Unit 1
Unit 1
Unit 1
• Introduction to Biochemistry
• Macromolecules
• Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
• Structure of nucleic acids
• Amino acids
• Protein: Architecture, conformational flexibility, folding
problem and validation
• Enzymes: Introduction, enzyme mechanisms
Levels of Organization in Nature
Biochemistry:
Where Chemistry & Biology Meet
• Living things require millions of chemical
reactions just to survive.
• Metabolism = all the chemical reactions
occurring in the body.
• Organic molecules:
– usually associated with living things.
– always contain CARBON.
– are “large” molecules, with many atoms
– always have covalent bonds (share electrons)
Biochemistry and Human Biology
• Biochemistry: Science concerned with the chemical
constituents of living cells and with the reaction and process
that they undergo.
– Complete understanding at the molecular level of all the chemical
processes associated with living cells
– Biochemistry of less complex form of life is often direct relevance to
human biochemistry
Nucleic
acid Protein Lipid Carbohydrates
Medicine
Giant Molecules - Polymers
Macromolecules in Organisms
• There are four categories of large molecules in cells:
Carbohydrates
Lipids
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
Carbohydrates
•Carbohydrates
include:
–Small sugar
molecules in soft
drinks
–Long starch
molecules in rice,
wheat, pasta and
potatoes
Linking Monomers
Remove
H
H2O Forms
Remove OH
C6H12O6
Disaccharides
•A disaccharide is a
double sugar.
They’re made by
joining two
monosaccharides
Involves removing a
water molecule
(condensation)
•Complex
carbohydrates
Composed of many
sugar monomers linked
together
Glucose Monomer
Polymers of
Starch
monosaccharide
chains
Glycogen
Cellulose
Lipids
• Lipids are hydrophobic –”water fearing”
• Do NOT mix with water
• Includes fats, waxes, steroids, & oils
•Fats store energy,
help to insulate
the body, and
cushion and
protect organs
FAT MOLECULE
13
Types of Fatty Acids
Saturated fatty acids have the Single
Bonds in
maximum number of Carbon
hydrogens bonded to the chain
carbons (all single bonds
between carbons)
14
Triglyceride
• Monomer of lipids
• Composed of Glycerol & 3
fatty acid chains
• Glycerol forms the
“backbone” of the fat
Organic Alcohol
(-OL ending)
Nucleotide
•Two strands of
DNA join
together to form
a double helix
Base
pair
•Nucleotides form long
chains called DNA Bases
Nucleic acids
are polymers
of nucleotides Phosphate
group
Thymine (T)
Sugar
(deoxyribose)
Phosphate
Base
Sugar
Nucleotide
Bases
•Each DNA
nucleotide has one of
the following bases:
–Guanine (G)
–Thymine (T)
–Cytosine (C)
Adenine (A) Guanine (G)
RNA – Ribonucleic Acid
Nitrogenous base
•Ribose sugar has (A,G,C, or U)
an extra –OH or
hydroxyl group
Sugar (ribose)
Macromolecules
Central Dogma of Molecular Biology
Storage Transmission
medium medium
Protein Synthesis DNA
The production
Transcription
(synthesis) of Prokaryotic mRNA
polypeptide chains Cell
Translation
(proteins) Ribosome
Translation
Protein
Discovery of DNA structure
Walter Sutton discovered chromosomes were
made of DNA and Protein
However, scientists were NOT sure which one
(protein or DNA) was the actual genetic
material of the cell
Frederick Griffith in 1928 showed the DNA was
the cell’s genetic material
• Rosalind Franklin took diffraction x-ray
photographs of DNA crystals
• Watson & Crick in the 1950’s built the 1st
model of DNA
Rosalind Franklin
Discovery of DNA Structure
• Erwin Chargaff showed the amounts of the four
