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Chemistry 4304 Biological Chemistry I Spring 2013 Dr. Leng CP--317 CP What is Biochemistry? bi·o·chem·is·try y P Pronunciation Key y ((b-km-str)n. ) 1 The study of the chemical substances and vital processes occurring in living organisms; biological chemistry; physiological chemistry chemistry. 2 The chemical composition of a particular living system or biological substance: viral biochemistry. Source: So ce The Th American A i Heritage® H it ® Dictionary Di ti off the th English E li h Language, L Fourth F th EditionCopyright Editi C i ht © 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company.Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. biochemistryn : the organic chemistry of compounds and processes occuring in organisms; the effort to understand biology within the context of chemistry Source: WordNet ® 2.0, © 2003 Princeton University What is Biochemistry? •What are we? Are we different from other organisms such as Bacteria? •Diseases and tools of diagnosis and treatment. •Foods. •Human cloning? g More Are they different? The tree of life: three domains. What does Life Require? -Deoxyribonucleic Deoxyribonucleic Acid (DNA) -Ribonucleic Acid (RNA) -Proteins Proteins (amino acids) -Carbohydrates (Sugars) -Lipids Lipids (Fat) St t Structure andd Function F ti We will start off by using DNA to illustrate a few of the underlying concepts in biochemistry but we could of choosen other macromolecules. DNA genetic material (a four letter alphabet with no spaces) AT G C ATGGCTTACGTTTAAGGCTAAGGCTGG GCCCTTAAAATTGGCGCCTTAGTGGCG CCGCGCGTATATAGAGAAGAGGGGCG CGCAAAATTTT DNA is a linear polymer, in which each unit of the polymeric structure is composed of a sugar, a phosphate and a base; The sequence of base along a DNA strand constitutes the Genetic information. DNA is constructed from four building blocks (bases) James Watson and Francis Crick’s DNA double helix structure: 1. Two single strands of DNA combine to form a double helix; 2. Specific base pairing held by hydrogen bonding: adenine pairs with thymine (A-T); guanine pairs with cytosine (G-C); 3. Sugar phosphate backbone lies on the outside and the bases on the inside; 4. The sequence of base along one strand completely determines the sequence along the other strand: genetic material (perfect way to store information). DNA replication p Formation of Double Helix I order In d to t understand d t d why h a double d bl helix h li forms f spontaneously t l we need to take a look at Chemical Bonding Chemical Bonds in Biochemistry • Bi Biochemistry h i t is i the th chemistry h i t that th t takes t k place within living systems: molecular i t interactions; ti • Covalent bonds (strong): share a pair of electrons between adjacent atoms; • 200-1000 kJ/mol OH + O O O CO2 Chemical Bonds in Biochemistry Non-covalent bonds,, weaker than covalent bonds with four fundamental types: i) electrostatic interactions, ii) hydrogen bonding, iii) van der Waals interactions, and iv) hydrophobic interactions. E =kq1q2/Dr NH H N E-energy q-charge on atom D-dielectric D dielectric constant r r-distance apart electrostatic k-proportionality constant Stronger inside proteins than outside proteins and non-directional 3 3 Chemical Bonds in Biochemistry Hydrogen bond are shared between two electronegative atoms such as oxygen and nitrogen and are directional. 4-20 kJ/mol in energy and similar to electrostatic interactions Chemical Bonds in Biochemistry y van der Waals interactions -Non-bonded atoms like to be together but not too close 2 to 4 kJ/mol per atom pair but many weak interactions can be added together Due to transient electrostatic interactions (non-directional) Chemical Bonds in Biochemistry y • The properties of water affect the bonding abilities of biomolecules; Water is polar (D =80, dielectric constant) and interacts with itself and other molecules via H-bonds. H bonds. Water competes for H-bonds Structure of ice Chemical Bonds in Biochemistry y • Entropy py The total entropy of the system and its surrounding always increases for a spontaneous process G , Gibbs free energy, must be negative for a process to be favorable G = H - TS Chemical Bonds in Biochemistry y • How do proteins fold spontaneously since they create order out of disorder Water is ordered around non-polar portions of the pprotein and is released during g folding. g Hydrophobic effect Chemical Bonds in DNA Electrostatic Repulsion between negatively charged phosphates is unfavorable Chemical Bonds in DNA Hydrogen bonding between bases Hydrogen bonds with water are broken to form y g bonds so little ggain in energy gy these new hydrogen Important for specificity of base pairing Chemical Bonds in DNA Bases pairs stack on top of each other and interact via van der d Waals W l interactions. i i p pparts of Also the non-polar the base are removed from water, which is favorable due to the hydrophobic effect. Many weak interactions are important and surfaces must match Thermodynamics First Law: The total energy of a system and its surroundings is constant. Energy is neither created nor destroyed. Second Law: The total entropy of a system plus that of its surroundings di always l increases. i Chaos h rules. l G , Gibbs free energy, energy must be negative for a process to be favorable G = H - TS Please review Thermodynamics Acid-Base Chemistry The double helix is pH sensitive Please review buffers and pH