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Welcome to CHEM BIO 3OA3! Bio-organic Chemistry [OLD CHEM 3FF3] Sept. 11, 2009 1 • Instructor: Paul Harrison – ABB 418, ext. 27290 – Email: [email protected] – Course website: http://www.elm.mcmaster.ca/ Lectures: MW 08:30, F 10:30 (ABB/106) – Office Hours: M 12:30-2:30 or by appointment – Labs: 2:30-5:30 R or F (ABB 217) Every week Labs start next Fri. Sept. 17, 2009 2 Web site update • ELM page: • Lectures 1: includes everything for today, and approx. 1 week of material: intro and bases • Course outline • Detailed course description: lecture-bylecture • Calendar For Thursday 11th & Friday 12th • Check-in, meet TA, safety and Lab 1 (Isolation of Caffeine from Tea) • Lab manuals: Available on web; MUST bring printed copy • BEFORE the lab, read lab manual intro, safety and exp. 1 • Also need: – – – – Duplicate lab book (20B3 book is ok) Goggles (mandatory) Lab coats (recommended) No shorts or sandals • Obey safety rules; marks will be deducted for poor safety • Work at own pace—some labs are 2 or 3 wk labs. In some cases more than 1 exp. can be worked in a lab period—your TA will provide instruction 4 Evaluation Assignments Labs: 2 x 5% -write up - practical mark Midterm Final Midterm test: Fri. Oct. 30, 2009 at 7:00 pm 10% 15% 5% 20% 50% Assignments: Oct. 9 – Oct. 19 Nov. 13 – Nov. 23 Note: academic dishonesty statement on outline-NO copying on assignments or labs (exception when sharing results) 5 Texts: • Dobson “Foundations of Chemical Biology,” (Optionalbookstore) Background & “Refreshers” • An organic chemistry textbook (e.g. Solomons) • A biochemistry textbook (e.g. Garrett) • 2OA3/2OB3 old exam on web This course has selected examples from a variety of sources, including Dobson &: • • • • Buckberry “Essentials of Biological Chemistry” Dugas, H. "Bio-organic Chemistry" Waldman, H. & Janning, P. “Chemical Biology” Also see my slides on the website 6 What is bio-organic chemistry? Biological chem? Chemical bio? Chemical Biology: “Development & use of chemistry techniques for the study of biological phenomena” (Stuart Schreiber) Biological Chemistry: “Understanding how biological processes are controlled by underlying chemical principles” (Buckberry & Teasdale) Bio-organic Chemistry: “Application of the tools of chemistry to the understanding of biochemical processes” (Dugas) What’s the difference between these??? Deal with interface of biology & chemistry 7 Simple organics BIOLOGY Life large macromolecules; cells—contain ~ 100, 000 different compounds interacting CHEMISTRY eg HCN, H2C=O (mono-functional) Biologically relevant organics: polyfunctional 1 ° Metabolism – present in all cells Cf 20A3/B3 (focus of 3OA3) 2 ° Metabolism – specific species, eg. Caffeine (focus of 4DD3) How different are they? BIOLOGY: CHEMISTRY: cell Round-bottom flask 8 Exchange of ideas: Biology Chemistry • Chemistry – Explains events of biology: mechanisms, rationalization • Biology – Provides challenges to chemistry: synthesis, structure determination – Inspires chemists: biomimetics → improved chemistry by understanding of biology (e.g. enzymes) 9 Key Processes of 1° Metabolism Bases + sugars → nucleosides nucleic acids Sugars (monosaccharides) polysaccharides Amino acids proteins Polymerization reactions; cell also needs the reverse process We will look at each of these processes, forwards and backwards, in 4 parts, comparing and contrasting the reactions: 1) How do chemists synthesize these structures? 2) How might these structures have formed in the pre-biotic world, and have led to life on earth? 3) How are they made in vivo? 4) Can we design improved chemistry by understanding the biology: biomimetic synthesis? 