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biotech unit 2

  • organic molecules contain carbon

  • the major elements of life are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen

  • and acronym for this is C.H.O.P.N.S

General tips

  • like dissolves like

Rubisco

  • makes inorganic Co2 into glucose

Carbon

  • VERY IMPORTANT TO BIOCHEM

  • can form up to four bond b/c of its number of valence electrons.

    • Covalent

      • shares electrons

    • ionic

      • takes away valence electron(s)

      • think of the time Mr Schuyler took Manav’s phone and ran around the room.

!!!STRUCTURE = FUNCTION!!!

Variation in Carbon skeletons

  • length

  • branching

  • sharing 2 valence electrons - double bonds(2 lines ==)

  • rings

Hydrocarbons

  • Long C-H chain

  • non-polar covalent

Isomers

  • Compounds with the same formula, but a different structure

    • think of your 2 hands, and how they are reversed, but do the same thing

Hydrolysis(to break water, literally)

  • breakdown between monomers

  • removes water, then separates into a hydroxl(-OH) and an -H

  • digestive enzymes hydrolise food into monomers which then enter the bloodstream.

Dehydration synthesis

  • dehydration synthesis and hydrolysis have pretty much opposite names from their processes

  • makes larger covalent bonds that produce water

  • needs enzymes/catalyst.

Functional groups

  • behaves the same way regardless of molecule

  • effects the structure, therefore the function

Monomers

  • single building blocks

  • there are about 50 different monomers or”parts” that make up everything in our bodies, DNA included.

    • this makes us less complicated than cars

Carbohydrates

  • sugars are their polymers

  • dehydration synthesis - make a bigger molecule by removing water

  • classified based on numbers of simple sugars

Monosacharides

  • ratio of CH_2O, nutrients for cells(glucose) photosynthesis

  • energy in bonds

  • isomers

  • spatial arrangement - 3 d organization of molecules and organic compounds - CH_2O

  • forming in water

Disacharides

  • double sugar joined by glucose linkage(dehydration synthesis)

Polysacharides

  • 100-1000 monosacharides

  • enzyme mediated dehydration synthesis

  • used for energy storage and structural support

Macromolecule

  • large organic polymer, has four classes

    • carbohydrates

    • lipids

    • proteins

    • nucleic acids

starch

  • short term energy

  • glucose polymer

  • storage in plants: t4 linkage(???)

  • granules in plastids( plastids are an organelle in plant cells that help with mitochondria)

    • amylose - simplest form - unbranched

    • amylopectin - branched form

Glycogen

  • storage in animals - large and highly branched

  • stored in muscle and liver - glucose polymer

Cellulose(structural)

  • linear chain of glucose units(Picture a straight, sugar necklace, the beads are glucose)

  • D-Glucose(in Humans)(just glucose needed to survive, standard glucose)

Chitin(structural)

  • polymer of amino sugar

  • exoskeleton in arthropods

Lipids

  • Think of oil

  • insoluble in water, but dissolves in non-polar solvents

  • fats, phospholipids(think the cell membranes Phospholipid bi-layer), and steroids

  • estrogen and testosterone are lipid based steroids.

Fats

  • 2 parts - Glycerol(alcohol—> polar) and fatty acid

  • Glycerol - three carbon alcohol

  • fatty acid - carboxylic(fatty acid —>non polar)

    • 16-18 carbons

    • non polar

    • enzyme linked dehydration synthesis

    • forms ester link(chemical bonds that join two parts of a molecule together)

    • do you see how the polar and the non polar come together????

