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Biochemistry the
chemistry of
life, a bridge between
biology and
chemistry that studies how
complex
chemical reactions give rise
to life. It is a hybrid branch of
chemistry which specialises in the
chemical processes in living
organisms. This article only
discusses terrestrial biochemistry
(carbon-
and
water-based), as all the life
forms we know are on
Earth. Since life forms alive
today are believed to have
descended from the same
common ancestor, they
naturally have similar
biochemistries, even for matters
which would appear to be
essentially arbitrary, such as the
genetic code or
handedness of various
biomolecules. It is unknown
whether alternate biochemistries
are possible or practical.
Biochemistry is the study of
the structure and function of
cellular components, such as
proteins,
carbohydrates,
lipids,
nucleic acids, and other
biomolecules.
Chemical biology aims to
answer many questions arising from
biochemistry by using tools
developed within
synthetic chemistry.
Although there is a vast number
of different biomolecules, they
tend to be composed of the same
repeating subunits (called
monomers), in different
orders. Each class of biomolecules
has a different set of subunits.
Recently, biochemistry has focused
more specifically on the chemistry
of
enzyme-catalyzed
reactions, and on the properties
of proteins.
The biochemistry of
cell metabolism and the
endocrine system has been
extensively described. Other areas
of biochemistry include the
genetic code (DNA,
RNA),
protein synthesis,
cell membrane transport, and
signal transduction.
Development of biochemistry
Originally, it was generally
believed that life was not subject
to the laws of science the way
nonlife was. It was thought that
only living beings could produce
the molecules of life (from other,
previously existing biomolecules).
Then, in
1828,
Friedrich Wöhler published a
paper about the synthesis of
urea, proving that
organic compounds can be
created artificially. The dawn of
biochemistry may have been the
discovery of the first
enzyme,
diastase, in
1833 by
Anselme Payen. It is generally
accepted that the term
biochemistry was coined in
1903 by Carl Neuber, a German
chemist. Since then,
biochemistry has advanced,
especially since the mid-20th
century, with the development
of new techniques such as
chromatography,
X-ray diffraction,
NMR,
radioisotopic labelling,
electron microscopy and
molecular dynamics
simulations. These techniques
allowed for the discovery and
detailed analysis of many
molecules and
metabolic pathways of the
cell, such as
glycolysis and the
Krebs cycle (citric acid
cycle).
Today, the findings of
biochemistry are used in many
areas, from
genetics to
molecular biology and from
agriculture to
medicine. The first
application of biochemistry was
probably the making of
bread using
yeast, about 5000 years ago.
Carbohydrates
- Main articles:
Carbohydrate,
and
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Sucrose: ordinary table
sugar and probably the most
familiar carbohydrate.
The function of carbohydrates
includes energy storage and
providing structure.
Sugars are carbohydrates,
although there are carbohydrates
that are not sugars. There are
more carbohydrates on Earth than
any other type of biomolecule. The
simplest type of carbohydrate is a
monosaccharide, which among
other properties contains
carbon,
hydrogen, and
oxygen in a ratio 1:2:1
(generalized formula CnH2nOn,
where n is at least 3).
Glucose, one of the most
important carboyhydrates, is an
example of a monosaccharide. So is
fructose, the sugar that gives
fruits their sweet taste.
Two monosaccharides can be
joined together using
dehydration synthesis, in
which a hydrogen atom is removed
from the end of one molecule and a
hydroxyl group (—OH) is
removed from the other; the
remaining residues are then
attached at the sites from which
the atoms were removed. The H—OH
or H2O is then released
as a molecule of
water, hence the term
dehydration. The new molecule,
consisting of two monosaccharides,
is called a
disaccharide and is
conjoined together by a glycosidic
or ether bond. The reverse
reaction can also occur, using a
molecule of water to split up a
disaccharide and break the
glycosidic bond; this is termed
hydrolysis. The most
well-known disaccharide is
sucrose, ordinary sugar (in
scientific contexts, called
table sugar or cane sugar
to differentiate it from other
sugars). Sucrose consists of a
glucose molecule and a fructose
molecule joined together. Another
important disaccharide is
lactose, consisting of a
glucose molecule and a
galactose molecule. As most
humans age, the production of
lactase, the enzyme that
hydrolyzes lactose back into
glucose and galactose, typically
decreases. This results in
lactase deficiency, also
called lactose intolerance.
