Title: Biochemistry I CHE 418 5418
1Biochemistry I(CHE 418 / 5418)
- Reading Assignment
- Berg et. al (2007) Chapter 1
2Biochemistry
- Study of the chemistry of life processes.
- The cell, as a living system, obeys the same
laws of chemistry and physics that influence
nonliving systems and reactions. - A primary goal of biochemistry is to understand
the cell in terms of the principles of chemistry
and physics.
3Unifying Themes
- All life has a common ancestor
- Use DNA as genetic material
- Use same amino acids
4Life is divided into 3 domains
5Living Things are composed of Cells
- Cell Theory
- Organisms consist of one or more cell(s) and the
cell is the basic unit of structure for all
organisms - all cells arise only from preexisting cells
6Domain Bacteria
- Prokaryotic cell
- lacks membrane bound organelles
- cell wall containing peptidoglycan.
- Gram negative thin layer of peptidoglycan
- Gram positive thick layer of peptidoglycan
7Domain Archaea
- Prokaryotic cell
- lacks membrane bound organelles
- Cell wall lacking peptidoglycan.
8Domain Eukarya
- Contain membrane bound organelles
- Four kingdoms
Nucleus Endoplasmic reticulum Golgi
apparatus Mitochondria Chloroplast Peroxisomes
Protists
Kingdom Plantae
Kingdom Fungi
Kingdom Animalia
9Kingdom Protista
- Single cellular (with a few multicellular)
- Have groups with characteristics of other three
Eukaryotic kingdoms. - Holding Kingdom
10Kingdom Fungi
- Cell
- Eukaryotic cell with cell wall containing chitin.
- Nutition
- Heterotrophic
- By absorption
- Motitlity
- Nonmotile
- Life cycle
- Haplontic life cycle
- Adult is haploid (n)
- Zygote is diploid (2n)
- Meiosis produces haploid spores
- Spores develop into adults
- Energy Storage
- glycogen
11Kingdom Plantae
- Cell
- Eukaryotic cell with cell wall containing
cellulose. - Nutition
- Autotrophic
- Photosynthetic
- Motitlity
- Nonmotile
- Life cycle
- Alternation of Generations
- Energy Storage
- starch
12Kingdom Animalia
- Cell
- Eukaryotic cell lacking cell wall
- Nutition
- Heterotrophic
- Ingest food
- Motitlity
- Motile
- By contractile fibers
- muscles
- Life cycle
- Diplontic
- Diploid adults (2n) that produce haploid gametes
(n) - Gametes are egg or sperm
- Energy Storage
- Glycogen
13Evolutionarily Diverse Organisms Have Proteins
with similar structure (and function)
Tata box binding protein
14The 5 Types Of Chemical Bonds Are Formed By
Electrons
15Units
- Length
- Angstrom (Å) 1 x 10 -10 m
- Energy
- Joule (J) energy required to move 1 meter
against a force of 1 newton. - Calorie (Cal) energy required to raise the
temperature of 1 gram of water 1 degree celsius. - 1Joule 0.239 cal.
16Covalent Bonds
- Covalent bonding between two atoms results from
sharing a pair of electrons such that electron
shells overlap. - A? ?B ? AB
- Strong interactions!
- do not break spontaneously under physiological
conditions.
17Hydrogen Bond
- Hydrogen Bonds Occur when a hydrogen atom is
shared between 2 other atoms (both
electronegative, such as O and N). See next slide - Hydrogen bonds are strongest when the atoms
sharing the hydrogen and the hydrogen are in a
straight line. complementary - In DNA, H bonds hold together strands.
- In Proteins, H bonds stabilize alpha helixes and
beta sheets.
18Electronegativity
19Ionic Bonds
- Occur between full ( or -) or partial charges
- Important interactions at active site of enzymes.
- Coulombs law E kq q-
- r2
D -
- k proportionality constant ( 1389 kJ / mol OR
332 kcal / mol) - D dielectric constant (1 for vacuum 2 for
hexane 80 for water) - q charges of atoms
- r distance of separation (Å)
20Van der Waals Interactions
- Van der Waals weak forces between neutral atoms
due to transient electrostatic interactions. At
close distances any 2 atoms will show a weak
attraction due to the dipole generated by the
random movement of electrons (negative) around
the nuclei (positive).
When atoms are too close they repulse each other,
and when too far they have little
attraction. Substrate specificity may come from
large numbers of van der Waals bonds resulting
from matching surfaces.
21Hydrophobic Interactions
- Nonpolar molecules cannot participate in H-bonds
or ionic interactions. Water forms a cage or
ordered structure around the nonpolar molecule.
When two nonpolar molecules interact, the water
molecules in the cage are displaced and
interact with other water molecules rather than
the nonpolar molecule. This interaction is more
energetically favorable. - An active site cleft may be strongly nonpolar,
and therefore attract nonpolar substrates.
