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BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis and degradation of biomolecules 2. Metabolism Energy production, utilization and conservation anabolism vs catabolism 3. Genetic Information Transmission, expression and storage of genetic information

BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

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Page 1: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

BIOCHEMISTRYFocus:

1. Biological Structures

Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules

Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules

Synthesis and degradation of biomolecules

2. Metabolism

Energy production, utilization and conservation

anabolism vs catabolism

3. Genetic Information

Transmission, expression and storage of genetic information

Page 2: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

BIOCHEMISTRYDefinition:

the study of the chemistry of life

“The basic goal of the science of biochemistry is to determine how the collections of inanimate molecules that constitute living organisms interact with each other to maintain and perpetuate life.”

Lenhinger, Principles of Biochemistry

Page 3: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Biology and ChemistryBackground

Biology Prokaryotes vs EukaryotesOrganelle Functions

Chemistry Bonds

Page 4: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis
Page 5: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

The tree of life

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Biomolecules

The Chemical Building Blocks of Life

Biologically important molecules

Page 8: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

•Molecules that are important to cells!• Organic Compounds- made mostly of carbon, hydrogen and oxygen

Page 9: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Biomolecules – the building blocks of living cells

a. Carbohydratesb. Lipidsc. Proteinsd. Nucleic Acids

Organic Molecular Structure of Living Systems

Page 10: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

These biomolecules or organic molecules are polymers.Most are macromolecules

Macro means largeA polymer consists of many identical subunits connected together

Page 11: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

How are polymers made?

They are formed by a process called condensation – where units are linked and a water molecule is removed.

Page 12: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

CondensationIt’s not just for the water cycle anymore

Macromolecules are constructed by covalently bonding monomers by condensation reactions where water is removed from the functional groups of the monomers

Dehydration synthesis (water is removed) A hydroxyl (-OH) from one monomer and a

hydrogen (-H) from another are removed Anabolic reaction

Page 13: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

How are polymers broken down? They are broken down by adding a

water molecule through a process called hydrolysis.

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Hydrolysis

Hydrolysis is the reverse of condensation Results in the break down of polymers Hydration reactions add water and break

bonds releasing energy

Page 15: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Macromolecules in Organisms

There are four categories of large molecules in cells:

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Carbohydrates

Lipids

Proteins

Nucleic Acids

Page 16: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Carbohydrates Monosaccharides

Five carbon: Ribose Six carbon: glucose and fructose

•Disaccharides–Sucrose (table sugar)–Lactose (milk sugar)–Maltose (grain sugar)

•Polysaccharides–Starch–Cellulose–Glycogen

Page 17: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Molecular structure of various forms of glucose.

Page 18: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Monosaccharides:Called simple sugars

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Include glucose, fructose, & galactoseHave the same chemical, but different structural formulas

C6H12O6

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Rings

In aqueous (watery) solutions, monosaccharides form ring

structures

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3. Polysaccharides These are macromolecules that have a

few hundred or thousands of monosaccharides linked together

They store a lot of energy and also provide structural support for cells

Examples: Starches – potatoes, wheat, corn, rice,

fruits of grasses Glycogen – animal starch – stored in

muscles and livers of vertebrates Cellulose – plant fiber – in cell walls – the

fiber in our diet Chitin – in exoskeletons of invertebrates

Page 23: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Polysaccharides

Complex carbohydrates

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Composed of many sugar monomers linked togetherPolymers of monosaccharide chains

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Starch Starch is an example of a polysaccharide in plants

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Plant cells store starch for energy

Potatoes and grains are major sources of starch in the human diet

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Cellulose chains Starch chain

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GlycogenGlycogen is an example

of a polysaccharide in animals

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Animals store excess sugar in the form of glycogen

Glycogen is similar in structure to starch because BOTH are made of glucose monomers

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cellulose

amylose (a starch)

glycogen

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Dietary Cellulose

Most animals cannot derive nutrition from fiber

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They have bacteria in their digestive tracts that can break down cellulose

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LIPIDS A diverse group of organic molecules

that are insoluble in water (nonpolar) and will only dissolve in nonpolar solvents like chloroform and benzene

Made of glycerol and fatty acids 3 groups

Fats Phospholipids Steroids

Page 30: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

fats…….

