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What Is A Lipid?: Objective

Lipids are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen and include triglycerides, phospholipids, and waxes. They form cell membranes and are important for energy storage and hormone production. While excess lipids can cause health issues, our bodies need them to function properly. Triglycerides are composed of a glycerol molecule bonded to three fatty acids, removing three water molecules in the process. Phospholipids contain glycerol, two fatty acids, and a phosphate group, allowing them to form bilayers in water. Lipids are efficient carriers of energy due to their carbon-hydrogen bonds.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
219 views6 pages

What Is A Lipid?: Objective

Lipids are composed of carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen and include triglycerides, phospholipids, and waxes. They form cell membranes and are important for energy storage and hormone production. While excess lipids can cause health issues, our bodies need them to function properly. Triglycerides are composed of a glycerol molecule bonded to three fatty acids, removing three water molecules in the process. Phospholipids contain glycerol, two fatty acids, and a phosphate group, allowing them to form bilayers in water. Lipids are efficient carriers of energy due to their carbon-hydrogen bonds.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

WHAT IS A LIPID?

OBJECTIVE
The objective of this worksheet is to understand the structure and function of lipids

PART A: Understanding Lipids


Lipids are more commonly known as fats and include triglycerides, phospholipids, and waxes. Lipids get a bad
rap, but they are very important for all living things. We are made up of trillions of cells, and lipids form the
membranes of all of our cells. Without these membranes, cells couldn’t exist! So why do lipids have a bad
reputation? Because we store up too many of them when we eat a poor diet and don’t exercise regularly. In
addition to this, lipids can build up in our blood vessels and cause cardiovascular disease. However, other
problems can appear if we don’t store enough lipids in our bodies. For example, hormones are made from
lipids. Our bodies do not function correctly without the proper amounts of hormones. Therefore, we need to
eat lipids!

Lipids are actually similar to carbohydrates. With some exceptions, both lipids and carbohydrates are composed
of only 3 elements: carbon, hydrogen, and oxygen. However, there are far less oxygen in lipids than there are in
carbohydrates. In addition, both lipids and carbohydrates can be broken down for energy.

Another key component to lipids is fatty acids. A fatty acid is recognizable by its long hydrocarbon (made of
hydrogen and carbon) chain and its carboxyl group.

Triglycerides

Triglycerides are composed of three fatty acids and one glycerol.

Tri = 3 fatty acids


Glyceride = glycerol

Glycerol is an alcohol that contains three hydroxide (-OH) groups.

Fatty Acids contain a hydrocarbon chain and a carboxyl (-COOH) group

In order to join Glycerol to the three fatty acids we simply remove three molecules of water by dehydration
synthesis.
To do this we remove the “H” from each hydroxyl group on Glycerol and an “OH” from each carboxyl group
on the fatty acids. This will form 3 water molecules.

 + 3H2O

Saturated vs. Unsaturated

Saturated – Fatty Acids that contain the maximum number of hydrogen atoms, and therefore no carbon to
carbon double bonds

Unsaturated – Fatty Acids that contain less than the maximum number of hydrogen atoms in one or more of its
fatty acid chains because some of its carbon atoms are double-bonded to each other.
 Trans Unsaturated Fatty Acids – Carbons are missing on opposite sides of the carbon chain
 Cis Unsaturated Fatty Acids – Carbons are missing on the same side of the carbon chain
Phospholipids

Phospholipids are very important molecules that compose the cell membrane of a cell

Phospholipids are very similar to triglycerides, except Phospholipids contain Glycerol, two Fatty Acids, and one
Phosphate Group. (the Phosphate Group replaces one of the fatty acids)
Phospholipids contain a polar head (the phosphate group) and a non-polar tail (the two fatty acids). This allows
phospholipids to form a phospholipid bi-layer (Two layers of phospholipids) when placed in water. (Remember,
water is Polar!).

Hydrophobic – “water fearing”


Hydrophilic – “water loving”
PART B: Applying your knowledge of lipids

Lipids include triglycerides (fats), phospholipids, and waxes. One of the key parts that make up a lipid is an
alcohol. An alcohol is recognizable by its hydroxyl (-OH) groups.

1. Use the chemical models to build a model of the alcohol called glycerol. Use the key below.
When you have finished, have your teacher sign his/her name. ____________________

key

carbon black

hydrogen white

oxygen blue
2. Draw a box around each OH group.
3. The bond white tube molecular formula for glycerol is C __ H __ O __.

Another key component of lipids is a fatty acid.


A fatty acid is recognizable by its carboxyl group.

1. Use the chemical models to build a model of each of the fatty acids shown below.
When you have finished, have your teacher sign his/her name. _______________________

butyric acid

caproic acid

lauric acid

2. Draw a box around the carboxyl group on each fatty acid.


3. The molecular formula for butyric acid is C __ H __ O __.
4. The molecular formula for caproic acid is C __ H __ O __.
5. The molecular formula for lauric acid is C __ H __ O __.
One of the lipids, triglyceride, is composed of glycerol and three fatty acids.
In order to make a triglyceride, you will have to modify each of the component parts.

1. There are three OH groups on the glycerol model. Pull the H off each OH group.
2. Each fatty acid has a carboxyl group. Pull the OH group off the carboxyl group of each acid.
3. In removing the 3 Hs and the 3 OHs, you have created how many H2O molecules? _____
4. You should now be able to create a triglyceride. Join the glycerol and 3 fatty acids.
Use the diagram below to help build your model of a triglyceride.
Note: the diagram will not be identical to your model.

When you have finished, have your teacher sign his/her name. _______________________

5. Write the molecular formula for triglyceride by completing the following equation:

glycerol + butyric acid + caproic acid + lauric acid


C __ H __ O __ + C __ H __ O __ + C __ H __ O __ + C __ H __ O __

 3 water + triglyceride
 3 H2O + C __ H __ O __

6. What process was used to join glycerol to the three fatty acids? ______________________
7. The more carbon – hydrogen bonds in a molecule, the more energy the molecule can hold.

Do you think lipids, like triglycerides, are efficient energy carriers? _________________

Explain your answer: ________________________________________________________


__________________________________________________________________________
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