Biochem Prelim
Biochem Prelim
Biochem Prelim
“A cell has history; its stucture is inherited, it grows, divides, and, as in the
embryo of higher animals, the products of division differentiate on complex
lines. Living cells, moreover transmit all that is involved in their complex
heredity.”
Cell Theory
Have nucleus
Protists, fungi, plants, and animals
Complex type of cells
Nucleus
Cell membrane
Cytoplasm w/organelles
The Organelles
Microscopic
Various functions
Found in cytoplasm
May/may not be membrane bound
Double layer of
phospholipids and
proteins
Surrounds outside of
ALL cells
Controls what enters/leaves the cell
Living layer
Phospholipids
Head –
o Glycerol, Phosphate
o Hydrophilic (attract water)
Tails = fatty acids; hydrophobic
Bilayer – tails point INWARD toward each other
Move laterally to allow small molecules to enter (O2, CO2 & H2O)
The Cell Membrane is Fluid
Cytoplasm of a Cell
Jelly-like
substance
A medium for chemical reactions to take place
Contains organelle (carry out specific jobs)
Fluid and ogranelles that are outside the nucles (all the contents for prokaryotes)
Removes waste material
Helps in cell respiration
Converts glucose = energy
The Nucleus
Nuclear Envelope
Double membrane
surrounding nucleus
Nuclear membrane
Contains nuclear pores (for
materials to enter/leave nucleus)
Nucleolus
Inside nucleus
Disappears when cell divides
Makes ribosomes that make proteins
The Cytoskeleton
Dynamic structure
Microfilaments and microtubules can
depolymerise and repolymerise very easily
The Cytoskeleton
Functions:
Centrioles
Animal cells
Paired structures near nucleus
Made of bundle of microtubules
Appear during cell division forming mitotic
spindle
Pull chromosome pairs apart to opposite ends
of the cell
Mitochondrion (Mitochondria)
Rough ER
Smooth ER
Lacks ribosomes
Lipid metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism, detoxification
Abundant in mammalian liver and gonad cells
Synthesizes phospholipids (secreted by testes, ovaries, skin oil glands)
Ribosomes
Structure of Ribosomes
flattened sacs
shipping side (cis face) & a receiving
side (trans face)
Receive proteins made by ER
Transport vesicles with modified
proteins pinch off the ends
Modify, sort, package molecules from ER for storage or transport out of cell
Lysosome
Digestive enzymes
Break down
Destroyer; Apoptosis – cell death
Release enzymes to break down &
recycle cell parts
Lysosome Digestion
Endomembrane System
Diff:
Cilia are slender protuberances that project from much larger cell body.
Flagella is a lash-like appendage that protrudes from the cell body.
Vacuoles
double membrane
DNA
Green pigment chlorophyll
Function
Cell type
Eukaryotic, plant
Granum – flat membrane stacks increase SA/Vol ratio and small internal volumes
quickly accumulate ions
Prokaryotes
Bacteria shapes
Spheres (Cocci)
Rods (Bacilli
Spirals
Classification
Glycolysis
Water
Water
Properties of water
Carbon-based Molecules
Hydrocarbons
Large Hydrocarbons
Groups of atoms that give properties to the compounds to which they attach
Examples: (O-H); ketone, alcohol, aldehyde, organic acid
Polymers
Macromolecules
Built from monomers
Examples: carbohydrates, nucleic acids, lipids, proteins
Macromolecules in Organism
Carbohydrates
o Small sugar molecules in softdrinks
o Long starch molecules in pasta/potatoes
Monosaccharides (C6H12O6)
o Simple sugars
o Glucose, fructose & galactose (milk sugar)
Glucose found in sports drinks
Fructose found in fruits
Honey contains both
-ose = sugar
o Same chemical, different structural formulas
o Cellular fuel
Isomers
o Glucose and fructose
Structures are diff but chemical formulas are same
Rings
Aqueous solutions
Monosaccharides form ring structures
Double sugar
Joining two monosaccharides
Condensation – removing water molecule
Glycosidic bond
Ex: sucrose (table sugar), lactose (milk sugar), maltose (grain sugar)
