Uses of Chemical Elements Search Science 9
... Use a Periodic Table of Elements and the internet to complete this activity 1. A gas used in coloured light signs ...
... Use a Periodic Table of Elements and the internet to complete this activity 1. A gas used in coloured light signs ...
Recovery
... 3. Carbohydrates/glycogen/glucose 4. broken down into pyruvate/ pyruvic acid 5. Some ATP produced/2 ATP 6. Krebs cycle 7. Fats/triglycerides/fatty acids/glycerol 8. Beta oxidation 9. Oxidation of acetyl-coenzyme-A/Citric acid/ production of CO2 10. Electron transport chain 11. Water/H2O formed/hydro ...
... 3. Carbohydrates/glycogen/glucose 4. broken down into pyruvate/ pyruvic acid 5. Some ATP produced/2 ATP 6. Krebs cycle 7. Fats/triglycerides/fatty acids/glycerol 8. Beta oxidation 9. Oxidation of acetyl-coenzyme-A/Citric acid/ production of CO2 10. Electron transport chain 11. Water/H2O formed/hydro ...
word - My eCoach
... 26. Look at the Figure above. The phospholipid molecule of the cell membrane has two main parts: the head and the tail. These parts are either hydrophobic (repelled by water) or hydrophilic (attracted to water). Which statement best describe the phospholipid head and tail? a. The tail is hydrophilic ...
... 26. Look at the Figure above. The phospholipid molecule of the cell membrane has two main parts: the head and the tail. These parts are either hydrophobic (repelled by water) or hydrophilic (attracted to water). Which statement best describe the phospholipid head and tail? a. The tail is hydrophilic ...
CHEM1102 2014-J-2 June 2014 • Compounds of d
... The ions have similar radii so the properties of natural carbonic anhydrase and the version with cobalt replacing zinc should have similar biological properties. The unpaired electrons on Co2+ however mean that it is paramagnetic and the magnetism can be used to study the active site. Suggest two di ...
... The ions have similar radii so the properties of natural carbonic anhydrase and the version with cobalt replacing zinc should have similar biological properties. The unpaired electrons on Co2+ however mean that it is paramagnetic and the magnetism can be used to study the active site. Suggest two di ...
nature of Matter
... Depending on how the electrons interact, the type of bond is decided. The main types of chemical bonds are Ionic & Covalent. When electrons are transferred from one atom to another, an ionic bond is formed. An atom that loses electrons has a + charge. An atom that gains an electron has a – charge. T ...
... Depending on how the electrons interact, the type of bond is decided. The main types of chemical bonds are Ionic & Covalent. When electrons are transferred from one atom to another, an ionic bond is formed. An atom that loses electrons has a + charge. An atom that gains an electron has a – charge. T ...
Life Science Name: Date: ______ Per: ______ Chemical Reactions
... 13. Can one single enzyme catalyze many different types of substrates? Explain why? ...
... 13. Can one single enzyme catalyze many different types of substrates? Explain why? ...
Quaternary structure
... neutralize nonpolar exogenous toxic compounds by nucleophilic addition of glutathione A dimeric quaternary structure is essential for function and the active site is formed by amino acids from both subunits The association relies on hydrophobic interaction in which an aromatic ‘key’ from one domain ...
... neutralize nonpolar exogenous toxic compounds by nucleophilic addition of glutathione A dimeric quaternary structure is essential for function and the active site is formed by amino acids from both subunits The association relies on hydrophobic interaction in which an aromatic ‘key’ from one domain ...
oxidation
... proteins 20 amino acids, carbohydrates glucose, fats glycerol and fatty acids Second stage: occurs in cytoplasm small organic units convert into simple units, Ex: sugars, fatty acids, glycerol, and amino acids are converted into acetyl unit of acetyl CoA; process does not require oxygen, yields ...
... proteins 20 amino acids, carbohydrates glucose, fats glycerol and fatty acids Second stage: occurs in cytoplasm small organic units convert into simple units, Ex: sugars, fatty acids, glycerol, and amino acids are converted into acetyl unit of acetyl CoA; process does not require oxygen, yields ...
Chapter 5 Lecture Notes: Microbial Nutrition
... B. microelements or trace elements (µg/L) usually metals that serve structural and catalytic roles for some enzymes C. Growth factors = Organic compounds that are required for growth because they can not be synthesized by a particular organism and are part of essential cell components 1. Amino acids ...
... B. microelements or trace elements (µg/L) usually metals that serve structural and catalytic roles for some enzymes C. Growth factors = Organic compounds that are required for growth because they can not be synthesized by a particular organism and are part of essential cell components 1. Amino acids ...
AP Chemistry Summer Assignment
... order to ensure the best start for everyone next fall, I have prepared a summer assignment that reviews basic chemistry concepts. There is a multitude of tremendous chemistry resources are available via the Internet. With the ready access to hundreds of websites either in your home or at the local l ...
... order to ensure the best start for everyone next fall, I have prepared a summer assignment that reviews basic chemistry concepts. There is a multitude of tremendous chemistry resources are available via the Internet. With the ready access to hundreds of websites either in your home or at the local l ...
The Making of Macromolecules - Cornell Center for Materials
... 1) Prepare 4 cards, each card with structural formula one type of biomaterial (lipid, carbohydrate, protein (amino acid-alanine), nucleic acid (thymine) 2) The structural formula will only compose of color-coded atoms (w/o element symbols of each atom of molecule and w/o the name of each type of mol ...
