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Biochemistry

Biochemistry. Study of chemical reactions that take place in our body everyday Chemical reactions allow us to remain alive Rearrangement of chemical bonds to form products from reactants. Macromolecules. Water . Most abundant molecule in any cell

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Biochemistry

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  1. Biochemistry • Study of chemical reactions that take place in our body everyday • Chemical reactions allow us to remain alive • Rearrangement of chemical bonds to form products from reactants

  2. Macromolecules

  3. Water • Most abundant molecule in any cell • Acts as a carrier for dissolved molecules across cell membrane • Used in chemical reactions • Cellular respiration, photosynthesis • Lubricant between organs, tissues, and cells

  4. What Makes Water so Important? • Remains liquid over wide range of temps • Dissolves most substances important for cellular function • Oxygen, carbon dioxide, glucose, amino acids • Gradual change in temperature when heated or cooled – helps maintain homeostasis • Expands when it becomes solid • Polar – uneven charge

  5. What Makes Water so Important?

  6. Water • Dipole nature • Two charges that belong to a water molecule • Small positive charge on two hydrogen atoms • Small negative charge on oxygen atom

  7. What do you notice about this picture?

  8. Macromolecules • Organic compounds • Contain both hydrogen and carbon • Large molecules composed of smaller subunits • Carbohydrates • Proteins • Lipids • Nucleic Acids

  9. Carbohydrates (Sugars) • Biomolecule consisting of carbon, oxygen, and hydrogen. • General molecular formula (CnH₂nOn) (C₆H₁₂O₆) • Roles • Energy storage - plants • Structural support in cells and tissues • Hydrophilic • Pentose/Hexose ring structure

  10. Monosaccharides • Used as primary energy source for cellular metabolism (making ATP) • 1 sugar unit • Glucose – grape sugar, blood sugar • Fructose – honey, fruit juices

  11. Disaccharides • Consist of two monosaccharides • Maltose – used to make beer • Sucrose – simple sugar found in plant sap • Lactose – milk • Used as energy sources and building blocks for larger molecules

  12. Polysaccharides • Complex carbohydrate/polymer • Chain of hundreds to thousands of monosaccharides (monomers) with many subunits • Unbranched – side chains • Branched – single chain

  13. Examples • Amylose – soluble component of starch • Glycogen – energy storage in animals • Cellulose – main component of plant cell walls • Chitin – hard exoskeleton of insect and crustaceans

  14. Lipids • Non-polar • Made up of mostly carbon and hydrogen • Do not dissolve in water • Roles • Formation of cell membranes • Energy source • Hormones • Vitamins

  15. Fatty Acids • Derivative of most lipids (structural backbone) • Consists of • glycerol (alcohol) • 3 molecules of fatty acids • As chain length increases, insolubility in water increases

  16. Fatty Acids • Saturated • Max number of hydrogen atoms attached to carbons • Single bonds throughout the carbon chain • Unsaturated • Formation of double bonds in carbon chain • Monounsaturated – one double bond • Polyunsaturated – many double bonds • Causes a bent formation in molecule

  17. Cholesterol • Formed in the liver • Structural component of plasma membrane • Function • Maintain membranes • proper membrane permeability/fluidity • Types • LDL – low density lipoprotein • Promote cardiovascular disease • HDL – high density lipoprotein • Good cholesterol – removes cholesterol from artery

  18. Proteins • Each cell contains several hundred to several thousand proteins • Composed of many amino acids linked together by a peptide bond that form a polypeptide chain

  19. Proteins • Structural – framework support (Eg; hair, tendon, ligaments) • Defensive – infection fighters (Eg; antibodies) • Signal – messenger (Eg; hormones) • Carrier – transport of materials (Eg; hemoglobin) • Recognition and Receptor – cellular markers (Eg; major histocompatability complex) • Enzyme – catalyst (Eg; amylase) • Motile – movement (Eg; actin and myosin)

  20. Amino Acids • 20 different amino acids • 8 essential - supplied by diet • Contain: • Central carbon • Amino group (-NH₂) • Carboxyl group (-COOH) • R group • R groups give each amino acids specific characteristics • Polarity, acidity

  21. Amino Acids

  22. Protein Structure • Primary Structure 1⁰ • Linear sequence of amino acids in polypeptide chain • Changing one amino acid with change overall structure of protein

  23. Protein Structure • Secondary Structure 2⁰ • Polypeptides fold or coil into patterns • Result of hydrogen bonding • β-pleated sheets • Side-by-side alignment • (Eg; strength of silk) • α-helix • Coil that is held together by hydrogen bonds between every 4th amino acid • (Eg; transmembraneproteins)

  24. Protein Structure • Tertiary Structure 3⁰ • 3-D shape of a protein • Caused by folding

  25. Protein Structure • Quaternary Structure 4⁰ • Composed of 2 or more polypeptides • Functional proteins

  26. Protein Denaturation • When a protein loses its 3-D structure • Often irreversible • Extreme temperatures • pH • Chemcials

  27. Nucleic Acids • Polynucleotide chains serve as assembly instructions for all proteins in living organisms • 2 Types • DNA – deoxyribonucleic acid • Stores hereditary information • RNA – Ribonucleic acid • Hereditary molecule of some viruses • Involved in protein synthesis • Composed of nucleotides • Linked by a phosphodiester bond

  28. Nucleotides • Consists of • Nitrogenous base • Uracil (U), thymine (T), cytosine (C), adenine (A), guanine (G) • Sugar • Phosphate groups • Functions • Transport chemical energy • Regulate and adjust cellular activity

  29. DNA • Consists of • Deoxyribose sugar • Phosphate group • A, T, C, G • Double stranded molecule (Double Helix) • Two strands of DNA run antiparallel to each other (opposite direction) • 5’ to 3’ • 5’ is the end with the phosphate group • 3’ is where deoxyribose sugar is located • Nitrogenous bases • Held together by hydrogen bonds • A pairs with T ( forms double bond) • C pairs with G (forms a triple bond) • http://i-biology.net/2012/01/15/drew-berrys-animations-of-unseeable-biology-ted-talk/

  30. RNA • Consists of • Ribose sugar • Phosphate group • A, U, C, G • Single stranded molecule • Converts information stored in DNA into proteins

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