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The chemistry of life

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The chemistry of life
The chemistry of life


Cell chemistry is hierarchical
Inorganic precursors

Small organic molecules

Macromolecules

Supramolecular structures

Organelles/structures

Cell
BIO 1140 – SLIDE 1

Review of macromolecules
Carbohydrates
 Polymers of monosaccharides (polysaccharides)



Energy storage
Structural
chitin

starch glycogen Purple pages F23



cellulose

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 2

http://www.mpie.de/index.php?id=2957

Monosaccharides


CnH2nOn






n = 3 to 7
Trioses, pentoses and hexoses most common

Linear vs ring configuration
Asymmetrical C  isomers

glyceraldehyde

ribose
D-glucose

-D-glucose

ß-D-glucose

Fig. 2.13

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 3

Purple pages F20-21

 Polysaccharides


Glycosidic bond



C1 to C4
 vs ß

starch

glycogen

Purple pages F22-23 cellulose chitin

NH

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 4



NH

NH

NH

C=O

C=O

C=O

C=O

CH3

CH3

CH3

CH3

Fig. 2.17 Karp 2010

Test your recall:
Distinguish between a polymer and a polysaccharide.
Provide an example of a carbohydrate used for energy storage.
 Glucose is a 6-carbon sugar or __________________.
 Why are there  and ß forms of glucose in the ring configuration but not in the linear configuration?
 What carbohydrate is formed from repeated units of ß-glucose? Can humans digest this carbohydrate?



BIO 1140 – SLIDE 5

Nucleic acids
 Polymers of nucleotides





Informational
DNA vs RNA

Nucleotides



5C sugar – ribose or deoxyribose nitrogenous base



Purine: adenine, guanine
Pyrimidine: cytosine, cytosine thymine thymine, uracil

Sugar + base = nucleoside
Up to 3 phosphate groups  nucleotide
 Several different roles in cell...

Fig. 4.12




BIO 1140 – SLIDE 6

H
(deoxyribose)

Purple pages F29-30

Nucleic acids
 Polymers of nucleotides





Informational
DNA vs RNA

Nucleotides



5C sugar – ribose or deoxyribose nitrogenous base



Purine: adenine, guanine
Pyrimidine: cytosine, cytosine thymine thymine, uracil

Fig. 4.12

Sugar + base = nucleoside
 Up to 3 phosphate groups  nucleotide
 Several different roles in cell...


(deoxyribose)

Adenosine

Base

Nucleoside

Adenine
Guanine
Cytosine
Thymine
Uracil

Adenosine or deoxyadenosine
Guanosine or deoxyguanosine
Cytidine or deoxycytidine
Deoxythymidine
Uridine

Adenosine monophosphate (AMP)
Adenosine diphosphate (ADP)

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 7



H

Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)

Sugar-phosphate backbone

Nucleic acids
Phosphodiester bond
RNA  single-stranded
 DNA  double-stranded


5’ end






Double helix
James Watson & Francis
Crick, Nature 1953

Fig. 2.53 Karp 2010
3’ end

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 8



Sugar-phosphate backbone

Nucleic acids
Phosphodiester bond
 RNA  single-stranded
 DNA  double-stranded





Purple pages F30

5’ end

3’ end

Double helix
James Watson & Francis
Crick, Nature 1953 (see http://www.nature.com/nature/dna50/archive.html) 3’ end

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 9

5’ end
Purple pages F30



Nucleic acids
Phosphodiester bond
RNA  single-stranded
 DNA  double-stranded






Double helix
James Watson & Francis
Crick, Nature 1953 (see http://www.nature.com/nature/dna50/archive.html) BIO 1140 – SLIDE 10



Purple pages F31

Test your recall:
Distinguish between a nucleic acid and a nucleotide.
True or false – cytosine is a purine.
 Use the blocks at right to construct a nucleoside.
 List three differences between DNA and RNA.
 Describe the structure of dGTP.
 Who elucidated the structure of DNA?
 Nucleic acid sequences are always presented in the order _____ to _____.



BIO 1140 – SLIDE 11

Proteins
 Polymers of amino acids



Informational
Wide array of functions:
Enzymes (e.g. carbonic anhydrase)
Structural (e.g. keratin, collagen)
 Motility (e.g. actin)
 Transport (e.g. Na+-K+-ATPase)





Regulatory (e.g. transcription factors, hormones) Receptors (e.g. ß-adrenoreceptors)
 Defensive (e.g. antibodies)




Amino acids



~20
Central carbon ( carbon)
Carboxyl group
 Amino group
 H atom
 Side chain (R group)


R group
(different for each amino acid)
Amino
group

H3N+

C
H

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 12

Carboxyl group R
C

OO



R group


Properties of amino acid determined by R group:  Nonpolar
 Polar, uncharged
 Polar, acidic (-ve charge)
 Polar, basic (+ve charge)
 Reactive functional groups

