Introduction to Biochemistry.ppt
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1、08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,1,Introduction to Biochemistry,Andy Howard Biochemistry, Fall 2008 IIT,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 2 of 62,What is biochemistry?,By the end of this course you should be able to construct your own definition; but for now: Biochemistry is the study of che
2、mical reactions in living tissue.,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 3 of 62,Plans,What is biochemistry? Cells Cell components Organic and biochemistry Concepts from organic chemistry to remember Small molecules and macromolecules,Classes of small molecules Classes of macromolecules Water Cataly
3、sis Energetics Regulation Molecular biology Evolution,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 4 of 62,What will we study?,Biochemistry is the study of chemical reactions in living tissue, both within cells and in intercellular media. As such, it concerns itself with a variety of specific topics:,08/2
4、1/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 5 of 62,Topics in biochemistry,What reactions occur; The equilibrium energetics and kinetics of those reactions; How the reactions are controlled, at the chemical and cellular or organellar levels; How the reactions are organized to enable biological function withi
5、n the cell and in tissues and organisms.,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 6 of 62,Organic and biological chemistry,Most molecules in living things (other than H2O, O2, and CO2) contain C-C or C-H bonds, so biochemistry depends heavily on organic chemistry But the range of organic reactions tha
6、t occur in biological systems is fairly limited compared to the full range of organic reactions:,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 7 of 62,Why we use only a subset of organic chemistry in biochemistry,Biochemical reactions are almost always aqueous. They occur within a narrow temperature and pr
7、essure range. They occur within narrowly buffered pH ranges. Many of the complex reaction mechanisms discovered and exploited by organic chemists since the 1860s have no counterparts in the biochemical universe.,Frederich Whler,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 8 of 62,Cells,Most biochemical re
8、actions (but not all!) take place within semi-independent biological entities known as cells Cells in general contain replicative and protein-synthetic machinery in order to reproduce and survive They often exchange nutrients and information with other cells,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 9
9、of 62,Cell components,Cells are separated from their environments via a selectively porous membrane Individual components (often called organelles) within the cell may also have membranes separating them from the bulk cytosol and from one another,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 10 of 62,Eukar
10、yotes and prokaryotes,The lowest-level distinction among organisms is on the basis of whether their cells have defined nuclei or not Cells with nuclei are eukaryotic Cells without nuclei are prokaryotic Eubacteria and archaea are prokaryotic Other organisms (including some unicellular ones!) are euk
11、aryotic,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 11 of 62,Eukaryotic organelles I,Nucleus: contains genetic information; site for replication and transcription Endoplasmic reticulum: site for protein synthesis and protein processing Ribosome: protein-synthetic machine Golgi apparatus: site for packagi
12、ng proteins for secretion and delivery,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 12 of 62,Eukaryotic organelles II,Mitochondrion: site for most energy-producing reactions Lysosome: digests materials during endocytosis and cellular degradation Peroxisome: site for oxidation of some nutrients and detoxif
13、ication of the H2O2 created thereby Cytoskeleton: network of filaments that define the shape and mobility of a cell,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 13 of 62,Eukaryotic organelles III,Chloroplast: site for most photosynthetic reactions Vacuoles: sacs for water or other nutrients Cell wall: bac
14、terial or plant component outside cell membrane that provides rigidity and protection against osmotic shock,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 14 of 62,Concepts from organic chemistry,There are some elements of organic chemistry that you should have clear in your minds. All of these are concepts
15、 with significance outside of biochemistry, but they do play important roles in biochemistry. If any of these concepts is less than thoroughly familiar, please review it:,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 15 of 62,Organic concepts I,Covalent bond: A strong attractive interaction between neighbo
16、ring atoms in which a pair of electrons is roughly equally shared between the two atoms. Covalent bonds may be single bonds, in which one pair of electrons is shared; double bonds, which involve two pairs of electrons; or triple bonds, which involve three pairs (see above). Single bonds do not restr
17、ict the rotation of other substituents around the bond; double and triple bonds do.,Image courtesy Michigan State U.,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 16 of 62,Organic concepts II,Ionic bond: a strong attractive interaction between atoms in which one atom or group is positively charged, and ano
18、ther is negatively charged.,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 17 of 62,Organic concepts III,Hydrogen bond: A weak attractive interaction between neighboring atoms in which a hydrogen atom carrying a slight, partial positive charge shares that positive charge with a neighboring electronegative a
19、tom. The non-hydrogen atom to which the hydrogen is covalently bonded is called the hydrogen-bond donor; the neighboring atom that takes on a bit of the charge is called the hydrogen-bond acceptor,Cartoon courtesy CUNY Brooklyn,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 18 of 62,Organic concepts IV,Van
20、der Waals interaction: A weak attractive interaction between nonpolar atoms, arising from transient induced dipoles in the two atoms.,Image courtesy Columbia U. Biology Dept.,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 19 of 62,Organic Concepts V,Chirality: The property of a molecule under which it canno
21、t be superimposed upon its mirror image.,Image courtesy DRECAM, France,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 20 of 62,Organic Concepts VI,Tautomerization: The interconversion of two covalently different forms of a molecule via a unimolecular reaction that proceeds with a low activation energy. The
22、two forms of the molecule are known as tautomers: because of the low activation barrier between the two forms, we will typically find both species present.,acetone,propen-2-ol,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 21 of 62,Organic Concepts VII,Nucleophilic substitution: a reaction in which an elect
23、ron-rich (nucleophilic) molecule attacks an electron-poor (electrophilic) molecule and replaces group or atom within the attacked species. The displaced group is known as a leaving group. This is one of several types of substitution reactions, and it occurs constantly in biological systems.,08/21/08
24、,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 22 of 62,Organic Concepts VIII,Polymerization: creation of large molecules by sequential addition of simple building blocks often by dehydration, i.e., the elimination of water from two species to form a larger one: R1-O-H + HO-R2-X-H R1-X-R2-OH + H2O The product here
25、can then react with HO-R3-X-H to form R1-X-R2-X-R3-OH with elimination of another water molecule, and so on.,08/21/08,Biochemistry: Introduction,p. 23 of 62,Organic Concepts IX,Equilibrium: in the context of a chemical reaction, the state in which the concentrations of reactants and products are no
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