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BIOCHEMISTRY…
The Chemistry of Life
Bio Chemistry
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Bio= life
Chemistry = how things interact
Biochemistry= the branch of science in which
you study the chemical and physical processes
that occur in an organism.
Branches of Biochemistry
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1. Animal Biochemistry
- studies the chemical composition and chemical reaction
that occurs in the animal body
- covers studying animal metabolism, diseases, functions
of the cell and further generation.
2. Blood Biochemistry
- studies the structure and function of blood in living
organisms
Branches of Biochemistry
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3. Cell Biology
- deals with the structure and function of the cell
concerned with a life cycle, physiological properties
, and signaling pathway
4. Enzymology
- studies the kinetics, structures and functions of
the enzymes
5. Genetics
- studies the genes, variation, and heredity
information of living organisms
Branches of Biochemistry
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6. Immunology
- studies the immune system in a
living organism
7. Medical Biochemistry
- studies the chemical composition
and structure of human beings
Branches of Biochemistry
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8. Molecular Biology
- deals with structure and function of macromolecules that
essential for life like proteins and nucleic acid
- study of the biology on a molecular level including the structure,
function, and makeup of biologically important molecules such
as DNA, RNA, and proteins
9. Plant Biochemistry
- studies the structure, functions and chemical reaction in the
plants
History of Biochemistry
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Please watch this video for the history of Biochemistry
Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RpDx0DVJmeo
Importance of Biochemistry to Society
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1. Agriculture
helps to control diseases in a field like in the
wheat field and rice field
pesticide and medicines are used in the field
helps to control diseases
Importance of Biochemistry to Society
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2. Health and Medicine
Biochemistry used in medical sciences helps to
students to understand how chemical procedure
occur like a citric acid cycle, Krebs cycle, and
many more cycles occurred in the body.
Importance of Biochemistry to Society
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3. Research and Laboratories
Genes, functions of genes, the formation of protein,
control of diseases by Genetic engineering, the study of
RNA, DNA all are the focus point in the research area
In Lab Biochemistry- diagnosis of many diseases like HCV
, HBV and many more test are performed
Importance of Biochemistry to Society
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4. Food Science and Industries
Biochemistry improves the quality of the
products which suit to the nutritional needs of the
people
Chemical Composition of the Living Organisms
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1. Carbohydrates
2. Lipids
3. Proteins
4. Nucleic Acids
5. Acid and Bases
6. Water
7. Salts
Why we need carbohydrates?
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Main sources of energy
Go food items
Why lipids are important to living
organisms…
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Long term storage of energy
Fat is the storage mechanism
Formation of cell membranes
Nerves and brain tissue
Phospholipids and cholesterol
Phospholipids have hydrophobic heads and
hydrophilic tails
Hormones
Made of steroids
What are the significance of proteins
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Catalysis – enzymes
Structural – keratin
Transport – hemoglobin
Toxins – rattle snake venom, ricin
Contractile function – actin, myosin
Hormones – insulin
Storage Proteins – seeds and eggs
Defensive proteins – antibodies
Why nucleic acids are important to living
things…
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DNA
Blueprint for life
Our genes
RNA
Translates DNA to make PROTEINS
Chemical Reactions
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Chemical reactions form or break bonds between atoms or
molecules
In biological systems, chemical reactions are accelerated by
enzymes
Atoms or molecules entering a chemical reaction are called
reactants; those leaving a reaction are products
Chemical Equations
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An arrow shows the direction of the chemical reaction;
reactants on the left, products on the right
Chemical reactions written in balanced form (number of
each type of atom is the same on the left as on the right)
are known as chemical equations
Example: Overall reaction of photosynthesis:
6 CO2 + 6 H2O → C6H12O6 + 6 O2
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
Chemical Reactions in the living organisms
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Examples
1. Respiration
C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → 6 CO2 + 6 H2O
2. Photosynthesis
6 CO2 + 6 H2O → C6H12O6 + 6 O2
3. Lactic Acid Fermentation
C6H12O6 + 6 O2 → CO2 + Lactic acid + 2 ATP
Properties of Water
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In water, an oxygen atom forms polar covalent bonds with two
hydrogen atoms – the electrons are attracted much more
strongly to the oxygen nucleus than to the hydrogen nuclei
The water molecule is asymmetric – the oxygen atom is
located on one side (δ-) and hydrogen atoms on the other (δ+)
– making the water molecule strongly polar
The polar nature of water is the basis of its ability to adhere to
ions and weaken their attractions
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
Polarity in the Water Molecule
δ-
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H H
δ+ δ+
104.5o
Hydrogen Bonds and Properties of Water
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Hydrogen bonds between water molecules produce a
water lattice that affects properties of density, heat
absorption, cohesion, and surface tension
Polarity of water molecules contributes to formation of