Usually low free energy (G), enthalpy (H), but a
gain in entropy (S).
22What is the most important precious
valuable compound?
23Facts about Water
- Water has unique physical properties that make it
suitable to serve as the matrix of life - H2O
- boiling point 100o C (212o F)
- melting point 0o C (32o F)
- F.W. 18
- High Heat of Vaporization
- 540 calaries/1g (liquid to gas)
- Universal Solvent
- High Surface Tension
- Density of solid water (ice) is less than density
of liquid water. - Ionize
- 70 of cell mass
24Universal Solvent
- Many compounds dissolve in water to form a
solution. - Solution - uniform molecular mixture of two or
more substances. - solvent - substance in the greatest quantity
- solute - substance in lesser amount.
- Substances are categorized depending on
interaction with water - hydrophilic - (water loving) - dissolves in water
- hydrophobic - (water fearing) poorly soluble in
water
25High Surface Tension
- Surface tension - measure of how difficult it is
to break the surface of the liquid. - Insects walking on water
- skipping rock on water
- needle floating on water
- Water is
- Cohesive - attractive to self.
- Adhesive - attractive to surfaces.
- Solid water (ice) is less dense
- than liquid water.
- Ice floats on water ---see the movie Titanic
- Ponds freeze at top insulating the remaining
water
26Why is water so important to life?
- Water is a liquid at physiological temperatures
- Water has an unusually high boiling point
27Why is water so important to life?
- 3. Water is a good thermal regulator. Large
amount of heat is required to change its
temperature. - ?T ?H/Cp
- It takes 1 cal to raise 1 g water 1 deg C
- Smaller Cp ? Greater ?T
28Why is water so important to life?
- 4. Water provides very effective heat
dissipation. - Q ?Hvap
- Evaporation of 1g water dissipates 540 cal.
29Why Does Water Have Such Unusual Properties?
- Shape of the molecule
- Hydrogen bond -
- weak intermolecular bond formed between the d
charge of the H and d- charge of the oxygen - millisecond duration
- requires energy to break
30Hydrogen bonds explain
- High Boiling Point /Freezing point
- High Heat of Vaporization
- Universal Solvent
- High Surface Tension Adhesive / Cohesive forces
- Density of solid water (ice) is less than density
of liquid water.
31Water Can Ionize
- H2O H OH- hydrogen
hydroxide - ion ion
- (1x 10-7 moles/L)
- A measure of the concentration of hydrogen ion
H in solution is the pH. - (Actually, the hydrogen ions do not exist free in
solution, but combine with another water to form
hydronium ion, H3O)
pH -log H
32Kw
How did we get this? Keq HOH_
H2O Water is 55.5M K 1.8 x 10 -16 Kw
KH2O HOH- Kw 1.8 x 10-16 X 55.5 Kw
1.0 x 10-14
If you know the hydrogen concentration you can
calculate the hydroxyl concentration and vise
versa. pKw pH pOH 14
33pH Scale
- Measures H
- scale is continuum from 0 - 14
- 7 is neutral
- Neutral - neither acidic or basic
- 0 - 6.99 is acidic
- 7.01 - 14 is basic (alkaline)
- one pH unit change represents 10 fold change in
H - What is the pOH and OH- at each point?
34pH Scale
- Compounds may be categorized as
- Acid - molecule that dissociates in water to
release hydrogen ion(s) - raises hydrogen ion concentration
- lowers pH .
- Base - molecule that in water either takes up a
hydrogen ion or releases a hydroxide ion. - reduces hydrogen ion concentration
- raises pH.
Blood pH 7.35 7.45 H 40 nM
35pH of specific tissues and fluids are maintained
at precise values
36pH Scale
- Strong acid - dissociates 100 releasing all
possible hydrogen ions. - HCl H Cl-
- Weak acid does not dissociate 100.
- H2CO3 H HCO3-
- (weak acid) (proton)
(conjugate base or salt)
37Buffer
- Buffer - substance that tends to resist pH
changes in a solution thus stabilizing its
relative pH. - Weak acids and conjugate bases
- buffer works one pH unit either side of pKa
(buffering range). - Characteristics
- Buffering capacity
- pH
- See p. A2
38pH Scale
- Carbonic acid is a weak acid that buffers blood.
- H2CO3 H HCO3-
- (carbonic acid) (hydrogen ion)
(bicarbonate)
H
OH-
H2O
39A Derivation of the Henderson-Hasselbalch
Equation
- 1. Consider a buffering mixture
WEAK ACID
PROTON
CONJUGATE BASE
40A Derivation of the Henderson-Hasselbalch
Equation
- 2. Write the acid dissociation constant (Ka)?
concentration in moles / liter mole
6.022 X 10 23 particles
41A Derivation of the Henderson-Hasselbalch
Equation
- 3. Take the logarithm in base 10 of both sides.