Stores energy (actually stores 2x the energy as polysaccharides like starches)

Cushions vital organs in animals Insulates against heat loss Two types

Saturated fat – no double bonds between carbon atoms, solid at room temp, mostly animal fats – bacon, butter, lard

Unsaturated fats – one or more double bonds between carbon atoms, liquid at room temp, most plant fats – corn oil, olive oil

Page 31: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Triglycerides

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Triglyceride

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Glycerol Fatty Acid Chains

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Types of Fatty Acids

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Single Bonds in Carbon chain

Double bond in carbon chain

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Fats in Organisms

Most animal fats have a high proportion of saturated fatty acids & exist as solids at room temperature (butter, margarine, shortening)

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Page 35: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Fats in Organisms

Most plant oils tend to be low in saturated fatty acids & exist as liquids at room temperature (oils)

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phospholipids……..

Major part of cell membranes “a phospholipid bilayer”

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hydrophobic tails

hydrophilichead

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steroids……

Cholesterol is an important steroid in the cell membrane – provides strength

Some develop into to vertebrate sex hormones

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SteroidsThe carbon skeleton of steroids is bent to form 4 fused rings

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Cholesterol is the “base steroid” from which your body produces other steroids

Estrogen & testosterone are also steroids

Cholesterol

TestosteroneEstrogen

Page 40: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Lipids & Cell Membranes Cell membranes are

made of lipids called phospholipids

Phospholipids have a head that is polar & attract water (hydrophilic)

Phospholipids also have 2 tails that are nonpolar and do not attract water (hydrophobic)

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Page 41: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Proteins

Proteins are polymers made of monomers called amino acids

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All proteins are made of 20 different amino acids linked by peptide bond in different orders

Proteins are used to build cells, transport things across membrane,act as hormones & enzymes, and do much of the work in a cell

Page 42: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Amino group (basic)

Carboxyl group (acidic)

R group (20 kinds with distinct properties)

Page 43: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Linking Amino AcidsCells link amino acids together to make proteins

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The process is called condensation or dehydrationPeptide bonds form to hold the amino acids together

Carboxyl

Amino Side

Group

Dehydration Synthesis

Peptide Bond

Page 44: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

•They are very folded and coiled.

•The function of the protein depends on the structure of the protein

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Levels of Protein Structure

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Proteins as Enzymes

Many proteins act as biological catalysts or enzymes

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Thousands of different enzymes exist in the body

Enzymes control the rate of chemical reactions by weakening bonds, thus lowering the amount of activation energy needed for the reaction

Page 47: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Enzymes

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Their folded conformation creates an area known as the active site.

Enzymes are globular proteins.

The nature and arrangement of amino acids in the active site make it specific for only one type of substrate.

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Enzyme + Substrate = Product

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Nucleic Acids

Two types - DNA and RNA These store and transmit hereditary

information Made of chains of nucleotides which are

made of a sugar, a nitrogenous base and a phosphate group

The sequence of the bases in the DNA or RNA determines the type of protein that is made

Page 50: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Bases in DNA and RNA

DNA Adenine Guanine Cytosine Thymine

• RNA– Adenine– Guanine– Cytosine– Uracil

Page 51: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

BasesEach DNA nucleotide has one of the following bases:

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Thymine (T) Cytosine (C)

Adenine (A) Guanine (G)

–Adenine (A)

–Guanine (G)

–Thymine (T)

–Cytosine (C)

Page 52: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Nucleic Acids

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Nitrogenous base(A,G,C, or T)

Phosphategroup

Thymine (T)