bases on DNA ( A,T,C,G)
• In a body or somatic cell:
A = 30.3%
T = 30.3%
G = 19.5%
C = 19.9%
• Chargaff’s rule:
– Adenine must pair with Thymine
– Guanine must pair with Cytosine
– The bases form weak hydrogen bonds
T A G C
Structure of DNA
DNA is made of subunits called nucleotides
DNA nucleotides are composed of a phosphate,
deoxyribose sugar, and a nitrogen-containing base
The 4 bases in DNA are: adenine (A), thymine (T),
guanine (G), and cytosine (C)
• Purines have single rings of carbon-nitrogen (G,
A)
• Pyrimidines have double carbon-nitrogen rings
(C, T)
• This is called complementary base pairing because
a purine is always paired with a pyrimidine
5’ to 3’ Sugars
When the DNA double helix
. unwinds, it resembles a
ladder
Anti-Parallel Strands of
The sides of the ladder are DNA
the sugar-phosphate
backbones
The rungs of the ladder are
the complementary paired
bases
The two DNA strands are
anti-parallel (they run in
opposite directions)
Steps in DNA Replication
Occurs when chromosomes
duplicate (make copies)
An exact copy of the DNA is
produced with the aid of the
enzyme DNA polymerase
Hydrogen bonds between bases
break and enzymes “unzip” the
molecule
Each old strand of nucleotides
serves as a template for each new
strand
New nucleotides move into
complementary positions are
Two New, Identical
joined by DNA polymerase DNA Strands Result
from Replication
Another View of Replication
RNA Differs from DNA
Genetic Code:
DNA contains a triplet code
Every three bases on DNA stands for ONE amino acid
Each three-letter unit on mRNA is called a codon
Most amino acids have more than one codon!
There are 20 amino acids with a possible 64 different triplets
The code is nearly universal among living organisms
35
Overview of Transcription
During transcription in the
nucleus, a segment of DNA
unwinds and unzips, and the DNA
serves as a template for mRNA
formation
RNA polymerase joins the RNA
nucleotides so that the codons in
mRNA are complementary to the
triplet code in DNA
The transfer of information in the
nucleus from a DNA molecule to
an RNA molecule
Only 1 DNA strand serves as the
template
Starts at promoter DNA (TATA
box)
Ends at terminator DNA (stop)
When complete, pre-RNA
molecule is released
RNA Polymerase
Enzyme found in the nucleus
Separates the two DNA strands by breaking the
hydrogen bonds between the bases
Then moves along one of the DNA strands and links
RNA nucleotides together
DNA
RNA Polymerase
pre-mRNA
Processing Pre-mRNA
• Also occurs in the nucleus
• Pre-mRNA made up of segments called introns & exons
• Exons code for proteins, while introns do NOT!
• Introns spliced out by splicesome-enzyme and exons re-join
• End product is a mature RNA molecule that leaves the nucleus to the
cytoplasm
pre-RNA molecule
exon intron exon intron exon
intron intron
start
codon
mRNA A U G G G C U C C A U C G G C G C A U A A
peptide bonds
Transfer RNA (tRNA)
• Made up of 75 to 80 nucleotides amino acid
long attachment site
Ribosomes
• Made of a large and small subunit
• Composed of rRNA (40%) and proteins (60%)
• Have two sites for tRNA attachment --- P and A
Ribosomes
P= Peptide site
A= Amino acid site
Large
subunit
P A
Site Site
mRNA
A U G C U A C U U C G
Small
subunit
Translation
• Synthesis of proteins in the cytoplasm
• Involves the following:
1. mRNA (codons)
2. tRNA (anticodons)
3. ribosomes
4. amino acids
• Three steps:
1. initiation: start codon (AUG)
2. elongation: amino acids linked
3. termination: stop codon (UAG, UAA, or UGA).