    • Animal fats have no double bonds

    • vegetable fats can have double bonds, but they are loose(flexible connection)

Proteins

  • made of amino acids

  • four levels of protein structure

    • 1) unique amino acid sequence

    • 2)alpha helixes(twisty spiral staircase)(one strand)

    • 3)hydrophobic interactions and disulfide bonds(defined somewhere here)

    • 4)overall shape

  • central Dogma(DNA—> RNA—> Amino Acid—>Protein)

  • all enzymes are proteins, but not all proteins are enzymes(use da squares analogy)

Nucleic Acids

  • stores genetic material

    • genes

    • blueprint for building proteins

    • DNA—> RNA—>proteins

  • transfers information

    • blueprint for new cells and next gen

  • RNA is single helix

  • DNA is double helix

  • structure - monomers=nucleotide

  • Nucleic acids was the evidence darwin(or Lamark?) was missing!

  • Always remember the five prime three prime, if there are arrows pointing opposite directions, you can guess that.

Nucleotide

  • 3 parts

    • nitrogen base(C-N ring)

    • pentose sugar(5 C)

      • ribose in RNA

      • Deoxyribose in DNA

    • phosphate(PO_4) group

Types of nucleotide

  • 2 types

    • different nitrogen bases

  • purines

    • double ring N base

    • adenine

    • Guanine

    • “pure AG(silver)”

  • Pyrimidines

    • single ring N base

    • cytosine

    • thymine

    • uracil

Nucleic polymer

  • backbone

    • sugar to PO_4 bond

  • Phosphodiester bond(

    • new base added to sugar of previous base

    • polymer grows in one direction

  • N bases hang off the sugar-phosphate backbone

    • dangling bases are

Pairing Of Nucleotides

  • Nucleotides bond between DNA strands

  • H- bonds

    • purine::pyrimidine

  • A :: T

    • 2 H bonds

  • G :: C

    • 3 H bonds

  • DNA is a double helix

  • H bonds between bases and join the 2 strands

    • A :: T

    • C :: G

Copying DNA

  • replication

    • 2 strands of DNA helix are complimentary

      • if it has one, it can build the other

      • if it has one, it can rebuild the whole

When does a cell copy DNA?

  • cell reproduction(mitosis)

  • gamete production(meiosis)

The History of DNA

  • Watson and Crick

    • “discovered” the structure of DNA, but used other peoples research such as . . .

  • Maurice Wilkins

    • discovered that A and T, G and C have the corresponding numbers

    • Watson and Crick assumed that meant they went together.

  • Rosalind Franklin

    • Saw the top of a DNA Helix

    • corrected Watson and crick on the order of the nucleic acid b/c they had it that the phosphate went on the inside, and that would explode.

    • moved back to France because she was sick of men

Information polymer

  • series of based encodes info like letters of a book(ttagcgtaccggcatccgat for example)

  • stored info is passed from parent to offspring(this needs to be copied accurately!!)

Gel electrophoresis

  • method used to separate particles by size

  • bigger molecules=less movement

  • DNA is negatively charged, so the wells start on the negative side and(run to red) and move towards the positive side(like how a magnet repels the same charge)

Hydroxl

  • _OH

    • alcohols(ethanol is an example)

    • polar

    • water soluble

Carboxyl

  • the top is non ionized

  • the bottom is ionized

  • this functional group is acidic because it donates H- into the solution

  • polar

  • water soluble

  • a combo of a hydroxl and carbonyl

Amino group

  • the top is non ionized

  • the bottom is ionized

  • called amines

  • this group is a weak base because it gains a H+ ion, removing them from the solution(so the carboxyl is putting negative ions and Amino group is taking positive ions out of the solution)

  • non polar

  • generally water soluble

Sulfhydryl

  • called a thiol

  • helps stabilize protein structure(structure related to function!!) through disulfide bridges(2 sulfer atoms from different parts of the molecule bond very tightly)

  • polar

  • not very water soluble

phosphate

  • called organic phosphates

  • acidic, looses h+ ions

  • polar

  • water soluble

  • unstable, so great for energy transfer and storage

carbonyl

  • The top is an aldehyde, which means it is on the end of a molecule

  • the bottom is a ketone, which means it is in the middle of a molecule.

