1 - Foundations of Biochemistry: © 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company
1 - Foundations of Biochemistry: © 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company
1 - Foundations of Biochemistry: © 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company
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Albert Lehninger (1917–1986)
• Bioenergetics (1965–1974)
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CHAPTER 1
Foundations of Biochemistry
Learning goals:
• Distinguishing features of living organisms
• Structure and function of the parts of the cell
• Roles of small and large biomolecules
• Energy transformation in living organisms
• Regulation of metabolism and catalysis
• Coding of genetic information in DNA
• Role of mutations and selection in evolution
•How weak acids and bases behave in water
•How buffers work and why we need them
•How water participates in biochemical reactions
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Biochemistry is
the Chemistry of Living Matter
Living Matter is characterized by:
• High degree of complexity and organization
• Extraction, transformation, and systematic use of
energy to create and maintain structures and to do
work
• Interactions of individual components are dynamic
and coordinated
• Ability to sense and respond to changes in
surrounding
• A capacity for fairly precise self-replication while
allowing enough change for evolution
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Complexity and Organization
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Living organisms must intake nutrients
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Living organisms must
accurately reproduce
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Cell: The Universal Building Block
• Living organisms are made of cells
• Simplest living organisms are single-celled
• Larger organisms consist of many cells with different
functions
• Not all of the cells are the same
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Cell: The Universal Building Block
Stem cell
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Cell: The Universal Building Block
Bone cell
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Cell: The Universal Building Block
Blood cell
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Cell: The Universal Building Block
Muscle cell
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Cell: The Universal Building Block
Fat cell
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Cell: The Universal Building Block
Skin cell
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Cell: The Universal Building Block
Nerve cell
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All cells share some common features
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Bacterial, animal, and plant cells are different
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Components of Bacterial Cell
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Bacterial, animal, and plant cells
are different
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Bacterial, animal, and plant cells
are different
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Biochemistry is
the Chemistry of Living Matter
• The basis of all life is the chemical reactions that take place
within the cell.
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Organisms can also be classified by:
different energy and carbon sources
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Living systems extract energy
• From sunlight
– plants
– green bacteria
– cyanobacteria
• From fuels
– animals
– most bacteria
• Accelerating reactions
• Organization of metabolism and signaling
• Storage and transfer of information
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The ABCs of Life
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The Molecular Hierarchy of Structure
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Biochemistry: Unique Role of Carbon
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30 Elements Essential for Life
• Other than carbon, elements H, O, N, P, S are also common
• Metal ions (e.g., K+, Na+, Ca++, Mg++, Zn++, Fe++) play important roles
in metabolism
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Common Functional Groups of Biological Molecules
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Biological molecules typically have several
functional groups
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Interactions between
biomolecules are specific
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Interactions between
biomolecules are specific
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Organisms perform energy transductions
to accomplish work to stay alive
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ATP: Chemical Currency of Energy
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Series of related enzymatically catalyzed
reactions forms a pathway
Metabolic Pathway
• produces energy or valuable materials
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Pathways are controlled in order to
regulate levels of metabolites
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RNA World?
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Complementarity in DNA allows for
replication with near-perfect fidelity
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The Central “Dogma” of Biochemistry:
DNA → RNA → Protein
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Natural selection
favors some mutations
• Mutations occur more or less randomly
• Mutations that give organisms an advantage in a
given environment are more likely to be propagated
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Natural selection
favors some mutations
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Evolution of Eukaryotes through
Endosymbiosis
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What is pH?
• pH is defined as the negative
pH = -log[H+] logarithm of the hydrogen ion
concentration
• Simplifies equations
K w [H ][OH - ] 11014 M 2 • The pH and pOH must always
add to 14
log[H ] log[OH- ] 14 • In neutral solution, [H+] = [OH–]
and the pH is 7
pH pOH 14 • pH can be negative ([H+] = 6 M)
pH scale is logarithmic:
1 unit = 10-fold
pH of Some Common Liquids
Dissociation of Weak Electrolytes:
Principle
O
+ H2O
Keq O • Weak electrolytes dissociate
H3C H3 C + H3O+
OH O- only partially in water.
K a K eq [H 2 O] • Extent of dissociation is
determined by the acid
[H ][CH 3COO - ] dissociation constant Ka.
Ka 1.74 10 5 M
[CH 3COOH]
[ x ][x ]
Ka 1.74 10 5 M
[0.1 - x] • To find the [H+], a
quadratic equation
x 2 1.74 10 6 1.74 10 5 x
must be solved
x 2 1.74 10 5 x 1.74 10 6 0
x = 0.001310, pH = 2.883
Dissociation of Weak Electrolytes:
Simplification
Ka
[ x ][x ]
1.74 10 5 M • Approximation works for
[0.1] sufficiently weak acids and
x 2 1.74 10 6 bases
• Check that x < [total acid]
x = 0.00132, pH = 2.880
pKa measures acidity
• pKa = –log Ka (strong acid large Ka small pKa)
Buffers are mixtures of weak acids
and their anions (conjugate base)
[A - ]
[HA]
- log[H ] -logK a log
[A-]
-
[A ]
pH pK a log
[HA]
Biological Buffer Systems
• Maintenance of intracellular pH is vital to all cells
– Enzyme-catalyzed reactions have optimal pH
– Solubility of polar molecules depends on H-bond donors and acceptors
– Equilibrium between CO2 gas and dissolved HCO3– depends on pH