o sucrose (table sugar) – glucose + fructose
o maltose (grain sugar) – 2 glucose molecules
o lactose (milk sugar) – galactose + glucose
Polysaccharides
complex carbohydrates
many sugar monomers linked together
polymers of monosaccharide chain
examples: starch, glycogen, cellulose
o starch – plant stores this for energy;
potatoes and grains
o glycogen – excess sugar in animals;
similar structure to starch because they are both glucose monomers
o cellulose – most abundant organic compound;
cable-like fibrils in tough walls that encloses plants
major component of wood
dietary fiber
Dietary Cellulose
Sugars in Water
Lipids
Hydrophobic
Do not mix with water
Fats, waxes, steroids, oils
Function of Lipids
Store energy
Insulate body
Cushion/protect organs
Saturated fatty acids – max hydrogens bonded to the carbons (all single bonds
between carbons)
o Single bonds
Unsaturated fatty acids – less than max hydrogens bonded to the carbons
o Unsaturated
Triglyceride
Monomer of lipids
Glycerol & 3 fatty acid chains
o Glycerol forms backbone of the fat
o Ex: organic alcohol (-OL)
Fats in Organisms
Fats
Steroids
Variants of testosterone
Build up muscles quickly
Pose serious health risks
Proteins
Polymers made of
amino acids
(monomers)
20 different amino acids
linked in diff orders
Used to build cells
Act as hormones & enzymes
Do much of work
20 Acid Monomers
Essential amino acids – cannot be made by the body; must come from food
o Histidine
o Isoleucine
o Leucine
o Lysine
o Methionine
o Phenylalanine
o Threonine
o Tryptophan
o Valine
Non-essential amino acids – bodies produce;
o Alanine
o Arginine
o Asparagine
o Aspartic acid
o Cysteine
o Glutamic acid
o Glutamine
o Glycine
o Proline
o Serine
o Tyrosine
Proteins as Enzymes
Biological catalysts
Thousands
Enzymes
Globular proteins
Folded conformation ---- active site
Specific for only one type of substrate
Reusable
Active site changes shape
Induced fit
Primary
protein
structure
polypeptide
Specific sequence of amino acids in a protein
R groups interact
Other Important
Proteins
Insulin – controls
blood sugar level
o Causes liver to
uptake & store
excess sugar (Glycogen)
Cell membrane contains proteins
Receptor proteins – recognize cells
Nucleic Acid
Bases
Nucleotide Monomers
ATP – Cellular
Energy
biochemical compounds
Polymers – most biochemicals are large molecules
o Repeated units of monomers
Most organic compounds are covalent compounds
Not part of organic chemistry – carbonate ions & bicarbonate ions
Hydrocarbons - simplest organic compounds
o (Alkanes) Saturated hydrocarbons - have only single bonds / appear
as a chain (which can be a straight chain or can have branches)
Meth - means one carbon atom;
o methane is an alkane with one carbon atom
Eth- means two carbon atoms;
o ethane is an alkane with two carbon atoms.
Prop- means three carbon atoms;
o propane is an alkane with three carbon atoms.
Structural Formulas -
1. Methane: CH4
2. Chloroform: CHCl3
3. Ethane: C2H6
Type of Bonds
Types of Compounds
Formula: CnH2n
Also called ethylene series (IUPAC name is ethene)
Acetylene series
Formula – CnH2n-2
Formula – CnH2n-6
C6H6 – simplest
ANOTHER EXAMPLE
STEP 1 – 6 carbons =
hex; all single bonds = -
ane; HEXANE
STEP 2 – numbering
from right to left
STEP 3 – 2,4
DIMETHYL HEXANE
When naming w/a double/triple bond – start w/carbons closest to the bond
Halides
Alcohols
Replace e with ol
R-COOH
Replace e with al
First member – methanal
o Aka formaldehyde
Used to preserve biological samples
E with -one
Simplest – propanone
o IUPAC name is propanone but
common name – acetone
Esters – R-CO-O-R
Amines - -N-
Ammonia = NH3
IUPAC naming
o Replace final -e with -amine
Amides –
6CO2 + 6H20 +
(energy) → C6H12O6 +
6O2 Carbon dioxide +
water + energy from light produces glucose and oxygen; (The 686 kcal come from
solar energy.)
