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What is Biochemistry? Biochemistry is the study of the various chemicals that a living organism needs to stay alive. Metabolism? Refers to the sum total of all the chemical reactions that create this illusion that we call life. What causes sickness or disease in the body? Sickness is a malfunction of the body that the body quickly repairs. Disease is a breakdown of some organ, or an interruption in some metabolic pathway that causes the body machine to break down. 1.Differentiate HDL, LDL, AND VDL Lipoproteins: A lipoprotein is a transport molecule that MOVES cholesterol to the liver where it can be used by the body. HDL stands for : High Density Lipoprotein . These will transport their load of cholesterol to the liver with no problem. LDL stands for: Low Density Lipoprotein That drop SOME of their load of cholesterol on the way to the liver. VDL means : Very Low Density Lipoprotein These are very weak, they always drop most of their load of cholesterol while on their way to the liver. Which one is better to have? HDL’s – the others cause clogged arteries. Pops note Why should we here in Montgomery County be concerned with what kind of lipoproteins that we have? Southern Cookin’!! Soul Food! Our diet is full of fat and cholesterol! Why is it that some people have different types of lipoproteins? Genetics begins the problem. Then, lack of exercise will cause the creation of LDL’s. Start exercising, and your number of HDL’s will go up. 2. Explain what causes Carbon to be so important in life processes: Carbon has four open bonding sites. It can twist and turn around the central nucleus to allow for easier bonding with other substances. 3. Differentiate movement between a carbon molecule that has 4 single covalent bonds and a carbon molecule that has a few double covalent bonds. With single covalent bonds, the atoms Can still move freely and seek out other Molecules to bond with. Double bonds hold more rigidly, and Restricts rotation Pops note! What is meant by the Carbon backbone? Long chains of hydrocarbons that is The FOUNDATION for all Organic life! Pops note What are functional Groups? Clusters of atoms that move as a unit. They bond to the carbon backbone Of a molecule, causing it to Do different things. All of these will Bond with the Carbon backbone, But the EFFECTS They cause will be Different. 4. What causes the 3dimensional shapes and functions of organic compounds? 1.The number of covalent bonds within the backbone. a. The carbon backbone will kink at the double bond. 2. The kinds of functional group that is attached to the carbon backbone will cause it to have a different shape 5. Explain the importance of the various functional groups that may bond to the carbon 3 backbone: 1.The functional group will influence The polarity of surrounding atoms. 2. Different functional groups will cause Different kinds of bonding, some single And some double. 3. This shifting of polarity, and variation Of double and single bonds, forces the Molecule to do DIFFERENT THINGS. Explain the role of enzymes: 6. To speed up chemical Reactions and cause Changes in functional Groups to occur. 7. Complete the following chart regarding the 5 classes of enzyme mediated responses: List: Functional Group Transfer Define: One molecule gives up a Functional group – another accepts Example: A job needs doing, but it Doesn’t have the functional group To do it. List: Electron Transfer Define: Enzymes strip electrons from One molecule and transfer them to Another. Example: A bond was needed but the Polarity was wrong, shift the electrons Around, shift the polarity. List: Rearrangement Define: Enzymes will change some Single bonds to double bonds, and some Double bonds to single bonds. Example: This will change the 3 – D Shape so it can reach out and bond With other things. List: Condensation Define: Enzymes force two smaller Molecules to join. Example: A polymer is needed pops Condensation? Enzymes remove a water molecule, Polarity changes, and the molecules Are attracted to one another. List: Cleavage Define: Enzymes pull a larger Molecule apart Example: Simple sugars are released From a polysaccharide. Hydrolysis pops “A cleavage operation” Enzymes force water back into the Molecule, polarity shifts, and the Individual sugars repel each other. As you can see, Life has a way of going on. If the current situation isn’t doing the job, then “BAM” some enzyme mediated response just rewrites the script. What do we Need done?? Need that molecule to do a new job? Enzymes break off the current functional group – attach a new one. Need to form a bond with a Repelling neighboring molecule? Let the enzymes strip off some