  • polar

  • water soluble

  • found in all sugars

-

biotech unit 2

  • organic molecules contain carbon

  • the major elements of life are carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, and oxygen

  • and acronym for this is C.H.O.P.N.S

General tips

  • like dissolves like

Rubisco

  • makes inorganic Co2 into glucose

Carbon

  • VERY IMPORTANT TO BIOCHEM

  • can form up to four bond b/c of its number of valence electrons.

    • Covalent

      • shares electrons

    • ionic

      • takes away valence electron(s)

      • think of the time Mr Schuyler took Manav’s phone and ran around the room.

!!!STRUCTURE = FUNCTION!!!

Variation in Carbon skeletons

  • length

  • branching

  • sharing 2 valence electrons - double bonds(2 lines ==)

  • rings

Hydrocarbons

  • Long C-H chain

  • non-polar covalent

Isomers

  • Compounds with the same formula, but a different structure

    • think of your 2 hands, and how they are reversed, but do the same thing

Hydrolysis(to break water, literally)

  • breakdown between monomers

  • removes water, then separates into a hydroxl(-OH) and an -H

  • digestive enzymes hydrolise food into monomers which then enter the bloodstream.

Dehydration synthesis

  • dehydration synthesis and hydrolysis have pretty much opposite names from their processes

  • makes larger covalent bonds that produce water

  • needs enzymes/catalyst.

Functional groups

  • behaves the same way regardless of molecule

  • effects the structure, therefore the function

Monomers

  • single building blocks

  • there are about 50 different monomers or”parts” that make up everything in our bodies, DNA included.

    • this makes us less complicated than cars

Carbohydrates

  • sugars are their polymers

  • dehydration synthesis - make a bigger molecule by removing water

  • classified based on numbers of simple sugars

Monosacharides

  • ratio of CH_2O, nutrients for cells(glucose) photosynthesis

  • energy in bonds

  • isomers

  • spatial arrangement - 3 d organization of molecules and organic compounds - CH_2O

  • forming in water

Disacharides

  • double sugar joined by glucose linkage(dehydration synthesis)

Polysacharides

  • 100-1000 monosacharides

  • enzyme mediated dehydration synthesis

  • used for energy storage and structural support

Macromolecule

  • large organic polymer, has four classes

    • carbohydrates

    • lipids

    • proteins

    • nucleic acids

starch

  • short term energy

  • glucose polymer

  • storage in plants: t4 linkage(???)

  • granules in plastids( plastids are an organelle in plant cells that help with mitochondria)

    • amylose - simplest form - unbranched

    • amylopectin - branched form

Glycogen

  • storage in animals - large and highly branched

  • stored in muscle and liver - glucose polymer

Cellulose(structural)

  • linear chain of glucose units(Picture a straight, sugar necklace, the beads are glucose)

  • D-Glucose(in Humans)(just glucose needed to survive, standard glucose)

Chitin(structural)

  • polymer of amino sugar

  • exoskeleton in arthropods

Lipids

  • Think of oil

  • insoluble in water, but dissolves in non-polar solvents

  • fats, phospholipids(think the cell membranes Phospholipid bi-layer), and steroids

  • estrogen and testosterone are lipid based steroids.

Fats

  • 2 parts - Glycerol(alcohol—> polar) and fatty acid

  • Glycerol - three carbon alcohol

  • fatty acid - carboxylic(fatty acid —>non polar)

    • 16-18 carbons

    • non polar

    • enzyme linked dehydration synthesis

    • forms ester link(chemical bonds that join two parts of a molecule together)

    • do you see how the polar and the non polar come together????

