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Transcript
ASTR/GEOL-2040: Search for life
in the Universe: Lecture 3
•Building blocks (wrap up)
•Biomarkers
•Carbon in Universe
What we did last time
• The 4 different building blocks
– Lipids, carbohydrates, proteins, nucleic acids
– Their usefulness
• How chemists drop C & H
– Applied to sugars
• Nucleotides: backbone + bases (A,G,C,T)
– Genetic code (word of 3  1 amino acid)
2
What kind of molecule?
A. Lipid
B. Carbohydrate
C. Hydrocarbon
D. Amino acid
E. Nucleotide
3
What kind of molecule?
A. Lipid
B. Carbohydrate
C. Hydrocarbon
D. Amino acid
E. Nucleotide
4
Examples of amino acids
R=H: Glycine
R=CH3: Alanine
R=C3H4: Proline
R=C4H10N2: Arginine
5
How many carbon atoms?
A. None
B. 3
C. 6
D. 12
E. 24
6
How many carbon atoms?
C
C
C
C
C
C
A. None
B. 3
C. 6
D. 12
E. 24
7
How many H should be drawn?
C is tetravalent
Hint: what do double bars mean?
 Ask your neighbor
C
C
C
C
C
C
8
Tetravalent
only 3 bonds drawn
so 1 H missing on each C
CH
CH
CH
CH
CH
CH
9
Which molecule is this then?
A. Lipid
B. Carbohydrate
C. Hydrocarbon
D. Amino acid
E. Nucleotide
10
Which one is this then?
A. Lipid
B. Carbohydrate
C. Hydrocarbon
D. Amino acid
E. Nucleotide
In fact: this one “aromatic hydrocarbon”
11
An enzyme consists of a chain of
A. Carbohydrates
B. Amino acids
C. nucleotides
12
An enzyme consists of a chain of
A. Carbohydrates
B. Amino acids
C. nucleotides
Because proteins act as enzymes (=catalysts)
and proteins are made of amino acids
13
What kind of molecule?
A. Lipid
B. Carbohydrate
C. Hydrocarbon
D. Amino acid
E. Nucleotide
Hint: find the answer by elimination
14
Use of nucleobases
• The sequence contains genetic information
• The sequence can be copied
– TAA CAG
– ATT GTC
• One word (codon)  one amino acid
– TAA  stop (also nonsence or junk DNA)
– CAG  Gln (=Glutamine)
thymine
• In RNA, base U (=uracil)  base T
15
What we did last time
• The
16
What we did last time
• The
17
Mutations
• Example of adding one letter
– the cat ate the rat
– the aca tat eth era t
• One word (codon)  one amino acid
– TAA  stop (also nonsence or junk DNA)
– CAG  Gln (=Glutamine)
thymine
• In RNA, base U (=uracil)  base T
18
Which of the following mutations
has the greatest effect?
A. One that changes a single base in a
region of non-coding DNA;
B. one that changes the third letter;
C. one that deletes one base in the
middle of a gene?
Check with your neighbors
19
Greatest effect?
A. One that changes a single base in a
region of non-coding DNA;
 Has a chance in not doing much damage
B. one that changes the third letter;
 has no effect in many cases
C. one that deletes one base in the middle
of a gene?
 see example with the cat!
20
Was most of this on
DNA familiar?
A. Yes
B. Yes, mostly
C. Some of it
D. Not much
E. No
21
Quiz #1 will be on
• Thursday, February 9
• Not Tuesday, February 7 (as announced earlier)
22
For the rest of today
• Approaches to origin & remains of life
• Biomarkers: extinct & extant
• Further reading:
– RGS pp. 13-17
– Lon pp. 370-375, 40-43
– BS pp. 233-238 (artificial life), 69-74
23
How to study origins & remains of life?
• Top-down versus bottom-up
– Bottom-up: how nonliving
matter combines to make living
matter
– Top-down: extrapolate biology
toward simplest living organism
• Biomarkers/biomarkers
– Extinct life (no longer alive)
– Extant life (currently living)
Biomarkers
• Petroleum, fossil fuel
– Molecular fossils
– Organic-rich rocks
• Astrobiology
–
–
–
–
–
–
Cellular remains
Textual fabrics in sediments: structure & function
Biogenic (biologially produced) org. Matter
Minerals deposition affected by biological processes
Stable isotopes reflecting biological activity
Atmospheric constituents: concentrations  biol source
Subjectivity
• Textual fabrics or organics
– Difficult to tell whether biogenic or not
– Giant stars produce carbon compounds
• Martian meteorite
– controversial
– abiogenic
•
13C
also not
unchallenged
• Contamination
(for meteorites)
Biosignatures from space
Spectral lines
• Emission spectrum
• Absorption lines
Spectrum of air
900 nm = 0.9 mm
Biosignatures from space
Think about other
non-equilibrium processes
•
•
•
•
....
........
..........
.............
30
What is the energy source?
Example
Energy source Resulting activity
mountains
geothermal heat
Keeps rock rolling
31
What is the energy source?
Example
Energy source Resulting activity
mountains
Atmosphere
El circuit
living cell
geothermal heat
Solar heating
Electric energy
Carbon supply
CO2+hn
or CH2O
Keeps rock rolling
Keeps rain coming
Keeps motor running
ADP  ATP
adenosine
triphosphate
32
What we talked about
• DNS, Effect of mutations
• Biomarkers: Textual, cellular remains,
isotropic, atmospheric  specta
• Disequilibria: feature of life,
 different examples of disequilibria
33
Next time
• Organic matter in the Universe
• Synthesis of organics on early Earth
– Miller/Urey experiment, Murchison
– Chirality
• Biomolecule delivery from space
• Reading:
– RGS pp. 18-29, Lon pp. 214-218
– BS pp. 204-212
34