Criado por emma_moran
quase 11 anos atrás
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Questão | Responda |
Are lipids polar? | No they are non-polar |
Are lipids soluble in water? | No they are insoluble |
Are lipids soluble in non-polar solvents? | Yes |
Are lipids polymers? | No |
Structure of a triglyceride molecule | Glycerol forms the backbone and 3 fatty acid side chains are attached to the glycerol backbone |
What reaction occurs in the formation of triglycerides? | Dehydration synthesis (condensation reaction) |
Which enzyme catalyses the hydrolysis of triglycerides? | Lipase |
The possible products formed in the digestion of a triglyceride | Glycerol, Diglyceride, Monoglyceride and Fatty acids |
What are the features of a saturated fatty acid? | Saturated with single C-C bonds. Solid at room temperature (closely packed) |
What are the features of unsaturated fatty acids? | Unsaturated with numbers of C=C bonds. Liquid at room temperature (loosely packed) |
What are the two isomers that unsaturated fatty acids exist as ? | cis- and trans- isomers |
What is the difference between cis- and trans- isomers? | Cis- isomers: bend at the double bond and are naturally occurring Trans- isomers: straight at the double bond and are normally manmade |
Image:
cis (image/jpg)
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This is a cis- fatty acid |
Image:
trans2 (image/jpg)
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Trans- fatty acid |
What are fatty acids called when not part of a triglyceride? | Free fatty acids |
Image:
omega3 (image/png)
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Omega 3 fatty acid |
Image:
omega6 (image/jpg)
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Omega 6 fatty acid |
Steroids are lipids. What is the building block for other steroids? |
Image:
LANOSTER.GIF (image/GIF)
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How is lanosterol formed? | The cyclization of squalene |
Name some common steroids | Cholesterol, oestrogen, progesterone, testosterone corticosteroids (produced in the adrenal cortex) |
The structure of phospholipids | The phosphate head (polar, hydrophilic, soluble in water), Fatty acid tails (non-soluble in water, non-polar and hydrophobic), glycerol backbone |
Glycolipids | Lipid attached to an oligosaccharide |
Lipoproteins | Soluble complexes that transport lipids and are usually synthesised in the liver |
Structure of lipoproteins | Spherical particles with central hydrophobic core: triglycerides, esterified cholesterol, small amounts of other lipids and fat soluble vitamins. External hydrophilic layer: phospholipids, cholesterol, apoproteins (stabilise the structure and regulate enzymatic activity at the lipoprotein) |
Functions of white adipose tissue | Cushions internal organs, acts as a shock absorber, gives insulation, protects internal organs from temperature swings |
Effects of having excess adipose tissue | Atheroma, atherosclerosis, thrombosis, exerts undue pressure on organs, sequestration (accumulation) of lipophillic substances |
What is myelin? | It is an insulating material, made from phospholipids, surrounds nerve cells |
What cells produce myelin peripherally (nerves outside the brain and spinal cord)? | Schwann cells |
What cells produce myelin centrally (nerves in the brain and spinal chord)? | Oligodendrocytes |
Which vitamins are fat soluble? | ADEK |
What is the function of apoproteins? | They provide structural stability and regulate enzyme activity in lipoproteins |
What effect does myelin have on nerve cells? | Increases the speed at which nerve impulses are transmitted along the nerve |
How can lipids prevent moisture loss? | They prevent the evaporation of water |
Image:
oligo (image/jpg)
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Oligodendrocyte |
Image:
schwann (image/jpg)
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Schwann cell |
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