electrons and make the polarity more attractive! The molecule that you need is out of reach? No problem, enzymes can rearrange the internal bonding structure and cause it’s shape to be different so it CAN reach that needed molecule. Need the smaller units that the big molecule is made of? Let the enzymes force the big molecule into cleavage – then it will split. Need the larger molecule, but all you have are little molecules? Then the enzymes will add a molecule of water to the mix, and force the two little molecules to FUSE into one big molecule. (condensation) Pops note! What is the difference Between a polymer And a monomer? The polymer is a large molecule made up of many individual sub-units. The subunits are the monomers. Molecule? Carbohydrate Monomer? Saccharide Use by the body? Energy Source Molecule? Protein Monomer? Amino Acid Use by the body? Building new body tissue, and making enzymes. Molecule? Lipids Monomers? Fatty Acid Use by the body? Storage of excess carbohydrates, building plasma membranes Molecule? DNA MONOMER? Nucleic Acid Use by the body? Storage of Genetic information 9. Differentiate monosaccharides, oligosaccharides, and polysaccharides: Monosaccharide = one sugar unit Oligosaccharide? 2 sugar units hooked together Polysaccharide? Many sugar units hooked together! 10. Why are foods such as potatoes such an important energy source? Starches like potatoes, are merely LONG chains of sugars. Starchy foods provide you with a lot of energy Why did your Grandparents call it “Stick to your ribs food?” The sugars in those potatoes, will be broken Down one at a time. The energy will be released slowly. 11. Differentiate saturated and unsaturated fats: In a saturated fat, all The bonding sites are FULL of single bonds. DANGEROUS FAT!! In a saturated Fat, there are a Double bonds, Thus opening up Some bonding Sites. In a Polyunsaturated fat, There are many open bonding sites due to the double bonding. Safest fat To consume Pop’s Warning! Only liquid cooking oil is truly unsaturated. Shortening in the can had to be saturated to make it a solid. 12. What are Waxes? Long chains of fatty acids tightly packed and bonded to alcohol or carbon rings. Two examples of natural Waxes: Sebrum and beeswax Sebrum is a Wax that Water-proofs Birds feathers Bees make honey Wax + cutin forms Comb from wax the cuticle on fruit 13. What is a steroid? Lipids with no Flexible fatty acid tails. They have a rigid backbone of four fused carbon rings Dangers? You bet! In men, muscle growth, good..Penis and scrotum SHRINK..NO GOOD. Dangers? For women, shrinkage of the breast, beard, manish ways. Really bad case? ORGAN DAMAGE DEATH. 14. What does the human body use protein for? a)Building muscle b) Make enzymes and hormones c) Transport proteins which move things across the plasma membrane. 15. Describe a generic protein: Long chains of amino acids hooked together by peptide bonds. 16. What makes one protein different from another protein? The sequence of amino acids! or 17. Draw, or describe the shape of an amino acid: 18. What makes one amino acid different from another amino acid? What Difference Do you See? The R Group makes the difference 19. Using primary structure, secondary structure, tertiary, and quaternary structure, explain how a protein assumes its three dimensional shape: Primary Structure: Ordered sequences of amino acids link into chains, held in place by peptide bonds. Secondary structure Hydrogen bonding of side groups on the amino acid chain. Tertiary structure The various ‘R’ groups begin to pull towards one another or push away from one another causing the entire molecule to FOLD UP. Quaternary Structure More folding as a SECOND POLYPEPTIDE CHAIN bonds with the first chain. 20. Differentiate DNA and RNA by chemical make up and by function. Chemical make up DNA – A double stranded helix containing deoxyribose sugar. RNA – A single strand containing RIBOSE sugars. Function: DNA – Storage of genetic information within the nucleus RNA – Transfer of genetic information from the nucleus to the ribosome. 21. Explain how chemical analysis was used to prove the difference between a monosaccharide, a disaccharide, and polysaccharide. Benedict’s Solution turns Yellow in the Presence of a Monosaccharide No reaction to The disacchride Or the Polysaccharide. The Iodine Turns Black when Exposed to a Polysaccharide No reaction With a Monosaccharide Or a dissacharide If all three of these samples are made of sugars, why was there a chemical difference? There were DIFFERENCES in the available bonding sites. 22. Describe protein Denaturation: High temperatures or changes in the pH will change the 3-D shape of the molecule, by damaging the functional groups.