10 Properties of Biological Molecules that Inspire Chemists 1) Large → challenges: for synthesis for structural prediction (e.g. protein folding) 2) Size → multiple FG’s (active site) ALIGNED to achieve a goal (e.g. enzyme active site, bases in NAs) 3) Multiple non-covalent weak interactions → sum to strong, stable binding non-covalent complexes (e.g. substrate, inhibitor, DNA) 4) Specificity → specific interactions between 2 molecules in an ensemble within the cell 11 5) Regulated → switchable, allows control of cell → activation/inhibition 6) Catalysis → groups work in concert 7) Replication → turnover e.g. an enzyme has many turnovers, nucleic acids replicate 12 Evolution of Life • Life did not suddenly crop up in its current form of complex structures (DNA, proteins) in one sudden reaction from monofunctional simple molecules • In this course, we HCN + NH3 bases will follow some of the nucleosides ideas of how life may H2C=O sugars phosphate have evolved: "pre-RNA world" more RNA, other molecules nucleotides catalysis RNA "RNA world" CH4, NH3 H2O amino acids "pre-protein world" RNA (ribozyme) peptides 13 RNA World • Catalysis by ribozymes occurred before protein catalysis • Explains current central dogma: transcription translation protein RNA DNA requires protein requires RNA + protein Which came first: nucleic acids or protein? RNA world hypothesis suggests RNA was first molecule to act as both template & catalyst: catalysis & replication 14 How did these reactions occur in the pre-RNA world? In the RNA world? & in modern organisms? CATALYSIS & SPECIFICITY How are these achieved? (Role of NON-COVALENT forces– BINDING) a) in chemical synthesis b) in the pre-biotic world c) in vivo – how is the cell CONTROLLED? d) in chemical models – can we design better chemistry through understanding biochemical mechanisms? 15 Relevance of Labs to the Course Labs illustrate: 1) 2) 3) 4) 5) Biologically relevant small molecules (e.g. caffeine – Exp 1, related to bases) Cofactor chemistry – pyridinium ions (e.g. NADH, Exp 2 & 4) Biomimetic chemistry (e.g. simplified model of NADH, Exp 2) Chemical mechanisms relevant to catalysis (e.g. NADH, Exp 2) Structural principles & characterization (e.g. sugars: anomers of glucose, anomeric effect, diastereomers, NMR, Exp 3) 16 6) Application of biology to stereoselective chemical synthesis (e.g. yeast, Exp 4) 7) Synthesis of small molecules (e.g. peptides, drugs, dilantin, esters, Exp 5,6,7) 8) Chemical catalysis (e.g. protection & activation strategies relevant to peptide synthesis in vivo and in vitro, Exp 5) 9) Comparison of organic and biological reactions (Exp. 6) 10) Enzyme mechanisms and active sites (Exp. 7) All of these demonstrate inter-disciplinary area between chemistry & biology 17 Two Views of DNA 1) Biochemist’s view: shows overall shape, ignores atoms & bonds 2) Chemist’s view: atom-by-atom structure, functional groups; illustrates concepts from 2OA3/2OB3 GOAL: to think as both a chemist and a biochemist: i.e. a chemical biologist! 18 Biochemist’s View of the DNA Double Helix Minor groove Major groove 19 Chemist’s View O alkene O O P O O H H diastereotopic Ring conformation ax/eq H H-bonds NH N O H OH resonance O bonds H H OH chirality 2o alcohol (FG's) nucleophilic O + substitution rxn O P O O electrophilic 20 BASES N H N pyridine pyrrole • Aromatic structures: – all sp2 hybridized atoms (6 p orbitals, 6 π e-) – planar (like benzene) • N has lone pair in both pyridine & pyrrole basic (H+ acceptor or e- donor) ArN: H+ ArNH+ pKa? 21 + N H 6 π electrons, stable cation weaker acid, higher pKa (~ 5) & strong conj. base + H N H sp3 hybridized N, NOT aromatic strong acid, low pKa (~ -4) & weak conj. base • Pyrrole uses lone pair in aromatic sextet → protonation means loss of aromaticity (BAD!) • Pyridine’s N has free lone pair to accept H+ pyridine is often used as a base in organic chemistry, since it is soluble in many common organic solvents 22 • The lone pair also makes pyridine a