Sugar(deoxyribose)

Phosphate

BaseSugar

Nucleic acids are polymers of nucleotides

Nucleotide

Page 53: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

RNA – Ribonucleic Acid

Ribose sugar has an extra –OH or hydroxyl group

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It has the base uracil (U) instead of thymine (T)

Nitrogenous base(A,G,C, or U)

Sugar (ribose)

Phosphategroup

Uracil

Page 54: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Nucleotide – Nucleic acid monomer

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Page 55: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Comparing DNA and RNA

DNA stands for deoxyribonucleic acid – the plans for the actual proteins Remember proteins are used to build

cells and control processes in cells (enzymes)

RNA stands for ribonucleic acid – it is a copy of the DNA used for transferring a copy of the DNA to the ribosomes where the proteins are actually made

Page 56: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Comparing DNA and RNA

DNA is a double helix- a twisted ladder RNA is a single helix – one side DNA contains the bases Adenine,

Guanine, Cytosine and Thymine RNA contains the bases Adenine,

Guanine, Cytosine and Uracil DNA contains the sugar deoxyribose RNA contains the sugar ribose

Page 57: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

DNA

Two strands of DNA join together to form a double helix

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Basepair

Double helix

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Page 59: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Nucleotides, DNA, and RNA

Figure 2-18: RNA and DNA

Page 60: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

ATP – Cellular Energy

ATP is used by cells for energy Adenosine triphosphate Made of a nucleotide with 3

phosphate groups

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Page 61: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Cellular Fuel

Monosaccharides are the main fuel that cells use for cellular work

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ATP

Page 62: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

In Mitochondria

In Cytosol

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Macromolecules

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Macromolecules

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Carbohydrate Biomolecules: Carbon, Hydrogen & Oxygen

Figure 2-13-1: Carbohydrates

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Carbohydrate Biomolecules: Carbon, Hydrogen & Oxygen

Figure 2-13-2: Carbohydrates

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Lipids: Mostly Carbon and Hydrogen; little Oxygen

Figure 2-14: Lipids and lipid-related molecules

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Combination Biomolecules Lipoproteins (blood transport molecules) Glycoproteins (membrane structure) Glycolipids (membrane receptors)

Figure 2-19: Chemistry summary

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Nucleotides, DNA and RNA Composition

Base Sugar Phosphate

Transmit and store Information (genetic code) Energy transfer molecules

ATP Cyclic AMP NAD & FAD

Page 73: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

metabolism is categorized into two types

Catabolism (biodegradation): larger molecules (nutrients and cell constituents) are broken down (often via exergonic reactions) to salvage (reuse) their components or/and to generate energy.

Anabolism (biosynthesis): The generation of biomolecules from simpler components (often via endergonic reactions).

Page 74: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

metabolism is categorized into two types

Catabolism (biodegradation): larger molecules (nutrients and cell constituents) are broken down (often via exergonic reactions) to salvage (reuse) their components or/and to generate energy.

Anabolism (biosynthesis): The generation of biomolecules from simpler components (often via endergonic reactions).

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Classification of organisms based on trophic (“feed”) strategies

Autotrophs—synthesize all cellular components from simple inorganic molecules (e.g, H2O, CO2, NH3, H2S).

Heterotrophs—Derive energy from oxidation of organic compounds (made by autotrophs).

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Chapter 5

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Metabolism in various living organisms allow carbon, oxygen and nitrogen to be cycled in the biosphere.

The cycling of matter is driven by the flow of energy in one direction through the biosphere!

Page 78: BIOCHEMISTRY Focus: 1. Biological Structures Interaction, organization and coordination of biomolecules Chemical and 3D structures of biomolecules Synthesis

Metabolism allows the cycling of C/O and the flow of energy in the biosphere

H2O

glucose

Producers Consumers

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Metabolism also allows the cycling

of N in the biosphere

(NH4+)

NO3-

NO2-