mRNA Codons Join the Ribosome
Large
subunit
P A
Site Site
mRNA
A U G C U A C U U C G
Small subunit
Initiation
aa2
aa1
2-tRNA
1-tRNA
G A U
anticodon U A C
hydrogen A U G C U A C U U C G A
bonds codon mRNA
Elongation
peptide bond
aa3
aa1 aa2
3-tRNA
1-tRNA 2-tRNA G A A
anticodon U A C G A U
hydrogen A U G C U A C U U C G A
bonds codon mRNA
aa1 peptide bond
aa3
aa2
1-tRNA
U A C 3-tRNA
(leaves)
2-tRNA G A A
G A U
A U G C U A C U U C G A
mRNA
aa2 aa3
4-tRNA
2-tRNA 3-tRNA G C U
G A U G A A
A U G C U A C U U C G A A C U
mRNA
peptide bonds
aa1 aa4
aa2
aa3
2-tRNA
4-tRNA
G A U
(leaves) 3-tRNA G C U
G A A
A U G C U A C U U C G A A C U
mRNA
5-tRNA
U G A
3-tRNA 4-tRNA
G A A G C U
G C U A C U U C G A A C U
mRNA
aa1 peptide bonds aa5
aa2
aa3
aa4
5-tRNA
3-tRNA U G A
G A A 4-tRNA
G C U
G C U A C U U C G A A C U
mRNA
aa1
terminator
200-tRNA
or stop
codon
A C U C A U G U U U A G
mRNA
End Product –The Protein!
• The end products of protein synthesis is a
primary structure of a protein
• A sequence of amino acid bonded together by
peptide bonds
aa5
aa3 aa4
aa2 aa199
aa1 aa200
53
Amino acids
Amino acids
Each amino acid consists of
• A carbon atom
• Amino group
• Hydrogen atom
• Carboxyl group and Side chain (R group)
Amino acids grouping
• The beginning of the protein is known as the amino-terminus and the end of the
protein is known as the carboxyl-terminus.
Proteins
• Proteins are polymers
(macromolecules) made of
monomers called amino
acids
• All proteins are made of 20
different amino acids linked
in different orders
• Proteins are used to build Arginine
• Carboxyl group of one amino acid is joined to the amino group of other, with the
loss of a molecule of water.
Protein architecture
• Primary structure (sequence of amino acids)
• Secondary structure
• Tertiary structure
• Quaternary structure
Secondary structure
Two major types
• Alpha helical regions
• Beta sheets
Other classification
• Turns
• Transmembrane protein
• Internal region
• External region
• Antigenic region
Primary Protein Structure
The primary
structure is the
specific sequence of
amino acids in a
protein
Called polypeptide
Amino Acid
68
Protein architecture
Protein Structures
• Secondary protein structures occur when protein chains
coil or fold
70
• Physical properties of protein that influence stability therefore it
determines its fold
• Rigidity of backbone
• Amino acid interaction with water (Hydropathy index for side chains)
4. Volume constraints
Residue Globular protein Membrane protein
Most – Pro
Least - Gly
Geometry
• Distance (diatomic molecule)
• Angle (triatomic molecule)
• Dihedral angle ( four atoms)
Torsion angle
Phi (φ) torsion angles around N-Cα bond and Psi (ψ) angle around
Cα-C bond
Solving protein structures
Only two kinds of techniques allow one to get atomic resolution pictures of
macromolecules.
• X-ray crystallography ( first applied in 1961) Kendrew & Perutz
• NMR spectroscopy ( first applied in 1983 )
• Structure – function
• Structure – Mechanism
• Structure – origin/evolution
• Structure based drug design
• Solving the protein folding problem
Classes of proteins
Based on structure and solubility, proteins can be grouped into three large classes
• Fibrous protein
• Globular protein
• Membrane protein
Globular proteins
• Globular proteins are classified according to the type &
arrangement of secondary structure.
• Antiparallel alpha helix proteins
• Minimum volume
• Hydrogen bonds
Native state is typically only 5 to 10 kcal/mol more stable than the unfolded
form
Protein structure stabilizing interactions
• Van der waals forces (transient, weak electrical attraction of one atom for
another )
• Hydrophobic ( clustering of non polar groups)
• Hydrogen bonding
• Covalent
Hydrophobic -8
• Isoelectric point
• Are Reusable
• End in –ase
-Sucrase
-Lactase
-Maltase
83
Why Enzymes?
Natural catalysts
b. Noncompetitive
inhibitors: Inhibitors that
do not enter the active
site, but bind to another
part of the enzyme
causing the enzyme to
change its shape, which
Substrate Noncompetitive
in turn alters the active Enzyme Inhibitor
site. active site
altered