Title: What is Biochemistry
1What is Biochemistry?
- Chemistry and 3-D Structures of Biomolecules
- Molecular Interactions
- Synthesis and Degradation
- Cellular Energetics
- Mechanisms
- Genetics Storage, Transmission, Expression
2Chapter 1 A Review(What you should remember)
- Origins of Life
- Basic Organic Functional Groups Cpds.
- Components of the Cell
- Basic Terminology
- Thermodynamics
- Essential Equations
3Elements in Living Matter
4- With the exceptions of oxygen and calcium, the
biologically most abundant elements are only
minor constituents of the earths crust. - Crust
- O 47
- Si 28
- Al 7.9
- Fe 4.5
- Ca 3.5
5Human Composition
6Prebiotic Era 4.6 3.5 billion years ago
7Miller and UreyWater Methane Ammonia
Hydrogen
8TERMINOLOGY
- Prebiotic
- Functional Groups
- Condensation Rx
- Hydrolysis
- Polymers
Complementarity Vesicles Compartmentation Natural
Selection Enrichment
9Hydrolysis vs. Condensation Rx
- Both involve water as a product/reactant
- Condensation Rx Water rains out
- Water is formed by the joining of two molecules
and the splitting out of an H and OH - Hydrolysis Rx Water is split and is used to
split or cause lysis of a second molecule - A molecule is split and water is also split and
shared as an H and OH to the resulting two
molecules.
10Functional Groups
- Acyl
- Amido
- Amino
- Carbonyl
- Carboxyl
- Diphosphoryl
Ester Ether Hydroxyl Imino Phosphoryl Pyrophospho
ryl Sulfhydryl
11Elements in Living Matter
12CompartmentationTHINK Membranes
Hydrophobicity
- Vesicles
- Prokaryotes 1 - 10 µm
- Eukaryotes 10 - 100 µm
- Viruses
13Eukaryotic Cell Components
- Eukaryotes
- Organelles
- Endoplasmic Reticulum
- Golgi Apparatus
Mitochondria Chloroplasts Lysosomes Peroxisomes Cy
tosol Cytoskeleton
14Origins of Life
- Evolution
- Creationism
- Intelligent Design
- A critical moment in chemical evolution was the
transition from randomly generated molecules into
systems in which molecules were organized and
specifically replicated.
15How Do Organisms Evolve?
- SYMBIOSIS
- BENEFICIAL MUTATIONS
- ENRICHMENT
- NATURAL SELECTION
16How Do Organisms Evolve?
- Not Directed by the Organism
- Requires Sloppiness
- Constrained by the Past
- Ongoing
- Directed by the Environment
17THERMODYNAMICS(Govern the Spontaneity of
Reactions)
- 1st Law
- The Energy of the Universe (U) is conserved.
- 2nd Law-
- Entropy (disorder) tends to increase.
18THERMODYNAMICS
- 1st Law
- The Energy of the Universe (U) is conserved.
- Energy is neither created nor destroyed.
- Total energy of the Universe (or a system) cannot
be quantified, but CHANGES within a system often
can. - For a single (isolated) system
- ?U (Ufinal UInitial)) q (heat) w (work)
19THERMODYNAMICS
- 1st Law
- The Energy of the Universe (U) is conserved.
- For a single system
- ?U Ufinal UInitial q (heat) w (work)
- Heat random molecular motion
- Work force acting through a distance
- Energy, Heat (Enthalpy), Work
- Joules (J kg m2 s-2) OR Calorie (cal)
20- 1st Law of Thermodynamics -
- The Energy of the Universe (U) is conserved
thus, for a given system - ?U ?q (heat) ?w (work)
- For biological systems, most of which are at
constant pressure, - 1) work is usually pressure-volume work so w
P?V - 2) heat (q) of a system at constant P H
(enthalpy) - ? U ? H - P?V
- ? H ? U P?V
- Volume changes are usually insignificant so
- ? H ? ? U
21Spontaneity of a Rx
Enthalpy measures alone will not determine the
spontaneity of a Rx
Can heat (enthalpy) force all the molecules back
into one side?
