Biomolecules
Biomolecules
Biomolecules
BIOMOLECULES
Biomolecules: All the carbon compounds that we get from living tissues
Comparison of Elements Present in Non-living and Living Matter:
BIOMACROMOLECULES:
- one feature common to all those compounds found in the acid soluble pool, have
molecular weights ranging from 18 to around 800 daltons (Da) approximately.
- acid insoluble fraction, has four types of organic compounds:
proteins
nucleic acids
polysaccharides
lipids
- less than one thousand dalton are usually referred to as micromolecules or simply
biomolecules
- which are found in the acid insoluble fraction are called macromolecules or
biomacromolecules
- Lipids are not strictly macromolecules
α-Amino acids: organic compounds containing an amino group and an acidic group as
substituents on the same carbon i.e., the α-carbon
- substituted methanes
- four substituent groups occupying the four valency positions
hydrogen
carboxyl group
amino group
a variable group designated as R group
- Based on the nature of R group, there are many amino acids.
- amino acid those which occur in proteins are only of twenty types
- R group in these proteinaceous amino acids could be:
Hydrogen: glycine
a methyl group: alanine
hydroxy methyl: serine
- chemical and physical properties of amino acids are essentially of the amino, carboxyl
and the R functional groups
- Based on number of amino and carboxyl groups
Acidic: glutamic acid
Basic: lysine
Neutral: valine
- aromatic amino acids:
tyrosine
phenylalanine
tryptophan
- A particular property of amino acids is the ionizable nature of –NH2 and –COOH
groups: in solutions of different pH, the structure of amino acids changes
PROTEINS:
- Polypeptides
- linear chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds
- protein is a polymer of amino acids
- protein is a heteropolymer and not a homopolymer
- essential amino acids: amino acids that we get through our diet/food
- non-essential amino acids: amino acids which our body can make
- Proteins carry out many functions:
transport nutrients across cell membrane
some fight infectious organisms
some are hormones
some are enzymes
- Collagen is the most abundant protein in animal world
- Ribulose bisphosphate Carboxylase-Oxygenase (RuBisCO) is the most
abundant protein in the whole of the biosphere
STRUCTURE OF PROTEINS:
- are heteropolymers containing strings of amino acids
- the positional information in a protein – which is the first amino acid, which is second,
and so on – is called the primary structure
- protein is imagined as a line:
the left end: first amino acid
right end: last amino
- first amino acid – called as N-terminal amino acid
- last amino acid – called the C-terminal amino acid
- A protein thread does not exist throughout as an extended rigid rod. The thread is
folded in the form of a helix
- only some portions of the protein thread are arranged in the form of a helix
- In proteins, only right-handed helices are observed
- Other regions of the protein thread are folded into other forms: secondary structure
- long protein chain is also folded upon itself like a hollow woolen ball, giving rise to the
tertiary structure
- Tertiary structure is absolutely necessary for the many biological activities of
proteins
- Some proteins are an assembly of more than one polypeptide or subunits.
- manner in which these individual folded polypeptides or subunits are arranged with
respect to each other is the architecture of a protein otherwise called the quaternary
structure
- Adult human haemoglobin consists of 4 subunits.
- Two of these are identical to each other.
- two subunits of α type and two subunits of β type together constitute the human
haemoglobin
Lipids:
- water insoluble
- could be simple fatty acids
- fatty acid has a carboxyl group attached to an R group
- R group could be:
methyl (–CH3)
ethyl (–C2H5 )
higher number of –CH2 groups (1 carbon to 19 carbons
- palmitic acid: 16 carbons including carboxyl carbon
- Arachidonic acid: 20 carbon atoms including the carboxyl carbon
- Fatty acids could be
Saturated: without double bond
Unsaturated: with one or more C=C double bonds
- Another simple lipid: glycerol which is trihydroxy propane
- Many lipids have both glycerol and fatty acids
- fatty acids are found esterified with glycerol:
monoglycerides
diglycerides
triglycerides
- Oils have lower melting point
- Some lipids have phosphorous and a phosphorylated organic compound in them:
phospholipids – found in cell membrane
- Example: Lecithin
Nitrogenous bases:
- Adenine
- Guanine
- Cytosine
- Uracil
- Thymine
Starch is a variant of this but present as a store house of energy in plant tissues.
starch can hold I2 molecules in the helical portion
Starch forms helical secondary structures.
The starch-I2 is blue in colour.
the blood concentration of glucose in a normal healthy individual: 4.2 mmol/L– 6.1 mmol/L,
while that of hormones would be nanograms/mL
Hence the living state is a non-equilibrium steadystate to be able to perform work
ENZYMES:
- all enzymes are proteins
- There are some nucleic acids that behave like enzymes.
- These are called ribozymes
- inorganic catalysts work efficiently at high temperatures and high pressures
- enzymes get damaged at high temperatures (say above 40°C)
- Thermal stability is an important quality of such enzymes isolated from thermophilic
organisms
Rate of a physical or chemical process refers to the amount of product formed per unit
time. It can be expressed as:
In the absence of any enzyme this reaction is very slow, with about 200 molecules of H 2CO3 being
formed in an hour.
by using the enzyme called carbonic anhydrase, the reaction speeds dramatically with about
600,000 molecules being formed every second.
The catalytic cycle of an enzyme action can be described in the following steps:
- First, the substrate binds to the active site of the enzyme, fitting into the active site
- The binding of the substrate induces the enzyme to alter its shape, fitting more tightly
around the substrate
- The active site of the enzyme, now in close proximity of the substrate breaks the
chemical bonds of the substrate and the new enzyme- product complex is formed
- The enzyme releases the products of the reaction and the free enzyme is ready to bind
to another molecule of the substrate and run through the catalytic cycle once again
Co-Factors:
- Cofactors: there are a number of cases in which non-protein constituents bound to the
the enzyme to make the enzyme catalytically active.
- protein portion of the enzymes: apoenzyme.
- Three kinds of cofactors may be identified:
prosthetic groups:
organic compounds and are distinguished from other cofactors in that
they are tightly bound to the apoenzyme
Example: peroxidase and catalase, which catalyze the breakdown of
hydrogen peroxide to water and oxygen
haem is the prosthetic group and it is a part of the active site of the
enzyme
co-enzymes: organic compounds but their association with the apoenzyme is
only transient, usually occurring during the course of catalysis
The essential chemical components of many coenzymes are vitamins,
e.g., coenzyme nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD) and NADP
contain the vitamin niacin
metal ions.
Example: zinc is a cofactor for the proteolytic enzyme carboxypeptidase.
- Catalytic activity is lost when the co-factor is removed from the enzyme which testifies
that they play a crucial role in the catalytic activity of the enzyme.