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Introductory Chemistry: A Foundation FIFTH EDITION by Steven S. Zumdahl University of Illinois Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 1 Biochemistry Chapter 20 Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 2 Biochemistry • Biochemistry is the chemistry of living things – Look at living things on a molecular level • 30 essential elements – Macronutrients = H, C, N, O, S, Na, Mg, P, Ca, K, Cl – Trace elements = first transition row elements • Many required for enzyme function Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 3 Proteins • Natural polymers that make up 15% of body weight • Fibrous Proteins provide structural integrity and strength to tissues • Globular Proteins transport O2 and nutrients through body, act as catalysts, fight disease, participate in metabolism and cell regulation Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 4 Protein Primary Structure • Protein polymer made of chain of -amino acids • Amino acids contain both a carboxylic acid functional group (-COOH) and an amine functional group (-NH2) • The indicates that both functional groups are attached to the same carbon R1 O H2N C C OH H Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 5 Amino Acid R Groups • R groups also called side chains • Classified as either polar or non-polar – Non-polar contain mostly C & H – Polar contain O & N • Polar side chains are hydrophilic, Nonpolar side chains are hydrophobic Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 6 Linking Amino Acids • The OH of the acid group on one amino acid combines with a H on the amine group of another amino acid, releasing water and joining the C of the acid group to the N R1 O H 2N C H C R1 O R1 O OH +HN 2 C H C OH H 2N C H Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. C R1 O N H C C OH + H 7 H2O Primary Structure of Proteins • • • • Bond between amino acids is called a peptide bond Dipeptide = 2 amino acids Polypeptide = many amino acids The sequence of amino acids is called the primary structure of the protein • Use shorthand 3-letter abbreviations of amino acids • Primary structure indicated by amino acid abbreviations attached together • Polypeptides that contain the same amino acids, but different primary structures, can have vastly different properties and biological effects Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 8 Secondary Structure of Proteins • Secondary Structure is the arrangement of the polymer chain in space • It is determined by intramolecular attractive forces – Mainly H-bonds • The -helix is a spiral structure – Gives fibrous proteins their spring • The pleated sheet involves several peptide chains aligned in rows forming a corrugated sheet – Give fibrous proteins their flexibility and resistance to stretch Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 9 Tertiary Structure of Proteins • Tertiary Structure is the overall shape of the protein – Determines whether the protein will be long and narrow fibers or spherical globules • Much of the tertiary structure is stabilized by S-S bonds that form between cysteine amino acids in the same chain or between chains Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 10 Disulfide Linkages • The -SH side chains on 2 cysteine amino acids can join together to form a –S-S- bond • This is called a disulfide linkage – a.k.a. disulfide bridge • Disulfide linkages cause bends in the protein chain or attach chains together • The –S-S- bond is not very strong, easily broken • Results in breakdown of tertiary structure Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 11 Structure and Function of Proteins • 3-dimensional structure vital to the function of the protein • Breaking down the 3-dimensional structure is called denaturation • Denaturation can be caused by the addition of energy or a chemical reaction Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 12 Enzymes • Enzymes are proteins that catalyze specific biological reactions. – Most biological reactions would be too slow for living systems – As catalysts, enzymes are not consumed in the reaction • The lock-and-key model of enzyme activity says that enzymes function by binding to the reacting molecule – The reacting molecule(s) is called the substrate • In order for the reaction to take place, the substrate must bind to the enzyme by fitting into a specific part of the enzyme called the active site • After reaction has taken place, the products no longer fit well into the active site and are released from the enzyme Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 13 Carbohydrates • • • • • Contain Carbon, Hydrogen & Oxygen Contain carbonyl groups and alcohol groups Also known as sugars, starches, cellulose, dextrins & gums Hydroxycarbonyls - have many OH & one C=O Monosaccharides - cannot be broken down into simpler carbohydrates • Disaccharides - two monosaccharides linked – Loose