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Two notable breakthroughs in the history of biochemistry (1) Discovery of the role of enzymes as catalysts (2) Identification of nucleic acids as information molecules Flow of information: from nucleic acids to proteins DNA Prentice Hall c2002 RNA Chapter 1 Protein 1 Functional groups in biochemistry • Functional groups - specific parts of molecules involved in biochemical reactions • Figure 1.2 shows the general formulas of: (a) Organic compounds (b) Functional groups (c) Linkages common in biochemistry (R represents an alkyl group (CH3CH2)n-) Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 2 Fig 1.2 (a) General formulas Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 3 Fig 1.2(b) General Formulas Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 4 Fig 1.2 (c) General Formulas Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 5 1.3 Many Important Biomolecules are Polymers • Biopolymers - macromolecules created by joining many smaller organic molecules (monomers) • Condensation reactions join monomers (H2O is removed in the process) • Residue - each monomer in a chain Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 6 A. Proteins • Proteins are composed of 20 common amino acids • Each amino acid contains: (1) Carboxylate group (-COO-) (2) Amino group (-NH2) (3) Side chain (R) unique to each amino acid Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 7 Fig 1.3 Structure of an amino acid and a dipeptide (a) Amino group (blue), carboxylate group (red) (b) Dipeptides are connected by peptide bonds Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 8 Polypeptides • Polypeptides - amino acids joined end to end • Conformation - the three dimensional shape of a protein which is determined by its sequence • Active site - a cleft or groove in an enzyme that binds the substrates of a reaction Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 9 Fig 1.4 Egg white lysozyme (a) Free enzyme (b) Enzyme, bound substrate in active site cleft Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 10 B. Polysaccharides • Carbohydrates, or saccharides, are composed primarily of C,H and O • Polysaccharides are composed of saccharide monomers • Most sugar structures can be represented as either linear (Fischer projection) or cyclic Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 11 Fig 1.5 Representations of the structure of ribose Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 12 Fig 1.6 (a) Glucose, (b) Cellulose Glycosidic bonds connecting glucose residues are in red Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 13 C. Nucleic Acids • Polynucleotides - nucleic acid biopolymers are composed of nucleotide monomers • Nucleotide monomers are composed of: (1) A five-carbon sugar (2) A heterocyclic nitrogenous base (3) Phosphate group(s) Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 14 Fig 1.7 Deoxyribose • Deoxyribose lacks a hydroxyl group at C-2. It is the sugar found in DNA. Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 15 Nitrogenous bases • Major Purines: Adenine (A) Guanine (G) • Major Pyrimidines Cytosine (C) Thymine (T) Uracil (U) Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 16 Fig 1.8 Adenosine Triphosphate (ATP) • Nitrogenous base (adenine), sugar (ribose) Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 17 Fig 1.9 Structure of a dinucleotide • Residues are joined by a phosphodiester linkage Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 18 Fig 1.10 Short segment of a DNA molecule • Two polynucleotides associate to form a double helix • Genetic information is carried by the sequence of base pairs Prentice Hall c2002 Chapter 1 19