distinct polar and nonpolar environments critical to cell
organization
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
Hydrogen Bonds and Properties of Water
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Water is a solvent for charged or polar molecules
Water molecules separate into hydrogen and
hydroxyl ions
A Lattice of Hydrogen Bonds
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Liquid water forms a water lattice – each water
molecule constantly breaks and reforms hydrogen-
bonds with its neighbors (average 3.4 bonds)
An ice lattice is a rigid, crystalline structure in which
each water molecule forms four hydrogen bonds, which
spaces the water molecules farther apart than the water
lattice
Ice is about 10% less dense than liquid water, an unusual
property that makes ice float – water reaches its
greatest density at a temperature of 4°C
Hydrogen Bond Lattices
A. Hydrogen-bond B. Hydrogen-bond
lattice of liquid lattice of ice
water
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
Water and Temperature
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The hydrogen-bond lattice of liquid water retards the escape
of individual water molecules as water is heated
Water remains liquid in a wide temperature range (0°C to 100
°C) – a large amount of heat must be added to break enough
hydrogen bonds to make water boil
Water has a relatively high specific heat – it can absorb or
release relatively large quantities of heat energy without
undergoing extreme changes in temperature
Specific Heat and Calories
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Specific heat
Amount of heat energy required to increase the
temperature of a given quantity of water
Measured in calories
calorie (or small calorie)
Heat energy required to raise 1 g of water by 1°C
Calorie (with a capital C)
A kilocalorie (kcal) or 1,000 calories
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
Heat of Vaporization
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A large amount of heat (586 calories per gram) must be
added to give water molecules enough energy of motion to
break loose from liquid water and form a gas
This required heat, known as heat of vaporization, allows
humans and many other organisms to cool off when hot
Surface Tension
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Water molecules at surfaces facing air can form
hydrogen bonds with water molecules beside and below
them, but not on the sides that face the air
This unbalanced bonding places the surface water
molecules under tension (surface tension) making them
more resistant to separation than the underlying water
molecules
Surface tension causes water to form water droplets,
and can support small insects and other objects
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
Creation of Surface Tension
A. Creation of surface tension by unbalanced hydrogen bonding
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Air Water surface H2O
Effects of Surface Tension
B. Spider supported by water’s surface tension
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Water Ionization and Acids, Bases, and Buffers
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Water dissociates into positively charged hydrogen ions
(H+ or protons) and negative hydroxide ions (OH-)
H2O ↔ H + OH–
The reaction is reversible
In pure water, concentrations of H+ and OH– are equal
Acids and Bases
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Acids are proton donors that release H+ (and anions)
when they are dissolved in water, increasing the H+
concentration
Example: Hydrochloric acid (HCl) dissociates into H+ and
Cl– when dissolved in water (HCl ↔ H+ + Cl– )
Bases are proton acceptors that reduce the H+
concentration of a solution; most release a hydroxide
ion (OH–) and a cation
Example: NaOH → Na+ + OH– ; excess OH– combines with
H+ to produce water (OH– + H+ → H2O)
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
Acids and Bases (cont.)
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Some bases do not dissociate to produce hydroxide ions
directly
Example: Ammonia directly accepts a proton from water
to produce an ammonium ion and releasing a hydroxide
ion:
NH3 + H2O → NH4 + OH–
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
pH
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The concentration of H+ ions in a water solution, compared with
the concentration of OH– ions, determines the acidity of the
solution
Acidity is measured using the pH scale – ranging from 0 to 14 –
based on logarithms of the number of H+ ions in solution:
pH = –log10[H+]
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
pH
Hydrochloric acid (HCl) 0
The pH Scale
Gastric fluid (1.0–3.0) 1
Lemon juice, cola drinks, some acid rain 2
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Vinegar, wine, beer, oranges 3
Tomatoes 4
Bananas
Black coffee
Bread 5
Typical rainwater
Urine (5.0–7.0) 6
Milk (6.6)
Pure water [H+] = [OH–] 7
Blood (7.3–7.5)
Egg white (8.0) 8
Seawater (7.8–8.3)
Baking soda
Phosphate detergents, bleach, antacids 9
Soapy solutions, milk of magnesia 10
Household ammonia (10.5–11.9) 11
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Hair remover
Oven cleaner 13
Sodium hydroxide (NaOH) 14
Buffers
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Buffers are substances that compensate for pH changes by
absorbing or releasing H+
When H+ ions are released in excess, buffers combine with
them and remove them from the solution; if the
concentration of H+ decreases greatly, buffers release
additional H+
Most buffers are weak acids or bases that dissociate
reversibly in water solutions to release or absorb H+ or OH–
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014
Carbonic Acid -
Bicarbonate Buffer System
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A carbonic acid–bicarbonate buffer system buffers blood pH
In a reversible reaction, carbonic acid (H2CO3), a weak acid,
dissociates into bicarbonate ions (HCO3) and H+:
H2CO3 ↔ HCO3– + H+
Each buffer has a specific range of greatest buffering
capacity – interestingly, normal blood pH (7.4) is outside the
region of greatest buffering capacity for this buffer system
Source: Cell Biology, Cengage Learning 2014