introduction to lipids Flashcards

1
Q

biological organisms store energy in…

A

fats/oils

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2
Q

what is the role of lipds?

A

cofactors electron carriers, light absorbing pigments, chaperones, emulsifying agents, hormones, intracellular messengers

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3
Q

fatty acids

A

water-insoluble hydrocarbons used for cellular energy storage; highly reduced and thus provide rich source of stored chemical energy for cells; storage of hydrophobic fats as triacylglycerols is also highly efficient because water is not needed to hydrate the stored fats

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4
Q

nomenclature for unbranced fatty acids

A

chain length and number of bonds separated by a colon; numbering begins at the carboxyl carbon; positions of double bonds indicated by delta and a superscript number

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5
Q

polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs)

A

contain more than one double bond in their backbone: omega-3 fatty acids have double bond between C-3 and C-4 relative to the most distant carbon (w) ; omega-6 fatty acids have double bond between C-6 and C-7 relative to w

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6
Q

triacylglycerols

A

simplest lipids constructed from fatty acid; composed of three fatty acids, each in ester linkage with a single glycerol; can be simple (one kind of fatty acid) or mixed (two or three fatty acids); nonpolar & hydrophobic

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7
Q

vertebrates store triacylglycerols as …

A

lipid droplets in adipocytes (fat cells)

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8
Q

plants store triacylglycerols in…

A

seeds

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9
Q

lipases

A

enzymes that catalyze the hydrolysis of stored triacylglycerols, releasing fatty acids for export to sites where they are required as fuel

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10
Q

what contains lipases?

A

adipocytes and germinating seeds

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11
Q

membrane lipids are composed of…

A

hydrophobic tails attached to polar head groups

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12
Q

cellular membranes are composed of a variety of lipids, including glycerophospholipids and sterols. These lipids are used for…

A

structuring membranes as well as for displaying molecules on the membrane surfaces for signaling and molecular recognition

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13
Q

biological membranes

A

double layers of lipids that acts as a barrier to polar molecules and ions

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14
Q

amphipathic

A

one end of the molecule is hydrophobic, the other hydrophilic

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15
Q

3 types of membrane lipids

A

phospholipids, glycolipids, sterols

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16
Q

phospholipids

A

have hydrophobic regions composed of two fatty acids joined to glycerol or sphingosine

17
Q

glycolipids

A

contain a simple sugar or a complex oligosaccharide at the polar ends

18
Q

sterols

A

compounds characterized by a rigid system of four fused hydrocarbon rings

19
Q

glycerophospholipids (phosphoglycerides)

A

membrane lipids in which two fatty acids are attached in ester linkage to the first and second carbons of glycerol, and a highly polar or charged group is attached through a phosphodiester linkage to the third carbon

20
Q

glycerophospholipids head groups

A

a phosphodiester bond joins the head group of glycerol; phosphate group can bear a negative, neutral, or positive charge

21
Q

ether-linked fatty acids

A

one of the two acyl chains is attached to glycerol in ether, rather than ester, linkage-> chain may be saturated, chain may contain a double bond between C-1 & C-2 as in plasmalogens

22
Q

sphingolipids

A

large class of membrane phospholipids and glycolipids-> have a polar head group & two nonpolar tails, contain no glycerol, contain one molecule of long-chain amino alcohol sphingosine or one of its derivatives

23
Q

glycosphingolipids

A

have head groups with 1+ sugars connected directly to the -OH at C-1 of the ceramide moiety-> do not contain phosphate, occur largely in the outer face of plasma membranes

24
Q

cerebrosides

A

have a single sugar linked to ceramide-> those with galactose are found in the plasma membranes of cells in neural tissue, those with glucose are found in the plasma membranes of cells in nonneural tissues

25
Q

globosides

A

glycosphingolipids with 2+ sugars, usually D-glucose, D-galactose, or N-acetyl-D-galactosamine

26
Q

gangliosides

A

have oligosaccharides as their polar head groups and 1+ residues of N-acetylneuraminic acid (Neu5Ac), a sialic acid, at the termini

27
Q

sterols

A

structural lipids present in the membranes of most eukaryotic cells; steroid nucleus= consists of four fused rings, almost planar, relatively rigid; cholesterol= major sterol in animal tissues-> amphipathic, polar head group, nonpolar hydrocarbon body, membrane constituents, similar to stigmasterol in plants & ergosterol in fungi

28
Q

steroids

A

oxidized derivatives of sterols-> lack the alkyl chain attached to ring D of cholesterol, more polar than cholesterol; steroid hormones move through the bloodstream (on protein carriers) to target tissues; binding to highly specific receptor proteins in the nucleus triggers changes in gene expression

29
Q

what regulates cell structure and metabolism?

A

phosphatidylinositol and its phosphorylated derivates

30
Q

eicosanoids

A

paracrine hormones, substances that act only on cells near the point of hormone synthesis instead of being transported in the blood
involved in reproductive function, inflammation, fever, & pain associated with injury or disease, formation of blood clots, regulation of blood pressure, gastric acid secretion

31
Q

four major classes of eicosanoids

A

prostaglandins, thromboxanes, leukotrienes, & lipoxins

32
Q

what leads to accumulation of gangliosides in the cell?

A

genetic defects in any of these hydrolytic enzymes