42A Derivation of the Henderson-Hasselbalch
Equation
- 4. Multiplying through on both sides by -1.
- log Ka
- log H
-
43A Derivation of the Henderson-Hasselbalch
Equation
- 5. Substitute
- -log Ka pKa and
- - log H pH
pKa
pH
44A Derivation of the Henderson-Hasselbalch
Equation
pKa
pH
45Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation
46Mathematics of Log10 (A refresher)
- Logs used extensively in pH calculations We use
log10 exclusively in pH calculations - Definition If b 10a then log10b a
- Multiplication
- log(ab) loga logb
- e.g. log (2 X 108) log2 log108
- 0.3 8
- 8.3
- Division
- log(a/b) loga logb
- e.g. log (2 X 10-8) log (2/10-8)
- 0.3 8
- 7.7
47Thermodynamics
- Thermodynamics distinguishes between a system and
its surroundings. -
48The First Law of Thermodynamics
- The First Law of Thermodynamics states that the
total energy of a system and its surroundings is
constant. - Other ways to state this
- The energy content of the universe is constant
- Energy can be neither created nor destroyed
49The Second Law of Thermodynamics
- The Second Law of Thermodynamics states that the
total entropy (S) of a system plus that of its
surroundings always increases. - Entropy (S) is a measure of randomness or disorder
50Thermodynamics terms
- S Entropy
- Disorder or randomness
- H Enthalpy
- Heat content
- T Absolute Temperature
- In degrees Kelvin
- G Gibbs free energy
51Gibbs Free Energy (?G)
- ?G ?H system - T?Ssystem
- ?G must be negative for a process to occur
spontaneously.
52Human Genome Project
- 15 year project to sequence the entire human
genome - Start 1990 completed 2003 ( two years early)
- The facts
- 3164.7 million bases (3 billion)
- 99.9 identical between individuals
- 3 encodes for proteins
- 50 is repetitive junk DNA
- 1.4 million single nucleotide changes (SNPs) have
been identified. - 25,000 Genes
- Average gene is 3000 base pairs in size
- Largest gene is dystrophin at 2.4 million bases
53Human Genome Project (Cont)
- What We Still Don't Understand A Checklist for
Future Research - Exact gene number, exact locations, and functions
- Gene regulation
- DNA sequence organization
- Chromosomal structure and organization
- Noncoding DNA types, amount, distribution,
information content, and functions - Coordination of gene expression, protein
synthesis, and post-translational events - Interaction of proteins in complex molecular
machines - Predicted vs experimentally determined gene
function - Evolutionary conservation among organisms
- Protein conservation (structure and function)
- Proteomes (total protein content and function) in
organisms - Correlation of SNPs (single-base DNA variations
among individuals) with health and disease - Disease-susceptibility prediction based on gene
sequence variation - Genes involved in complex traits and multigene
diseases - Complex systems biology, including microbial
consortia useful for environmental restoration - Developmental genetics, genomics
- http//www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome
/project/journals/insights.html
54Human Genome Project (Cont)
- The draft sequence already is having an impact
on finding genes associated with disease. Over 30
genes have been pinpointed and associated with
breast cancer, muscle disease, deafness, and
blindness. Additionally, finding the DNA
sequences underlying such common diseases as
cardiovascular disease, diabetes, arthritis, and
cancers is being aided by the human variation
maps (SNPs) generated in the HGP in cooperation
with the private sector. These genes and SNPs
provide focused targets for the development of
effective new therapies. - One of the greatest impacts of having the
sequence may well be in enabling an entirely new
approach to biological research. In the past,
researchers studied one or a few genes at a time.
With whole-genome sequences and new
high-throughput technologies, they can approach
questions systematically and on a grand scale.
They can study all the genes in a genome, for
example, or all the transcripts in a particular
tissue or organ or tumor, or how tens of
thousands of genes and proteins work together in
interconnected networks to orchestrate the
chemistry of life. - Post-sequencing projects are well under way
worldwide. (See GenomicsGTL). These explorations
will result in a profound, new, and more
comprehensive understanding of complex living
systems, with applications to agriculture, human
health, energy, global climate change, and
environmental remediation, among others. - http//www.ornl.gov/sci/techresources/Human_Genome
/project/journals/insights.html
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56pH Problems
- 1. What are the pH and pOH of the following
solutions? - a. 0.1 M HCl
- 0.1 M H2SO4
- 2. For the dissociation of formic acid (HCOOH),
the pH is 3.75. At pH 4.75, what is the ratio
of formate (HCOO-) to formic acid?
57pH Problems
- 3.Calculate the ratio of HPO42- / H2PO- at pH of
5.7, 6.7 and 8.7.
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59pH problems
- 4. At a normal blood pH of 7.4, the sum of
- HCO3_ CO2 25.2 mM. What is the
concentration of HCO3 and CO2 (pKa for HCO3_ /
CO2 6.1)?