When a few (around three to
six) monosaccharides are joined
together, it is called an
oligosaccharide (oligo-
meaning "few"). These molecules
tend to be used as markers and
signals, as well as having some
other uses.
Many monosaccharides joined
together make a
polysaccharide. They can be
joined together in one long linear
chain, or they may be branched.
Two of the most common
polysaccharides are
cellulose and
glycogen, both consisting of
repeating
glucose
monomers. Cellulose is made by
plants and is an important
structural component of their
cell walls.
Humans can neither manufacture
nor digest it. Glycogen, on the
other hand, is an
animal carbohydrate; humans
use it as a form of energy
storage.
Image:Glycolysis10steps.gif
Glucose is the major energy source
in most life forms; a number of
catabolic pathways converge on
glucose. For instance,
polysaccharides are broken down
into their monomers (glycogen
phosphorylase removes glucose
residues from glycogen).
Disaccharides like
lactose or
sucrose are cleaved into their
two component monosaccharides.
Glucose is metabolized by a very
important and ancient ten-step
pathway called
glycolysis, the net result of
which is to break down one
molecule of glucose into two
molecules of
pyruvate; this also produces a
net two molecules of
ATP, the energy currency of
cells, along with two reducing
equivalents in the form of
converting
NAD to
NADH. This does not require
oxygen; if no oxygen is available
(or the cell cannot use oxygen),
the
NAD is restored by converting
the pyruvate to
lactate (in humans, for
instance) or to
ethanol in
yeast. Other monosaccharides
like galactose and fructose can be
converted into intermediates of
the glycolytic pathway. In
aerobic cells with sufficient
oxygen, like most human cells, the
pyruvate can be further
metabolized. It is irreversibly
converted to
acetyl-CoA, giving off one
carbon atom as the waste product
carbon dioxide, generating
another molecule of ATP, and
generating another reducing
equivalent as
NADH. The two molecules
acetyl-CoA (from one molecule of
glucose) then enter the
citric acid cycle, producing
two more molecules of ATP, six
more
NADH molecules and two of a
related molecule
FADH2, and
releasing the remaining carbon
atoms as carbon dioxide. The
reduced NADH and FADH2
then enter the
electron transport system,
where the electrons are
transferred to a molecule of
oxygen, producing water, and
the original NAD+ and
FAD are regenerated. This is why
humans breath in oxygen and breath
out carbon dioxide. The energy in
transferring the electrons from
high-energy states in NADH and
FADH2 is used to
generate an additional 28
molecules of ATP (only two had
been produced in glycolysis), for
a total of 32 molecules of ATP. It
is clear that using oxygen to
completely oxidize glucose
provides an organism with far
greater energy, and it is why
complex life appeared only after
Earth's atmosphere accumulated
large amounts of oxygen.
In
vertebrates, vigorously
contracting
skeletal muscle (during
weightlifting or sprinting, for
example) does not receive enough
oxygen to meet the energy demand,
and so it shifts to
anaerobic metabolism,
converting glucose to lactate
(lactic acid). The
liver can regenerate the
glucose, using a process called
gluconeogenesis. This process
is not quite the opposite of
glycolysis, and actually requires
three times the amount of energy
gained from glycolysis (six
molecules of ATP are used,
compared to the two gained in
glycolysis). Analogous to the
above reactions, the glucose
produced can then undergo
glycolysis in tissues that need
energy, be stored as glycogen (or
starch in plants), or be converted
to other monosaccharides or joined
into di- or oligosaccharides.
Proteins
- Main articles:
Protein,
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A schematic of
hemoglobin. The ribbon
parts represent the protein
globin; the four green
parts are the
heme groups.