H from one and OH from other • Polysaccharides - 3 or more monosaccharides linked into complex chains – Starch and cellulose polysaccharides of glucose Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 14 Cyclic Monosaccharides • Oxygen attached to second last carbon bonds to carbonyl carbon • Convert carbonyl to OH – Transfer H from original O to carbonyl O • New OH group may be same side as CH2OH () or opposite side () CH2OH O H HO HO H HO H OH H HO H H H O Glucose CH2 OH H HO H H OH OH Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 15 Glucose Polysaccharides • Made of glucose rings linked together – Give only glucose on hydrolysis – Differ in the manner rings linked together • Starch digestible by humans, Cellulose not – The enzymes in humans can only work on the glycosidic linkage found in starch • • • • Starch is the carbohydrate storage reservoir in plants Cellulose is the major woody structural component of plants Glycogen is the main carbohydrate storage reservoir in animals Hydrolysis breaks poly and disaccharides into monosaccharides by adding water to break the molecules down – Under acidic or basic conditions Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 16 Nucleic Acids • • • • carry genetic information DNA molar mass up to several billion grams RNA molar mass up to 40,000 grams made of nucleotides – Phosphate group – 5 carbon sugar – cyclic amine (nitrogen containing organic base) Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 17 DNA RNA • deoxyribonucleic acid • sugar is deoxyribose • one of the following amine bases – adenine (A) – guanine (G) – cytosine (C) – thymine (T) • 2 DNA strands wound together in double helix • ribonucleic acid • sugar is ribose • one of the following amine bases adenine (A) guanine (G) cytosine (C) uracil (U) • single strands wound in helix Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 18 Nucleotide Formation + Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 19 Base Pairing • base pairing generates the helical structure • A with T or U, C with G • in DNA, the two strands have complimentary bases – hold strands together – allow replication of strand Thymine Adenine Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 20 DNA and Protein Synthesis • Besides replication, the major function of DNA is to provide the blueprint for the amino acid sequence of proteins • Genes are specific segments of the DNA strand that code for a particular protein • First the code is transferred to messenger RNA – transcription • Then transfer RNA carries amino acids to the mRNA where they are matched up and joined together – translation Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 21 Fats & Oils: Triglycerides • Fats are solid at room temperature, oils are liquids • Triesters of glycerol with fatty acids • Triglycerides differ in – Length of the fatty acid side-chains (12 to 20 C) – Number of C=C in side-chain • Degree of unsaturation Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 22 Structure and Melting Point • Larger fatty acid = Higher melting point • Double bonds decrease the melting point • Saturated = no DB • Monounsaturated = 1 DB • Polyunsaturated = many DB Name Myristic Acid MP Class °C 58 Sat., 14 C Palmitic Acid 63 Sat, 16 C Stearic Acid 71 Sat, 18 C Oleic Acid 16 1 DB, 18 C Linoleic Acid -5 2 DB, 18 C Linolenic Acid -11 3 DB, 18 C Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 23 Soaps • Triglycerides can be broken down into fatty acids salts and glycerol by treatment with a strong hydroxide solution • The reaction is called saponifcation • Fatty acid salts have a very polar “head” because it is ionic – Hydrophilic • Fatty acid salts also have a very non-polar “tail” because it is all C and H – Hydrophobic • This unique structure allows the fatty acid salts, called soaps, to help oily substances be attracted to water through micelle formation – Surfactants or wetting agents – Ca+2 and Mg+2 precipitate soaps = soap scum Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 24 Phospholipids • Esters of glycerol • Glycerol attached to 2 fatty acids and 1 phosphate group • Phospholipids have polar head due to phosphate group as well as non-polar tail from the fatty acids Waxes • Waxes are esters of fatty acids and long chain alcohols • Solids • Furnish waterproof coatings Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 25 Steroids • Characterized by 4 linked carbon rings • Mostly hydrocarbon-like – Dissolve in animal fat • Mostly have hormonal effects • Serum cholesterol levels linked to heart disease and stroke – Levels depend on diet, exercise, emotional stress, genetics, etc. – Trans double bonds from partially hydrogenated oils increase • Cholesterol synthesized in the liver from saturated fats CH2 CH3 H2C H2C HO C H CH2 CH2 CH3 CH CH2 CH CH3 C C C CH H C CH2 CH CH CH2 CH2 CH CH3 CH3 CH2 CH2 Copyright©2004 by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. 26