    • Animal fats have no double bonds

    • vegetable fats can have double bonds, but they are loose(flexible connection)

Proteins

  • made of amino acids

  • four levels of protein structure

    • 1) unique amino acid sequence

    • 2)alpha helixes(twisty spiral staircase)(one strand)

    • 3)hydrophobic interactions and disulfide bonds(defined somewhere here)

    • 4)overall shape

  • central Dogma(DNA—> RNA—> Amino Acid—>Protein)

  • all enzymes are proteins, but not all proteins are enzymes(use da squares analogy)

Nucleic Acids

  • stores genetic material

    • genes

    • blueprint for building proteins

    • DNA—> RNA—>proteins

  • transfers information

    • blueprint for new cells and next gen

  • RNA is single helix

  • DNA is double helix

  • structure - monomers=nucleotide

  • Nucleic acids was the evidence darwin(or Lamark?) was missing!

  • Always remember the five prime three prime, if there are arrows pointing opposite directions, you can guess that.

Nucleotide

  • 3 parts

    • nitrogen base(C-N ring)

    • pentose sugar(5 C)

      • ribose in RNA

      • Deoxyribose in DNA

    • phosphate(PO_4) group

Types of nucleotide

  • 2 types

    • different nitrogen bases

  • purines

    • double ring N base

    • adenine

    • Guanine

    • “pure AG(silver)”

  • Pyrimidines

    • single ring N base

    • cytosine

    • thymine

    • uracil

Nucleic polymer

  • backbone

    • sugar to PO_4 bond

  • Phosphodiester bond(

    • new base added to sugar of previous base

    • polymer grows in one direction

  • N bases hang off the sugar-phosphate backbone

    • dangling bases are

Pairing Of Nucleotides

  • Nucleotides bond between DNA strands

  • H- bonds

    • purine::pyrimidine

  • A :: T

    • 2 H bonds

  • G :: C

    • 3 H bonds

  • DNA is a double helix

  • H bonds between bases and join the 2 strands

    • A :: T

    • C :: G

Copying DNA

  • replication

    • 2 strands of DNA helix are complimentary

      • if it has one, it can build the other

      • if it has one, it can rebuild the whole

When does a cell copy DNA?

  • cell reproduction(mitosis)

  • gamete production(meiosis)

The History of DNA

  • Watson and Crick

    • “discovered” the structure of DNA, but used other peoples research such as . . .

  • Maurice Wilkins

    • discovered that A and T, G and C have the corresponding numbers

    • Watson and Crick assumed that meant they went together.

  • Rosalind Franklin

    • Saw the top of a DNA Helix

    • corrected Watson and crick on the order of the nucleic acid b/c they had it that the phosphate went on the inside, and that would explode.

    • moved back to France because she was sick of men

Information polymer

  • series of based encodes info like letters of a book(ttagcgtaccggcatccgat for example)

  • stored info is passed from parent to offspring(this needs to be copied accurately!!)

Gel electrophoresis

  • method used to separate particles by size

  • bigger molecules=less movement

  • DNA is negatively charged, so the wells start on the negative side and(run to red) and move towards the positive side(like how a magnet repels the same charge)

Hydroxl

  • _OH

    • alcohols(ethanol is an example)

    • polar

    • water soluble

Carboxyl

  • the top is non ionized

  • the bottom is ionized

  • this functional group is acidic because it donates H- into the solution

  • polar

  • water soluble

  • a combo of a hydroxl and carbonyl

Amino group

  • the top is non ionized

  • the bottom is ionized

  • called amines

  • this group is a weak base because it gains a H+ ion, removing them from the solution(so the carboxyl is putting negative ions and Amino group is taking positive ions out of the solution)

  • non polar

  • generally water soluble

Sulfhydryl

  • called a thiol

  • helps stabilize protein structure(structure related to function!!) through disulfide bridges(2 sulfer atoms from different parts of the molecule bond very tightly)

  • polar

  • not very water soluble

phosphate

  • called organic phosphates

  • acidic, looses h+ ions

  • polar

  • water soluble

  • unstable, so great for energy transfer and storage

carbonyl

  • The top is an aldehyde, which means it is on the end of a molecule

  • the bottom is a ketone, which means it is in the middle of a molecule.

  • polar

  • water soluble

  • found in all sugars

-

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