Plants
Carbohydrates - needed for synthesis of nucleic acids and many proteins and
lipids.
Structure of Carbohydrates
Properties of Carbohydrates
Properties of Monosaccharides
sweet taste (fructose is sweetest; 73% sweeter than sucrose).
solids at room temperature.
extremely soluble in water
o Despite high molecular weights, the presence of large numbers of OH
groups make the monosaccharides much more water-soluble than most
molecules of similar MW.
Glucose can dissolve in minute amounts of water to make a syrup (1 g / 1 ml
H2O).
Monosaccharides
o Simplest group of carbohydrates
o simple sugars since they cannot be further hydrolyzed.
o Colorless, crystalline solid
o soluble in water and insoluble in a non-polar solvent.
o possesses a free aldehyde or ketone group.
o general formula - Cn(H2O) or CnH2nOn.
o classified according to the number of carbon atoms
basis of the functional group present.
The monosaccharides thus with 3,4,5,6,7… carbons are called trioses, tetroses,
pentoses, hexoses, heptoses, etc., and also as aldoses or ketoses depending
upon whether they contain aldehyde or ketone group.
Oligosaccharides
o compound sugars that yield 2 to 10 molecules of the same or different
monosaccharides on hydrolysis.
o glycosidic linkage – join monosaccharide units
o further classified as disaccharide, trisaccharide, tetrasaccharide etc.
o Disaccharide - Oligosaccharides yielding 2 molecules of
monosaccharides on hydrolysis
o Trisaccharides/tetrasaccharides – 3 or 4 monosaccharides
o general formula (disaccharides) - Cn(H2O)n-
o trisaccharides - Cn(H2O)n-2
Examples: Disaccharides - sucrose, lactose, maltose, etc.
Trisaccharides - Raffinose, Rabinose.
Polysaccharides
o “glycans”.
o more than 10 monosaccharide units and can be hundreds of sugar units
in length.
o more than 10 molecules of monosaccharides on hydrolysis.
o differ from each other in the identity of their recurring monosaccharide
units, in the length of their chains, in the types of bond linking units
and in the degree of branching.
o primarily concerned with two important functions ie.
Structural functions and the storage of energy.
Homopolysaccharidese - monosaccharides of the same type
starch, glycogen, cellulose, pectin.
heteropolysaccharides - monosaccharides of different types.
Hyaluronic acid, Chondroitin.
Functions
Carbohydrates - widely distributed molecules in plant and animal tissues.
In plants and arthropods, carbohydrates form the skeletal structures,
o food reserves in plants and animals.
o important energy source required for various metabolic activities,
o the energy is derived by oxidation.
Major Functions
carbohydrates as accessible energy to fuel cellular reactions.
most abundant dietary source of energy (4kcal/gram) for all living beings.
Glycolysis/kreb’s cycle – breakdown of glucose to yield ATP
energy stores, fuels, and metabolic intermediates.
stored as glycogen in animals and starch in plants.
Stored carbohydrates act as an energy source
form structural and protective components, like in the cell wall of plants and
microorganisms.
Structural elements in the cell walls of bacteria (peptidoglycan or murein),
plants (cellulose) and animals (chitin).
intermediates in the biosynthesis of fats and proteins.
aid in the regulation of nerve tissue
energy source for the brain.
associated with lipids and proteins to form surface antigens, receptor
molecules, vitamins, and antibiotics.
structural framework of RNA and DNA (ribonucleic acid and deoxyribonucleic
acid).
linked carbohydrates are important in cell-cell communication and in
interactions between cells and other elements in the cellular environment.
In animals - constituent of connective tissues.
Carbohydrates that are rich in fiber content help to prevent constipation.
the modulation of the immune system.
Aldohexoses
subclass of the hexoses
in the linear form, have carbonyl at carbon 1, forming an aldehyde derivative
with structure [H–C(=O)–(CHOH)5–H.]
glucose
The Fischer diagrams of the eight l-aldohexoses are the mirror images of the
corresponding d-isomers;