DP IB Biology: HL

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First teaching 2014

Last exams 2024

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2.2.3 Lipids

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Long Term Storage

Lipids are excellent storage compounds

  • Lipid macromolecules, like carbohydrates, contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms
  • However, unlike carbohydrates, lipids contain a low proportion of oxygen
  • More of the oxygen required for their respiration has to come from the air
  • This allows lipids to be energy-dense, maximising the energy content per gram versus carbohydrates
    • They contain 2× more energy per gram than most carbohydrates
    • Less body mass is required to store a given amount of energy

  • Lipids are insoluble so do not affect osmosis, so do not risk upsetting the water balance of the organism
  • When lipids are respired, a lot of water is produced compared to the respiration of carbohydrates
    • This is called metabolic water and can be used as a dietary water source when drinking water is unavailable
      • A camel's hump is not a water sac, it is a lipid-rich storage organ that yields metabolic water for the camel in its dry desert habitat
      • A bird's egg also makes use of lipid-rich yolk to provide energy and metabolic water to the growing chick

  • All these features make lipids ideal for long term energy storage

Forms of lipid storage

  • In animals, lipids are stored in various areas
    • Subcutaneous fats are stored below the skin
    • Visceral fats are stored around the major internal organs

  • There are genetic and gender differences between how individuals store fat
  • Fat is stored in adipose cells, which are specialised to contain large globules of fat
  • Adipose cells shrink when the fat is respired to generate metabolic energy
  • In many plants, seeds have evolved to store fats to provide energy for a growing seedling plant
  • Olives, sunflowers, nuts, coconuts and oilseed rape are good examples of crops whose oils are harvested for edible oil production by humans

Other roles of lipids

  • As well as energy storage molecules, lipids have a number of other roles
    • Physical protection of soft organs eg. visceral fat around the heart
    • Thermal insulation from subcutaneous fat eg. whale blubber
    • Subcutaneous fat as a buoyancy aid eg. in seals (fat is less dense than water so assists flotation)
    • Waterproofing secretions eg. birds' preening glands or waxy cuticles on leaf surfaces
    • Electrical insulation eg. the myelin sheath around certain nerve axons
    • Certain photosynthetic pigments eg. carotenoids
    • Glycolipids, typically as cell-surface recognition molecules/receptors

Exam Tip

Ensure that you are familiar with the structure of a triglyceride and that you can recognise whether the fatty acids are saturated or unsaturated.

Lipids: Health Claims

  • Lipids have been associated with poor health for a long time, even though they perform vital functions in tissues and organs
  • High-fat diets tend to supply more chemical energy than an individual needs
    • Consuming excess fat can cause an individual to become overweight or obese due to the storage of fat in adipose tissue

  • Body Mass Index (BMI) is a rough and ready measure of a person's mass in relation to their height
  • The calculation of BMI is as follows

Body Mass Index
    • A BMI below 18.5 is considered underweight
    • A BMI 18.5-24.9 is considered normal
    • A BMI of 25.0-29.9 is considered overweight
    • A BMI of 30.0-39.9 is considered obese
    • A BMI of 40.0 or more is considered morbidly obese

  • BMI is a crude measurement as it works against individuals who are heavily muscular but who are also extremely lean
  • Overweight and obese people have a higher risk of developing type II diabetes and high blood pressure and coronary heart disease
  • Because many risk factors combine in the prevalence of these conditions, lipids are by no means the only cause

NOS: Evaluating claims; health claims made about lipids in diets need to be assessed

  • Popular literature, TV and social media make claims about various foods and their health benefits
  • A food product labelled, 'Low Sugar' may in fact contain a lot of trans-fats but hides that information, or doesn't label it at all!
  • Many health claims are based on pseudoscience, or backed up with only very small trials or small samples sizes
  • Only scientifically controlled studies are able to prove causal links between food choices and health risks
  • Techniques such as randomised clinical trials provide data to inform government policy and consumers about their food choices
  • There remain complex challenges for consumers, food producers and governments to ensure a food supply that puts people at least risk of disease whilst ensuring that enough food is produced

Formation of Lipids

  • Triglycerides are formed by esterification
  • An ester bond forms when the hydroxyl (-OH) group of the glycerol bonds with the carboxyl group (-COOH) of the fatty acid
    • The formation of an ester bond is a condensation reaction
      • For each ester bond formed a water molecule is released

    • Three fatty acids join to one glycerol molecule to form a triglyceride
    • Therefore for one triglyceride to form, three water molecules are released

Triglycerides Basics - Formation of a triglyceride (1)_2, downloadable AS Level & A Level Biology revision notesTriglycerides Basics - Formation of a triglyceride (2), downloadable AS Level & A Level Biology revision notes

Formation of a triglyceride from a glycerol molecule and three fatty acid molecules by the process of esterification

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