Common functional groups:
Chemical formula
Name
-OH
Hydroxyl group
-C=O
Carbonyl group
-SH
Sulphhydryl group
-COOH
Carboxyl group
-PO32Phosphate group
-NH2
Amino group

Properties
Neutral, polar
Neutral, polar
Neutral, polar
-ve charge at cellular pH
-ve charge at cellular pH
+ve charge at cellular pH

+

Nonpolar

R group


-

See purple pages F18

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 13



-

Properties of amino acid determined by R group:  Nonpolar
 Polar, uncharged
 Polar, acidic (-ve charge)
 Polar, basic (+ve charge)
 Reactive functional groups

Polar, uncharged

Reactive functional groups

Polar, charged

Purple pages F25



BIO 1140 – SLIDE 14

Polypeptide
Peptide bond
N-terminus vs C-terminus
 Average 400-500 aa residues





From polypeptide to protein...


One or more polypeptides folded into native conformation





monomeric (single polypeptide) multimeric  homomeric, homomeric heteromeric

Conformation is dependent on covalent and non-covalent interactions in backbone and/or R groups 


Conformational changes
Denaturation
BIO 1140 – SLIDE 15

Purple pages F26



Polypeptide
Peptide bond
N-terminus vs C-terminus
 Average 400-500 aa residues





From polypeptide to protein...


One or more polypeptides folded into native conformation





monomeric (single polypeptide) multimeric  homomeric, homomeric heteromeric

Conformation is dependent on covalent and non-covalent interactions in backbone and/or R groups 


Conformational changes
Denaturation
BIO 1140 – SLIDE 16



Purple pages F27-28

Protein structure


Primary structure



Secondary structure



aa sequence, 20n possibilities where n = # aa

Hydrogen bonding in backbone
 helix vs ß pleated sheet
 Motifs, e.g. hairpin loop, helix-turn-helix



 helix

ß sheet

Fig. 2.31 Karp 2010

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 17



Purple pages F27-28

Purple pages
F27-28

Tertiary structure
Overall shape or conformation
Interactions between R groups
 Disulphide bridge
 Hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, hydrophobic interactions, van der
Waals interactions
 Relative contributions of 2° and 3°?
 Fibrous vs globular proteins
 Domains



Ch. 4

Fig. 2.22
Fig. 3-13 Becker et al. 2009

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 18



Tertiary structure
Overall shape or conformation
Interactions between R groups
 Disulphide bridge
 Hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, hydrophobic interactions, van der
Waals interactions
 Relative contributions of 2° and 3°?
 Fibrous vs globular proteins
 Domains



Autumn et al. 2000 Nature 405: 681-685 http://geckolab.lclark.edu/dept/AutumnLab/ van_der_Waals_mini-presentation.html

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 19



Quaternary structure




Interactions of subunits to form multimeric protein

Multiprotein complexes

Purple pages F27-28

Fig. 3-6 Becker et al. 2009

BIO 1140 – SLIDE 20



Test your recall:


Deduce the chemical nature of the amino acids below by examination of their side chains.

Between what groups does a peptide bond form?
Distinguish between a polypeptide and a protein.
List three functions of proteins.
 Distinguish between a motif and a domain.
 For what level of protein structure is hydrogen bonding in the backbone responsible?  True or false – Monomeric proteins do not exhibit quaternary structure.




BIO 1140 – SLIDE 21

Lipids
 ‘Macromolecules’ not polymers
Insoluble in water, soluble in nonpolar solvents
 energy storage, membrane structure, signalling





Types


6 main classes






Fatty acids
Phospholipids
Steroids

Purple pages F32-F34

Fatty acids


Hydrocarbon chains with carboxyl group



Saturated vs unsaturated




14 - 22 carbon fatty acids very common amphipathic BIO 1140 – SLIDE 22



Phospholipids
Structural component of membranes  Phosphoglycerides

R group



Phosphate

Glycerol
2 fatty acids (16 - 18 C)
 Phosphate
 Hydrophilic R group = serine, ethanolamine, choline, inositol
 amphipathic


glycerol

polar



BIO 1140 – SLIDE 23



Fatty acids nonpolar

Purple pages F33-34

Steroids
Derivatives of 4-ringed hydrocarbon skeleton
Only in eukaryotic cells
 Sterols



Cholesterol (animals)
Phytosterols (plants)
 Ergosterol (fungi)



stigmasterol

cholesterol
BIO 1140 – SLIDE 24

Purple pages F34



Test your recall:
Are lipids polymers?
Distinguish between a fatty acid and a phosphoglyceride.
What lipids play a role in signalling?
 Define amphipathic. Use a sketch of a phosphoglyceride to illustrate your answer.  Would you expect to find sterols in the inner membrane of a mitochondrion or chloroplast? Explain your answer.




BIO 1140 – SLIDE 25

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