22THERMODYNAMICS
- 2nd Law-
- Entropy (disorder, randomness) tends to increase.
- Chemicals like to exist in disordered arrays and
will naturally progress to a less ordered state
when no energy is added. - Spontaneous Rxs USUALLY result in reactants in a
less ordered state.
23Spontaneity of a Rx
Enthalpy alone cannot determine the direction of
a Rx
Heat
because Entropy favors the less ordered state.
24THERMODYNAMICS
- 2nd Law - Entropy tends to increase and we can
estimate entropy by - Entropy (S) kB ln W
-
- (S Joules per degrees Kelvin or J K-1)
- Where
- W energetically equivalent ways
- kB Boltzmans Constant 1.4 x 10-24 J K-1
25THERMODYNAMICS
- 2nd Law- Entropy tends increase, and
- Entropy (S) kB ln W
- The most probable or favored arrangement of a
system is one that maximizes W and, hence,
maximizes S. - Thus, the W in the final state must be greater
than the W of the initial state.
26- 2nd Law- Entropy tends increase, and
- Entropy (S) kB ln W
- We cannot determine W for biological systems,
- but in a closed system at constant T and P
- (remembering the unit of S are JK-1)
- q/T ? ?S
- (the heat of the system divided by the
temperature of the system gives the units of
S), - and q ?H for biological systems, so
- ? H/T ? ?S
27THERMODYNAMICS
- ? H/T ? ?S
- Or
- (true criterion for spontaneity by J. Willard
Gibbs) - H - T ?S ? 0
- G ? H - T ? S
- If ?G is negative spontaneous (exergonic)
- If ?G is positive NOT spontaneous (endergonic)
28Spontaneity Chart(searching for negative ?G)
29State FunctionsFree Energy, Energy, Enthalpy,
Entropy
- These functions depend only of beginning and end
states. Stepwise changes must still result in
the same final values - Example Combustion of glucose. The same
energy change occurs by combustion to CO2 and H2O
as occurs with multiple enzymatic steps in a
cell.
30State FunctionsFree Energy, Energy, Enthalpy,
Entropy
- Concentration Dependant
- entropy (and, hence, free energy) increases
with volume hence, we are concerned with the
partial molar free energy
GA-GºA RT lnA
31State FunctionsFree Energy, Energy, Enthalpy,
Entropy
- Temperature Dependant
- vant Hoff plot allows calculations of ?Hº,
?Sº, and ?Gº by measuring Keq at two or more
temperatures. - ?G RT ln Keq
- ln Keq ?Hº x 1 ?Sº
- R T
R
32Standard State Conventionsfor Biochemistry
- Most Rxs are in an aqueous environment hence,
pH becomes a factor. - Pure water is 55.5 M, but it is assigned an
activity of 1 at Standard State. - At pH 7.0, H 10-7 M
- (this is SS not pH 0)
- The total concentration of a substance capable of
acid-base reaction is defined in terms of total
at pH 7 - ( not of specific ionic species and not at pH0)
33Standard State Conventionsfor Biochemistry
- Thus, remember
- ?Gº ' is more defined than ?Gº,
- which is more defined than ?G
- ?Gº -- 298 ºK 1 atm solutes 1 M
- ?Gº -- pH 7.0 H20 55.5 M and H 10 7
M
34Standard State Conventionsfor Biochemistry
- Thus, remember
- ?Gº ? ?Gº '
- If the Rx includes H20, H, or an ionizable
species - And
- ?Gº ' means that the activity of water and
hydrogen ion activity are arbitrarily assigned a
value of 1.
35Does Life Obey the Laws of Thermodynamics?
- Life persists because a system can be ordered at
the expense of disordering its surroundings
- Living organizisms are open systems they are not
at equilibrium
- Nature is inherently dissipative efficiency is
always less than 100
36ENZYMES
- Enzymes accelerate biochemical Rxs by physically
interacting with the reactants and products to
provide a more favorable pathway . - Enzymes (like catalysts) may increase the RATE of
a Rx. - Enzymes May NOT promote Rxs with positive ?Gs.