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BIOCHEMISTRY Class Notes Summary Table of Contents 1.0
BIOCHEMISTRY Class Notes Summary Table of Contents 1.0

... how many water molecules are need to split a polysaccharide. For example. Using the above chemical formula of a polysaccharide, C66H112O56 - the chemical formula of a monosaccharide is C6H12O6 - divide the 6 from carbon of the monosaccharide into the 66 carbon of the polysaccharide and you get 11 - ...
ORIGIN OF LIFE ON EARTH
ORIGIN OF LIFE ON EARTH

... cyanide or phosphate compounds. Sydney Fox (1957) heated a mixture of 20 amino acids and obtained long chains of polypeptides, which immediately formed microspheres in water. They were equivalent to coacervates of Oparin and were called protenoids. Later in 1965, she placed a mixture of dry aminoaci ...
Protein structure and Function
Protein structure and Function

... attachment of structure such as phosphate group or an important component of active site of many enzymes. Asparagine and glutamine: Each contain carbonyle group and amide group can participate in hydrogen bond. Moreover it can serve as asite of attachment of oligosaccharide chains in glycoproteins. ...
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Research

... We are mainly interested in the rational design of novel sustainable synthetic methods, in particular reactions mediated by transition and non-transition metals and by metal-free organocatalysts. The primary goal in all our work is to devise and make use of synthetic routes that feature new chemistr ...
Laboratory of Dr. Wayne L. Hubbell Protocol designed by Carlos J
Laboratory of Dr. Wayne L. Hubbell Protocol designed by Carlos J

... incubator. The following day, inoculate the starter culture into 1-L of LB medium containing the aforementioned antibiotics and grow at 37°C in a shaking incubator to an OD600 of 0.75. Add 0.25 g of the unnatural amino acid and induce expression with 1mM isopropyl--Dthiogalactopyranoside and 0.02% ...
Biology 3 Winter 2009 First Exam
Biology 3 Winter 2009 First Exam

... While all three are triglycerides, they differ in the relative number of carbon to carbon double bonds in their fatty acid tails. Saturated fats have no carbon to carbon double bonds and are unkinked. Monounsaturated fats have a single carbon to carbon double bond in each of their fatty acid tails a ...
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... Antiviral properties of the MulFN-~IO protein To obtain information on the antiviral properties of the MulFN-~10 protein, the gene was inserted into the eukaryotic expression vector pSV328A (Van Heuvel et al., 1986) which contains the origin of replication and early promoter of simian virus 40 (SV40 ...
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Clinical Enzymology

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APDC Unit IV Biochem

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BMB 401 Summer, 2017 Comprehensive Biochemistry

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Enzyme Activity with Graphs

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Enzymes - WordPress.com
Enzymes - WordPress.com

... its specificity and catalytic activity. Many enzymes are specific for just one reaction. For example, catalase only catalyzes the breakdown of hydrogen peroxide, a toxic by-product of metabolism. ...
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Fate of pyruvate

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Chapter 13 Lecture Notes: Peptides, Proteins

... atom is removed from the carboxylate group on the left-most amino acid. Two hydrogen atoms are removed from the quaternary ammonium group on the rightmost amino acid. The oxygen atom and the two hydrogen atoms combine to form a water molecule. Step 2: A new bond is made between the carbonyl carbon a ...
peran serta masyarakat dalam plh
peran serta masyarakat dalam plh

... their reaction specificity and their substrate specificity. Each enzyme is entered in the Enzyme Catalogue with a four-digit Enzyme Commission number (EC number). The first digit indicates membership of one of the six major classes. The next two indicate subclasses and subsubclasses. The last digit ...
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... §2.3 Putrefaction of proteins Putrefaction of proteins: Some undigested proteins and no absorbed products are anaerobic decomposed by the bacteria in intestine. The products are toxic to body except few vitamin and fatty acid. ...
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3rd Fall - rci.rutgers.edu

... 19. Which liver mitochondrial enzyme involved in ketone body formation has a cytosolic isozyme that catalyzes an early step in cholesterol biosynthesis? A) Enoyl-CoA hydratase; B) β-Hyroxyacyl-CoA oxidoreductase; C) HMG-CoA reductase; D) HMG-CoA synthase; E) Mevalonate phosphotransferase. 20. Which ...
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Chapter 34 HEIN

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Citrate cycle - 3.LF UK 2015
Citrate cycle - 3.LF UK 2015

... The substances enter the CC a) acetyl~CoA (→ 2 CO2) b) NAD+ and FAD (→ NADH+H+ + FADH2) c) carbon skeleton of amino acids d) GDP (→ GTP) ...
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Amino acid synthesis

Amino acid synthesis is the set of biochemical processes (metabolic pathways) by which the various amino acids are produced from other compounds. The substrates for these processes are various compounds in the organism's diet or growth media. Not all organisms are able to synthesise all amino acids. Humans are excellent example of this, since humans can only synthesise 11 of the 20 standard amino acids (aka non-essential amino acid), and in time of accelerated growth, arginine, can be considered an essential amino acid.A fundamental problem for biological systems is to obtain nitrogen in an easily usable form. This problem is solved by certain microorganisms capable of reducing the inert N≡N molecule (nitrogen gas) to two molecules of ammonia in one of the most remarkable reactions in biochemistry. Ammonia is the source of nitrogen for all the amino acids. The carbon backbones come from the glycolytic pathway, the pentose phosphate pathway, or the citric acid cycle.In amino acid production, one encounters an important problem in biosynthesis, namely stereochemical control. Because all amino acids except glycine are chiral, biosynthetic pathways must generate the correct isomer with high fidelity. In each of the 19 pathways for the generation of chiral amino acids, the stereochemistry at the α-carbon atom is established by a transamination reaction that involves pyridoxal phosphate. Almost all the transaminases that catalyze these reactions descend from a common ancestor, illustrating once again that effective solutions to biochemical problems are retained throughout evolution.Biosynthetic pathways are often highly regulated such that building-blocks are synthesized only when supplies are low. Very often, a high concentration of the final product of a pathway inhibits the activity of enzymes that function early in the pathway. Often present are allosteric enzymes capable of sensing and responding to concentrations of regulatory species. These enzymes are similar in functional properties to aspartate transcarbamoylase and its regulators. Feedback and allosteric mechanisms ensure that all twenty amino acids are maintained in sufficient amounts for protein synthesis and other processes.
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