... 1) Prepare 4 cards, each card with structural formula one type of biomaterial (lipid, carbohydrate, protein (amino acid-alanine), nucleic acid (thymine) 2) The structural formula will only compose of color-coded atoms (w/o element symbols of each atom of molecule and w/o the name of each type of mol ...
Lecture 11 - U of L Class Index
... The exact spectroscopic process involved is different for each compound. What is important is that they are ionized relatively easilly, e.g. by the heat of the flame. The process involved in the characteristic sodium yellow (also the basis of "orange" street lighting) is as follows: in a flame, the ...
... The exact spectroscopic process involved is different for each compound. What is important is that they are ionized relatively easilly, e.g. by the heat of the flame. The process involved in the characteristic sodium yellow (also the basis of "orange" street lighting) is as follows: in a flame, the ...
practice making a protein from dna
... (Amino acids can be written as words or abbreviations like this: Arginine or Arg or R) It should look like MET - ARG - ... - ... - GLN STOP (but it will have other, different amino acids.). If you’ve done it correctly, there will be 6 amino acids, then a STOP codon. ...
... (Amino acids can be written as words or abbreviations like this: Arginine or Arg or R) It should look like MET - ARG - ... - ... - GLN STOP (but it will have other, different amino acids.). If you’ve done it correctly, there will be 6 amino acids, then a STOP codon. ...
The stuff of life?
... functional groups that form hydrogen bonds with water. Why is a water-insoluble molecule good for: storing energy, or building cell membranes, or ...
... functional groups that form hydrogen bonds with water. Why is a water-insoluble molecule good for: storing energy, or building cell membranes, or ...
Practice Exam 2
... The extremely large diversity of structure seen in proteins is mainly due to a. the disulfide and hydrogen bonds that determine molecular shape b. the action of the ribosomes c. the precise location of specific amino acids, common to all proteins d. different numbers, kinds, and sequences of amino a ...
... The extremely large diversity of structure seen in proteins is mainly due to a. the disulfide and hydrogen bonds that determine molecular shape b. the action of the ribosomes c. the precise location of specific amino acids, common to all proteins d. different numbers, kinds, and sequences of amino a ...
CHEMICAL REACTIONS
... – Chemical reactions occur when bonds between the outermost parts of atoms are formed or broken – Chemical reactions involve changes in matter, the making of new materials with new properties, and energy changes. – Symbols represent elements, formulas describe compounds, chemical equations describe ...
... – Chemical reactions occur when bonds between the outermost parts of atoms are formed or broken – Chemical reactions involve changes in matter, the making of new materials with new properties, and energy changes. – Symbols represent elements, formulas describe compounds, chemical equations describe ...
Figure 6 The RAD51 ATP-binding site
... Thr133, Lys134 in Walker motif A and Asp222, in Walker motif B, are sequestered in a solvent-inaccessible hydrogen-bonding network that extends to Tyr159, Asp161 and Thr165 via a buried water molecule. Side chains of residues important for ATP catalysis, together with adjacent, interacting amino aci ...
... Thr133, Lys134 in Walker motif A and Asp222, in Walker motif B, are sequestered in a solvent-inaccessible hydrogen-bonding network that extends to Tyr159, Asp161 and Thr165 via a buried water molecule. Side chains of residues important for ATP catalysis, together with adjacent, interacting amino aci ...
Ch. 2- BIOCHEMISTRY Macromolecules
... o “______________” (originating from animals and having all available hydrogens atoms which make them harder to metabolize) o “_______________________” – lacking some hydrogen atoms; contains double bonds o “___________________________” (originating from plants) o Hydrogenating oils makes them satur ...
... o “______________” (originating from animals and having all available hydrogens atoms which make them harder to metabolize) o “_______________________” – lacking some hydrogen atoms; contains double bonds o “___________________________” (originating from plants) o Hydrogenating oils makes them satur ...
Ch. 2 Macromolecules
... ! Primary component of the cell membrane ! Secondary energy source; used when an organism doesn’t have carbohydrates in its body ...
... ! Primary component of the cell membrane ! Secondary energy source; used when an organism doesn’t have carbohydrates in its body ...
Ch 5 ppt
... In the case of Thalidomide, it was discovered that only one of the two enantiomeric ...
... In the case of Thalidomide, it was discovered that only one of the two enantiomeric ...
Macromolecule Expert Sheets
... don’t “stack up” as well to make a solid and therefore tend to remain liquid at room temperature. 8. Predict which of the following would contain saturated fatty acids and which would contain unsaturated fatty acids: A) Solid Crisco shortening Saturated (since it is solid at room temperature) B) Oli ...
... don’t “stack up” as well to make a solid and therefore tend to remain liquid at room temperature. 8. Predict which of the following would contain saturated fatty acids and which would contain unsaturated fatty acids: A) Solid Crisco shortening Saturated (since it is solid at room temperature) B) Oli ...
Chapter 2 Chemistry of Life - OnCourse Systems For Education
... drastic changes in temp b/c large amt. of heat w/ small change in temp (ocean/lake) ...
... drastic changes in temp b/c large amt. of heat w/ small change in temp (ocean/lake) ...
Metalloprotein
Metalloprotein is a generic term for a protein that contains a metal ion cofactor. A large number of all proteins are part of this category.