H-bond acceptor e.g. benzene is insoluble in H2O but pyridine is soluble: N : e- donor base H-bond acceptor O H H e- acceptor acid H-bond donor • This is a NON-specific interaction, i.e., any H-bond donor will work 23 What about pyrrole? • Is it soluble in water? Other groups form H-bonds • Electronegative atoms, e.g. carbonyl group: • Acetone is soluble in water, but propane is not: .. .. O • Again, non-specific interactions O H O H Bifunctional compounds N mp -42oC bp 115oC O mp -47oC bp 155oC mp 105-107oC bp 280-281oC N OH N H O Bifunctional compounds N H O O H N Contrast with Nucleic Acid Bases (A, T, C, G, U) – Specific! Pyrimidines (like pyridine): O NH2 NH N H H * NH O N O N O N * H * Uracil (U) (RNA only) Thymine (T) (DNA only) Cytosine (C) Purines O NH2 N N N N H* Adenine (A) O N NH N H * N NH2 Guanine (G) * link to sugar • Evidence for specificity? • Why are these interactions specific? e.g. G-C & A-T 28 • Evidence? – If mix G & C together → exothermic reaction occurs; change in 1H chemical shift in NMR; other changes reaction occurring – Also occurs with A & T – Other combinations → no change! e.g. Guanine-Cytosine: H H N O N N H N N N NH H O N H 2 lone pairs in plane at 120o to C=O bond H • Why? G C – In G-C duplex, 3 complementary H-bonds can form: donors & acceptors = molecular recognition 29 • Can use NMR to do a titration curve: G+C Ka GC get equilibrium constant, G = -RT ln K = H-TS • Favorable reaction because ΔH for complex formation = -3 x H-bond energy • ΔS is unfavorable → complex is organized 3 H-bonds overcome the entropy of complex formation • **Note: In synthetic DNAs other interactions can occur 30 • Molecular recognition not limited to natural bases: Forms supramolecular structure: 6 molecules in a ring Create new architecture by thinking about biology i.e., biologically inspired chemistry! 31 Synthesis of the Bases in Nucleic Acids • Thousands of methods in heterocyclic chemistry– we’ll do 1 example: – Juan Or (1961) – May be the first step in the origin of life… NH2 N NH3 + N HCN N H N Adenine Polymerization of HCN – Interesting because H-CN/CN- is probably the simplest molecule that can be both a nucleophile & electrophile, and also form C-C bonds 32 Mechanism? H + N C H H N + H HN H C N H N N N H N NH + H H NH3 N N H H H H N NH NH2 H N tautomerization N H N N H N N NH N H NH + NH2 N H + NH N N H N + NH2 N H N H N N 33 Other Bases? HC N G, U, T and C NH3 N N N (cyanogen) H (cyanoacetylene) ** All these species are found in interstellar space: observed by e.g. absorption of IR radiation: a natural example of IR spectroscopy! Try these mechanisms! 34 Properties of Pyridine • We’ve seen it as an acid & an H-bond acceptor • Lone pair can act as a nucleophile: O O N N + + + N X SN2 R X + N R e.g. exp 2: benzyl dihydronicotinamide: R = PhCH2 O O H2N (like NaBH4) N + aromatic, but +ve charge + Ph O "H-" H2N N Ph electron acceptor: electrophile reduction [O] oxidation H2N H H N non-aromatic, but neutral Ph 35 • Balance between aromaticity & charged vs non-aromatic & neutral! • can undergo REDOX reaction reversibly: NAD-H NAD+ + "H-" reductant oxidant 36 • Interestingly, nicotinamide may have been present in the pre-biotic world: CN CN DielsAlder NH N H electrical discharge [O], hydrolysis of CN CH4 + N2 + H2 O NH2 N 1% yield • NAD or related structure may have controlled redox chemistry long before enzymes involved! 37 Another example of N-Alkylation of Pyridines Caffeine O N HN O O N H3 C N H O N N N N CH3 CH3 This is an SN2 reaction: stereospecific with INVERSION R NH R R Ad + + H3C S N Met R CH3 + Ad S Met S-adenosyl-methionine (SAM, important co-factor) 38 References Solomons • Amines: basicity ch.20 – Pyridine & pyrrole pp 644-5 – NAD+/NADH pp 645-6, 537-8, 544-6 • Bases in nucleic acids ch. 25 Also see Dobson, ch.9 Topics in Current Chemistry, v 259, p 29-68 39