Triglycerides: Basics
Lipids
- Macromolecules which contain carbon, hydrogen and oxygen atoms. However, unlike carbohydrates lipids contain a lower proportion of oxygen
- Non-polar and hydrophobic (insoluble in water)
- Different types:
- Fats and Oils (composed mainly of triglycerides)
- Phospholipids
- Steroids and waxes (considered lipids as they are hydrophobic thus insoluble in water)
Triglycerides
- Are non-polar, hydrophobic molecules
- The monomers are glycerol and fatty acids
- Glycerol is an alcohol (an organic molecule that contains a hydroxyl group bonded to a carbon atom)
- Fatty acids contain a methyl group at one end of a hydrocarbon chain (chains of hydrogens bonded to carbon atoms, typically 4 to 24 carbons long) and at the other is a carboxyl group
- Fatty acids can vary in two ways:
- Length of the hydrocarbon chain
- The fatty acid may be saturated (mainly in animal fat) or unsaturated (mainly vegetable oils, although there are exceptions e.g. coconut and palm oil)
- Unsaturated fatty acids can be mono or poly-unsaturated
- If H atoms are on the same side of the double bond they are cis-fatty acids and are metabolised by enzymes
- If H atoms are on opposite sides of the double bond they are trans-fatty acids and cannot form enzyme-substrate complexes, therefore, are not metabolised. They are linked with coronary heart disease
Examples of different types of fatty acids with the functional groups and presence of double bonds highlighted
- Triglycerides are formed by esterification
- An ester bond forms when the hydroxyl group of the glycerol bonds with the carboxyl group of the fatty acid
- For each ester bond formed a water molecule is released
- Therefore, for one triglyceride to form three water molecules are released
Formation of a triglyceride from a glycerol molecule and three fatty acid molecules by the process of esterification
Examiner 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.