1 / 25

Better Living Through Biochemistry

Better Living Through Biochemistry. figuring it all out from the bottom up. Finding a Date in Paris. First must deal with language barrier! Review hospital records, decide brain necessary for language. Dissect brain, note it has many neurons. Neurons conduct electricity? What the @#$*?!!

jana
Download Presentation

Better Living Through Biochemistry

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Better Living Through Biochemistry figuring it all out from the bottom up

  2. Finding a Date in Paris • First must deal with language barrier! • Review hospital records, decide brain necessary for language. • Dissect brain, note it has many neurons. • Neurons conduct electricity? What the @#$*?!! • Possibly result of weird ‘channeling’ molecules in membranes. • Molecules are made of atoms sharing electrons. • Electrons move according to Schrodinger’s equation!

  3. To get a date in Paris just need to solve Schrodinger’s Equations!!!

  4. 3 Years and 3,000,000 CPU Hours Later… • Realize Schrodinger’s equation is hard to solve past the hydrogen atom. • It’s not an entire waste though, simple Schrodinger solutions help explain tetrahedral arrangement of covalent bonds around a carbon atom. • Hmm, perhaps *chemistry*, not physics is the key to finding a date in Paris!

  5. Schrodinger’s Tetrahedrons

  6. Basic Chemistry • For cool quantum reasons, atoms like having 8 electrons in their ‘valence’ shells. • Elements in columns of the periodic table have the same # of valence electrons. • Elements with 5 or more valance electrons will tend to grab electrons from elements with 3 or less. (Having 0 electrons in outer shell is also quantumly stable.) • Carbon has 4 valance electrons, can go either way.

  7. Chemical Bonds • Electrons can transferred completely from one atom to another. This creates a pair of ions – one negatively and one positively charged. Opposite charges attract leading to an ‘ionic’ bond. • Electrons can also be shared by both atoms, leading to a ‘covalent’ bond. Covalent bonds can involve 1, 2, or 3 electrons.

  8. Electronegativity & Covalent Bonds • Electrons are shared in a covalent bond, but not necessarily shared equally. • Water is made up of oxygen bonded covalently to two hydrogens. • Oxygen (6 valance electrons wanting 8) tends to get most of electrons rather than hydrogen (1 valance electron wanting 0) • The H-O bond is ‘polar.’ There is a fractional negative charge on the oxygen, a fractional positive charge on the hydrogen.

  9. Polarity of Common Bonds • H-O is the most polar bond that is common in biology. • H-N bond is also quite polar. • C=O bond is fairly polar. • H-S bond is somewhat polar. • S-C bond not very polar • C-H bond is almost entirely non-polar. • C-C bond is entirely non-polar.

  10. Weak Interactions: Polar Bonds • Polar Bond/Ion attraction. Based on charge. Leads to salt dissolving readily in water. H+-O- … Na+ • Polar Bond/Polar Bond – also charge based C+= O- … C+= O- • Hydrogen Bonds – polar bond/polar bond where hydrogen is practically shared. Has a semi-covalent aspect. Like covalent bonds has geometrical constraints H+ - O-…H+-O-~ 5% the strength of a covalent bond.

  11. A Very Important Set of Hydrogen Bonds

  12. The Secret of Salad Dressing • Water with H-O-H mixes well with itself, lots of opportunity for hydrogen bonding. • Water will prefer sticking to itself to mixing with C-H (hydrocarbon) materials leading to so called ‘hydrophobic forces’ that separate oils and waters. • Hydrophobic forces involve entropy as well as energy.

  13. Weak Interactions: Van Der Waals Forces Orbits of electrons synchronize so that electrons in neighboring molecules stay as far away from each other as possible: - - + + This leads to a very weak very short range attraction perhaps 1% as strong as a covalent bond.

  14. Velcro Chemistry • Large molecules shaped to fit well against each other can stick quite tightly from large numbers of weak interactions. This can even help catalyze reactions.

  15. Basic Classes of Biochemicals • Lipids: mostly hydrocarbons. Form cell membranes and used for energy storage. • Carbohydrates: sugar monomers can be joined to form starch and cellulose. • Nucleic acids: formed from nucleotide monomers. DNA & RNA store and circulate information primarily. • Proteins: formed from amino acid monomers. Diverse in shape and function. Basis of most enzymes.

  16. Lipids • Triacylglycerides: used for energy storage. The $100.00 bills of the cell. Three long hydrocarbon chains joined to glycerol. • Phospholipids: Two long hydrocarbon chains joined to a phosphate (charged) head group. The main component of membranes. • Sterols: Many-ringed non-polar structures. Cholesterol strengthens cell membranes. Testosterone & estrogen are also sterols.

  17. Carbohydrates • Most composed of 6-carbon sugars, which are produced during photosynthesis. Glucose is the $20 bill of the cell. Mostly is a semi-rigid ring. • Table sugar is glucose and fructose joined.(Fructose converts to glucose easily.) • Starch is glucose joined together in a branched form that is easily converted back to glucose. • Cellulose is glucose joined together in a straight form that is relatively hard to convert back to glucose. • Fancy sugars decorate outside of animal cells.

  18. Nucleic Acids • Nucleic acids are synthesized from nucleotide-tri-phosphates (NTPs). • ATP is an aromatic base (A) linked to a five carbon sugar (ribose) and three phosphates (PO4-) • ATP is the dollar bill of the cell. The reaction ATP -> ADP directly powers most of cell. • dATP is like ATP but with one oxygen removed from the ribose, which makes it more stable. • RNA is made from NTPs, DNA from dNTPs

  19. Proteins • Proteins are made up of 20 different amino acids. • All amino acids share common central structure which forms backbone of proteins. • Side chains of amino acids can be non-polar, polar, charged, and aromatic. • Proteins may fold into a specific shape or remain fairly wiggly. • Cell often adds phosphates to OH groups on side chains to modulate shape and activity

  20. The Cell Membrane

  21. How A Nerve Cell Fires • Nerve cell memberne is a lipid bilayer with embedded proteins. • ATP-powered ion pumps keep outside of membrane + charged, inside – charged. • Channels in membrane can let + ions pass through. Channels normally closed. • Neurotransmitter gated channels collapse (‘depolarize’) voltage gradient. • Voltage gated channels propagate depolarization in a wave down axon.

  22. Conclusion • Careful study of biochemistry and macromolecules enables bottom up understanding of how a nerve works. • Bottom up understanding of how French works should not be much harder. • It’s very likely the astute biochemist will get laid *next* time they go to Paris.

More Related