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Chemistry

Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

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Page 1: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Chemistry

Page 2: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Session

Page 3: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Session Objectives

1. Enzymes

2. Cofactors

3. Sucrase Mechanism

4. Carboxypeptidase

5. Metabolism

6. DNA and RNA

7. Lipids

8. Hormones and Vitamins

Page 4: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Enzymes

An enzyme is a protein that acts as a catalyst for a biological reaction.

Most enzymes are specific for substrates while enzymes involved in digestion such as papain attack many substrates

Page 5: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Cofactors

In addition to the protein part, many enzymes also have a nonprotein part called a cofactor

The protein part in such an enzyme is called an apoenzyme, and the combination of apoenzyme plus cofactor is called a holoenzyme. Only holoenzymes have biological activity; neither cofactor nor apoenzyme can catalyze reactions by themselves

A cofactor can be either an inorganic ion or an organic molecule, called a coenzyme

Many coenzymes are derived from vitamins, organic molecules that are dietary requirements for metabolism and/or growth

Page 6: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Types of Enzymes by Function

Enzymes are usually grouped according to the kind of reaction they catalyze, not by their structures

Page 7: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

How Do Enzymes Work? Citrate Synthase

Citrate synthase catalyzes a mixed Claisen condensation of acetyl CoA and oxaloacetate to give citrate

Normally Claisen condensation require a strong base in an alcohol solvent but citrate synthetase operates in neutral solution

Page 8: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Sucrase Mechanism

Page 9: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Sucrase Mechanism

→→

Page 10: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Active Site of Carboxypeptidase

Page 11: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Carboxypeptidase's

Page 12: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

The Structure of Citrate Synthase

Determined by X-ray crystallography

Enzyme is very large compared to substrates, creating a complete environment for the reaction

Page 13: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Aspects of Metabolism

Metabolism.

The life process.

–Catabolism.

• Substances are broken down.

–Anabolism.

• Substances are built up.

Page 14: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Metabolism

• Lipid metabolism.

–Uptake of fats through walls of intestine.

–Glycerol converted to glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate.

–Fatty acids are oxidized by –oxidation.

• Protein metabolism.

–Stomach:

• HCl and pepsin hydrolize 10% of peptide bonds.

–Intestine:

• Trypsin and chymotrypsin cleave peptide fragments further.

Page 15: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Components of DNA and RNADNA: Deoxyribonucleic acid.

Chromosomes: Double stranded DNA rod-like structures.

Genes: Specific locations on chromasomes that code for specific traits.

RNA: Ribonucleic acid

Contains ribose instead of deoxyribose.

Generally single stranded.

Page 16: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

DNA Double Helix

Page 17: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

RNA Single Strand

Page 18: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Focus On Protein Synthesis and the Genetic Code

The genetic code

How triplets of the four nucleotides unambiguously specify 20 amino acids, making it possible to translate information from a nucleotide chain to a sequence of amino acids.

Page 19: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Transcription

How RNA polymerase, guided by base

pairing, synthesizes a single-stranded

mRNA copy of a gene’s DNA template

Page 20: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Protein Synthesis(Translation)

Translation

How base pairing between mRNA and tRNAs directs the assembly of a polypeptide on the ribosome

Page 21: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

DNA Replication

Page 22: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Click here

Page 23: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Lipids

Page 24: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Some Common Fatty Acids

Page 25: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Saponification

Page 26: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Fats and Oils

Both are triglycerides.

–Differ in the nature of the acid components attached.

– Both are colorless, odorless and tasteless

– Flavors and aromas come from organic impurites.

Fats.

–Predominantly saturated fatty acids.

–Normally solid at room temperature

Oils.

–Predominantly unsaturated fatty acids.

–Liquids at room temperature.

Page 27: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Butter

Page 28: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

“Calorie-Free” Fats

Page 29: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Phospholipids

Page 30: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Phospholipids

Page 31: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Hormones

Hormones are molecules that transfer information from one group of cells to a distant tissue or organ.

They are produced by various endocrine glands.

They are classified on the basis of their structure or site of activity in the cell.

Adrenal cortical horm ones(corticodes)

Estrogen Progestrone

Fem ale sex hom ones Male sex horm ones(Androgens)

Sex horm ones

Stero ids

Peptide horm ones(insulin , g lucagon)

Am ino acid derivatives(thyroidal hormones)

Miscellaneous(Prostaglandins, cyokin ins)

Non-Stero ids

Hormones

Page 32: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Vitamins

They are essential dietary factors required by an organism in minute quantities.

They are essential for life and their absence causes deficiency diseases.

Vitamins catalyze biological reactions in very low concentration

Vitamins are designated A,B,C,D,etc. in order of their discovery. Subgroup vitamins are designated by number subscript e.g. B1,B2,B6,B12

Classification:A.Fat solubleB.Water soluble

Page 33: Chemistry. Session Session Objectives 1.Enzymes 2.Cofactors 3.Sucrase Mechanism 4.Carboxypeptidase 5.Metabolism 6.DNA and RNA 7.Lipids 8.Hormones and

Thank you