrane components is amphipathic, which means that it has both a hydrophilic
and hydrophobic region
oFor membrane lipids, the polar head is the hydrophilic regions while the fatty
acid tail Is the hydrophobic region
oThis allows membrane lipids to form multiple structures in aqueous solution:
liposome, micelle, phospholipid bilayer, etc.
Phospholipids
Contain a polar hydrophilic head and a non-polar hydrophobic tail
oPolar group contains a phosphate and an alcohol
oPolar group is attached to a fatty acid tail by phosphodiester linkages
oOne or more fatty acids are attached to a backbone to form the hydrophobic tail
region
Phospholipids can be classified by the backbone that they are attached to
oE.g. – glycerol backbone forms phosphoglycerides or glycerophospholipids
All lipids have a tail that is composed of long-chain fatty acids which are varied in
degrees of length and saturation
oLength and saturation level determine how the fatty acid chain will behave
oSaturated Fatty Acid tails: will only have single bonds since the carbon atom I
considered saturated when it is bonded to four atoms
No pi bonds
These have greater Van Der Waals forces and are more stable overall
Solid at room temp
oUnsaturated Fatty Acid tails: include one or more double bonds
Double bond introduces kinks in the fatty acid chains which makes it
difficult for the chains to stack and solidify
Tend to be liquid at room temp
Glycerophospholipids
Are the phospholipids that contain a glycerol backbone bonded by ester linkages to two
fatty acids and by a phosphodiester linkage to a highly polar head group.
Named according to their head group since those determine the surface properties
oE.g. – phosphatidylcholine has a choline head group
Head group can of any charge (pos, neg, neutral)
Due to the variability in membrane surface properties, these molecules are important in
cell recognition, signaling, and binding