Functional Groups
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As listed on Figure 4.10 (p. 64-65)
Hydroxyl
- —OH
- Polar (Hydrophilic)
Carbonyl
- Pronounced car-bō-NEEL
- >CO (carbon double-bonded with oxygen)
- Polar: found in sugars which are water-soluble
Carboxyl
- Carbonyl + Hydroxyl
- —COOH (carbon has two oxygen: one is double bound, other is single; single-bond oxygen has hydrogen)
- Polar (hydrophilic), always acidic because it can give up the H atom in the hydroxyl branch. (see BIOL 111 Chapter 3), found in amino acids and fatty acids
Amino
- —NH2 (nitrogen with two hydrogens)
- polar, acts as a base because it picks up an extra H+ ion since N is so electronegative
Sulfhydryl
- —SH or HS—
- In some amino acids
- Important to protein structure
Phosphate
- —OPO32–
EX: Cell gets energy from adenosine triphosphate (ATP) - Very polar
- Negatively charged
- Found in nucleic acids, ATP, and phospholipids
Methyl
- —CH3 (carbon with three hydrogens)
- Addition to DNA/other molecules affects function of that molecule (more or less reactive; turns genes on or off)