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ASTR/GEOL-2040: Search for life in the Universe: Lecture 2 Additional office hours: o Mondays 10-11 o Mondays 11-12 o Mondays 12-1 What we did last time • Definition of life – Darwinian evolution, natural selection – & self-replication • Carbon, not silicon-based • Water, a polar molecule, allows cells made of lipids • This time: building blocks of life – pp. 8-12, Sect. 1.2.4 2 Natural selection is A. the occasional mutations that occur in DNA; B. the mechanism by which advantageous traits are preferentially passed on from parents to offspring; C. the idea that organisms can develop new characteristics during their lives and then pass these on to their offspring. BS p.182 3 Today: building blocks of life • Rothery, Gilmour, Sephton (RGS) pp. 4-12 • Longstaff (Lon) pp. 175-183 • Bennett & Shostak (BS) pp. 167-169 • pp. 176-183 4 Most abundant elements • • • • H and He in the Universe Nobel elements He, Ne, Ar, … highly unreactive (inert) Rest in Universe O, N, C, Si Human body H, O, C, N 5 Molecules in human body Molecule mass sum Water 65% 65% Protein 20% 85% Lipids 12% 97% Other inorg (eg carbohydrates) 1.5% 98.5% RNA 1.0% 99.5% Other org 0.4% 99.9% DNA 0.1% 100% The building blocks of life • • • • Proteins (“meat”) Lipids (“fats”, cell boundaries) Carbohydrates (“sugars”) RNA & DNA 6 Cells are made of lipids hydrophylic carboxyl group amphobic hydrophobic 7 Properties of lipids • Water-insoluble – Act as cell membranes • Energy substrates – Fats (used by migrating birds) • Fatty acids – Double bond = unsaturated RGS p.4, Lon p.171-173, BS p.168 8 Common carbon compounds • carbohydrates • hydrocarbons 9 Common carbon compounds • Hydrocarbons: made up entirely of hydrogen & carbon CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH3 • Carbohydrates: made up of hydrogen, carbon, & oxygen Cm(H2O)n H-C-OH H-C-OH H-C-OH 10 These endings have names – COOH – OH – CH3 – NH2 carboxyl group hydroxyl group methyl group amino group (=amine group) 11 building macromolecules +energy endergonic reaction +nH2O condensation =dehydration 12 (CH2O)n = “life” • Glucose=hexose =monosaccharide = C6H12O6 chemists drop C&H 13 Its polymers: polysaccharide C6H12O6= =C12(H2O)11 Polymers = many monomers … -OH + HO-…. … -O -…. • Polymerization: dehydration covalent bond (sharing of electrons) 15 (CH2O)n = “life” • Ribose = pentose = C5H10O5 • deoxyribose=C5H10O4 again: drop C&H 16 Why are sugars useful? • ...... • ........... • ................ think of carbohydrates more generally 17 Sugars are A. Hydrocarbons B. Carbohydrates C. Hydroxyls D. Carboxyls 18 Why are carbohydrates useful? • Energy storage • Structural support • Food source for others 19 Two more building blocks • Proteins • RNA & DNS: nuclei acids https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Central_dogma_of_molecular_biology What are proteins? • Proteios = primary – Berzelius (1838) C400H620N100O120P1S1 • Are the most complex macromolecules in living systems • Polymers of amino acids • ”peptides” are shorter polymers 21 What are amino acids? • • • • • amino: -NH2 acid: -COOH and a C and an H and possibly another H NH2 H-C-H COOH 22 Polymerization polycondensation carboxyl group amino group NH2 NH2 CH2 CH2 COOH CO NH2 NH CH2 CH2 COOH COOH glycine dipeptide “peptide bond” 23 Other amino acids • if R=CH3: alanine • valine, proline, sarcosine, ... 24 Why are proteins important? • Structural support (e.g., finger nails) • Act as catalysts (=enzymes) – Facilitates/accelerates reactions – Not used up or involved in reaction – Can be reused many times! • Their exact role depends on sequence 25 So many different ones • Only 20 amino acids in proteins – Although 70 have been identified – 2 (+) of them used in rare cases microbes • Folding – Depends on amino acid sequence – Determines how they work. 26 Finally: nucleic acids 27 Inventory • Polymers of nucleotides • Backbone – DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid) – or RNA (ribonucleic acid) – Pentose sugar (5 carbons) – Phosphate group • Nitrogen-containing base – four different ones • Form a spiral 28 Inventory • Backbone – deoxyribonucleic acid, ribonucleic acid – Pentose sugar (5 carbons) – Phosphate group • Nitrogen-containing base 29 Different bases • Two groups of bases: – pyrimidines T,C – purines A,G • These two groups pair in specific ways – T-A and A-T – C-G and G-C 30 In which ways could life elsewhere be different? • Different backbones • Different base pairs 31 An enzyme consists of a chain of A. Carbohydrates B. Amino acids C. nucleotides 32 Two more bases synthesized in 2014 33 Properties of nucleic acids • In DNA: pentose sugar deoxyribose – Very stable – Double-stranded – Replicate • RNA – Less stable – Singly stranded 34 Genetic code • • • • Alphabet of 4 letters Words with 3 letters Each word a particular amino acid Gene a particular protein 35 How many words possible? A. B. C. D. 4x3=12 4x3x2x1=24 43=64 34=81 36 How many words possible? A. B. C. D. 4x3=12 4x3x2x1=24 43=64 34=81 Redundancy In most cases: first 2 letters alone determine which amino acid 37 Examples • ACC, ACA, ACT, ACG threonine • Why? 38 Other examples • TGT, TGC cysteine • TGA ”stop” • TGG tryptophan 39 Evolution • Mutations – Most are lethal – Many have no effect – A few can carry benefits 40 What we talked about • The 4 different building blocks – Lipids, carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids • There usefulness • How they propagrate genetic information • Genetic code 41