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Nucleic Acids. Nucleic Acids. Nucleotides = monomers of DNA/RNA (hereditary info) Polynucleotides = polymers of nucleotides Nitrogenous base Pyrimidines = Single Carbon ring Cytosine, Thymine and Uracil (C,T,U) Purines = Double Carbon ring Adenine and Guanine (A,G)
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Nucleic Acids • Nucleotides = monomers of DNA/RNA (hereditary info) • Polynucleotides = polymers of nucleotides • Nitrogenous base • Pyrimidines = Single Carbon ring Cytosine, Thymine and Uracil (C,T,U) • Purines = Double Carbon ring Adenine and Guanine (A,G) • Pentose (5-Carbon) sugar • Ribose (RNA) • Deoxyribose (DNA) (lacks one Oxygen) • Phosphate group biologyjunction.com
Nucleic Acids • DNA = Double polynucleotide chain – helix structure. • Blueprints for all the actions of a cell; stays in nucleus. • Chromosome = Single long DNA molecule (one double helix) each containing hundreds of genes. • Humans = 23 chromosome pairs. • Genome = Sum of all the genes in an organism. • Humans = 24,000 genes
Nucleic Acids • Structure of DNA • 2 sugar-phosphate backbones are anti-parallel (divided highway) • Held together by Hydrogen bonds between the paired bases. familyhistory101.com
Complimentary strands = copying a strand of DNA means you are transmitting identical information on to daughter cells.
The Central Dogma • DNA is the master copy • RNA is the message carrier • Proteins are the product DNA RNA Protein
Proteins • Protein function… • Structural support • Storage (nutrients) • Transport • Cellular communications (EX: leptin) • Movement (motor proteins) • Defense against foreign substances (antibodies) • Catalyze chemical reactions (enzymes!)
Proteins • Enzymes are a type of protein that are a biological catalyst • Catalysts = Speed up chemical reactions by lowering the activation energy (energy needed to start reaction) • Unchanged in process • Get recycled thousands upon thousands of times… in a single second • Ability to catalyze reactions depends on the enzyme’s shape
Proteins • Protein structure… • Most structurally sophisticated molecules known • Thousands of different shapes • Composed of 1 or more polypeptides • Each type of protein has a unique conformation, or 3-D shape
Proteins • Amino acids = organic monomers of polypeptides • Alpha Carbon • Amino group • Carboxyl group • Hydrogen atom • Side chain (R group) aloeveraibs.com
Proteins • Polypeptides form when amino acids link together • Carboxyl group of one AA bonds to the amino end of another • Dehydration reaction peptide bond R R R R
Proteins • Side chains (R groups) • 20 different side chains, so 20 different amino acids. • Basis of thousands of types of proteins • The physical and chemical properties of the side chain determine the unique character of the amino acid. • Polar uncharged, polar acidic or polar basic • Nonpolar
Examples of amino acids Nonpolar Polar Acidic Polar Polar Basic
Essential Amino Acids • Essential amino acidsAmino acids the body is unable to synthesize on its own. • Phenylalanine • Valine • Threonine • Tryptophan • Isoleucine • Methionine • Leucine • Lysine • Histidine • Note: Cysteine, tyrosine & arginine are required by infants and growing children. survivaltopics.com
Proteins • 4 levels of protein structure • Primary structure = Unique sequence of amino acids • Based on covalent bonds between amino acids • NOT RANDOM specified in DNA sequence of nucleotides
Proteins • 4 levels of protein structure • Secondary structure = Coils and folds that occur mostly due to hydrogen bonding between the amino and carboxyl groups • Not due to bonds between side chains wikipedia.org sheet helix
Beta sheets dominate in fibrous proteins, such as a spider’s web silk Reinforcement of the H bonds makes silk stronger than steel of the same weight dearbornschools.org
Proteins • 4 levels of protein structure • Tertiary structure = 3-dimensional structure of a polypeptide • Stabilized by lots of weak bondsand the hydrophobic/hydrophilicinteractions of the side chains.
Proteins • 4 levels of protein structure • Quaternary structure = Multiple polypeptide subunits (2+) • Hemoglobin has four subunits
Proteins • Side chains interact with each other to form an active site, which is where other molecules can bind to the protein. Ligand = any ion or molecule that bonds to the active site. Lock-and-key model = refers to the specificity of the bonding. student.biology.arizona.edu
Proteins • Shape is EVERYTHING when it comes to protein • Mutations can cause important changes in protein structure and therefore their function. • Glutamic acid Valine in hemoglobincauses the disease sickle cell anemia
Proteins • The environment can affect protein shape • Denatured = Tertiary structure is destroyed • Heat • Organic solvents (ethanol) • Acids (acetic acid) • pH changes • Etc. wikipedia.org