1 / 53

Chapter 5 Introduction to Nanobiology

Chapter 5 Introduction to Nanobiology. Chapter 5. Introduction to Nanobiology. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up Biological Function at the Nanoscale Practical Applications .

berg
Télécharger la présentation

Chapter 5 Introduction to Nanobiology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 5 • Introduction to Nanobiology

  2. Chapter 5 Introduction to Nanobiology • Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • Biological Function at the Nanoscale • Practical Applications

  3. Introduction to Nanobiology • 1 • 5 Section 1: Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • Molecular Machines • The Biological Importance of Water • The Building Blocks of DNA: Nucleotides • Multifunctional Polymers: Proteins • Lipids • Carbohydrates • The Bonds of Molecular Components

  4. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Molecular Machines

  5. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Flagellar Motors

  6. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 The Biological Importance of Water Liquid Water Ice

  7. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Single Stranded DNA

  8. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 DNA: Watson-Crick Base Pairs

  9. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Single Stranded RNA

  10. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Multifunctional Polymers: Proteins

  11. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Phospholipids

  12. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Membrane Self Assembling Monolayer

  13. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Common Sugars – Cn(H2O)n

  14. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Glucose

  15. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Carbohydrates: Glucose Polymers glycogen linear: α (1 → 4) D-glucose branch: α (1 → 6) D-glucose cellulose linear: β (1 → 4) D-glucose

  16. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Ribose

  17. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 Nucleic Acids DNA RNA

  18. Biological Molecules: Components of the Molecular Machinery of Life • 1 • 5 The Bonds of Molecular Components

  19. Introduction to Nanobiology • 2 • 5 Section 2: Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • Learning from Nature • Structures within Structures: DNA • Complexity and Diversity of Structured Components: Proteins • Other Structures within Structures: Cells • Structures within Cells: Phospholipids • Inner Components of Cells: Organelles • Origin of Color in Biology: Chemical or Structural? • Physical Characteristics • Bottom-Up Hierarchy

  20. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Learning from Nature

  21. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Structures within Structures: DNA

  22. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Scaffolded DNA Origami

  23. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Complexity and Diversity of Proteins Primary Protein Structure Secondary Protein Structure Tertiary Protein Structure Quaternary Protein Structure

  24. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Protein Folding

  25. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Collagen Self-Assembly

  26. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Other Structures within Structures: Cells

  27. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Other Structures within Structures: Cells

  28. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Inner Components of Cells: Organelles • Nucleus • DNA storage and gene expression • Mitochondria • Energy conversion: glucose bonds to ATP bonds • Chloroplasts • Energy conversion: sunlight to ATP bonds • Endoplasmic Reticulum • Synthesis and transport processes • Golgi Apparatus • Synthesis and transport processes

  29. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Structures within Cells: Phospholipids

  30. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Structures within Cells: Phospholipids

  31. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Origin of Color in Biology: Chemical or Structural? • South American Butterfly from Genus Morpho • Tops of brown wings appear iridescent blue • Photonic structures • Constructive interference from Stacked chitin lamellae (~70 nm) False color SEM image, X14,000

  32. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Origin of Color in Biology: Chemical or Structural? • Blue-Ringed Octopus • Hapalochlaena lunulata • Dynamic Photonic Structure • ~70 nm Bragg reflector with adjustable spacing

  33. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Physical Characteristics 153 ± 1º 154 ± 1º Lotus Leaf Biomimetic Silanized Silicon Surface

  34. Structural Hierarchy in Biology Viewed from the Bottom-Up • 2 • 5 Bottom-Up Hierarchy • Biological Molecules • Cells • Tissues • Organisms • Populations and Communities • Ecosystems • Biosphere

  35. Introduction to Nanobiology • 3 • 5 Section 3: Biological Function at the Nanoscale • Processes of DNA • Reproduction of genetic information • Gene expression and RNA • Energy Production for Cell Use • Transportation of materials for energy production • Cross-membrane energy production and storage • Energy production through sunlight conversion • Energy Processes as Motors • Nanomotors • Cell and Environment Interaction

  36. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Gene Expression and RNA

  37. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Reproduction of Genetic Information

  38. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Energy Production for Cell Use

  39. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Transportation of Materials for Energy Production • empty binding site T ATP D ADP P Pi

  40. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Cross-Membrane Energy Production and Storage 3 Na+cytosol + 2 K+out + ATP → 3 Na+out + 2 K+cytosol + ADP + Pi

  41. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Cross-Membrane Energy Production and Storage

  42. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Energy Production through Sunlight Conversion 3 H+lumen + ADP + Pi→ 3 H+stroma+ ATP Matrix/Stroma Intermembrane Space/Lumen

  43. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Energy Processes as Motors

  44. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Nanomotors • Biomimetic Nanomotor Requirements • Energy source • Unidirectional, 360º rotation • Biomotor Predictions • 0.05 to 0.2 rotations per picosecond • Mixotricha Paradoxa, a Cellulose-Digesting Protozoan that Inhabits Termite Guts • Translocation from symbiotic bacterial colony

  45. Biological Function at the Nanoscale • 3 • 5 Cell and Environment Interaction • Dynamic Focal Adhesion Complex • Integrin Surface Proteins • ECM Recognition Site: RGD

  46. Introduction to Nanobiology • 4 • 5 Section 4: Practical Applications • DNA Sequencing • Detection and Diagnostics • DNA Microarrays • Protein Microarrays • Detection Using Nanoparticles • Materials Delivery System • Creating Compatible Artificial Surfaces • Creating Tissues Out of Cells • Looking Ahead

  47. Practical Applications • 4 • 5 DNA Sequencing Conventional Nanotechnology Concept

  48. Practical Applications • 4 • 5 Detection and Diagnostics • Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) • Immuno-PCR • Bio-Barcode Assay

  49. Practical Applications • 4 • 5 Microarrays DNA Microarrays Protein Microarrays

  50. Practical Applications • 4 • 5 Detection Using Nanoparticles • Visualization • Quantum dots • Targeted Delivery • Magnetic or optically activated nanoparticles

More Related