Like carbohydrates, some
proteins perform largely
structural roles. For instance,
movements of the proteins
actin and
myosin ultimately are
responsible for the contraction of
skeletal muscle. One property many
proteins have is that they
specifically bind to a certain
molecule or class of
molecules—they may be extremely
selective in what they bind.
Antibodies are an example of
proteins that attach to one
specific type of molecule. In
fact, the
enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay
(ELISA), which uses antibodies, is
currently one of the most
sensitive tests modern medicine
uses to detect various
biomolecules. Probably the most
important proteins, however, are
the
enzymes. These amazing
molecules recognize specific
reactant molecules called
substrates; they then
catalyze the reaction between
them. By lowering the
activation energy, the enzyme
speeds up that reaction by a rate
of 1011 or more: a
reaction that would normally take
over 3,000 years to complete
spontaneously might take less than
a second with an enzyme. The
enzyme itself is not used up in
the process, and is free to
catalyze the same reaction with a
new set of substrates. Using
various modifiers, the activity of
the enzyme can be regulated,
enabling control of the
biochemistry of the cell as a
whole.
In essence, proteins are chains
of
amino acids. An amino acid
consists of a carbon atom bound to
four groups. One is an
amino group, —NH2,
and one is a
carboxylic acid group, —COOH
(although these exist as —NH3+
and —COO− under
physiologic conditions). The third
is a simple
hydrogen atom. The fourth is
commonly denoted "—R" and is
different for each amino acid.
There are twenty standard amino
acids. Some of these have
functions by themselves or in a
modified form; for instance,
glutamate functions as an
important
neurotransmitter.
Generic amino acids (1)
in neutral form, (2) as they
exist physiologically, and
(3) joined together as a
dipeptide.
Amino acids can be joined
together via a
peptide bond. In this
dehydration synthesis, a water
molecule is removed and the
peptide bond connects the nitrogen
of one amino acid's amino group to
the carbon of the other's
carboxylic acid group. The
resulting molecule is called a
dipeptide, and short
stretches of amino acids (usually,
fewer than around thirty) are
called
peptides or polypeptides.
Longer stretches merit the title
proteins. As an example,
the imporant blood
serum protein
albumin contains 585 amino
acid residues.
The structure of proteins is
traditionally described in a
hierarchy of four levels. The
primary structure of a protein
simply consists of its linear
sequence of amino acids; for
instance, "alanine-glycine-tryptophan-serine-glutamate-asparagine-glycine-lysine-...".
Secondary structure is
concerned with local morphology.
Some combinations of amino acids
will tend to curl up in a coil
called an
α-helix; some of these can be
seen in the hemoglobin schematic
above.
Tertiary structure is the
entire three-dimensional shape of
the protein. This shape is
determined by the sequence of
amino acids. In fact, a single
change can change the entire
structure. The β chain of
hemoglobin contains 146 amino acid
residues; substitution of the
glutamate residue at position
6 with a
valine residue changes the
behavior of hemoglobin so much
that it results in
sickle-cell disease. Finally
quaternary structure is
concerned with the structure of a
protein with multiple peptide
subunits, like hemoglobin with its
four subunits. Not all proteins
have more than one subunit.
Ingested proteins are usually
broken up into single amino acids
or dipeptides in the
small intestine, and then
absorbed. They can then be joined
together to make new proteins.
Intermediate products of
glycolysis, the citric acid cycle,
and the
pentose phosphate pathway can
be used to make all twenty amino
acids, and most bacteria and
plants possess all the necessary
enzymes to synthesize them. Humans
and other mammals, however, can
only synthesize half of them. They
cannot synthesize
isoleucine,
leucine,
lysine,
methionine,
phenylalanine,
threonine,
tryptophan, and
valine. These are the
essential amino acids, since
it is essential to ingest them.
Mammals do possess the enzymes to
synthesize
alanine,
asparagine,
aspartate,
cysteine,
glutamate,
glutamine,
glycine,
proline,
serine, and
tyrosine, the nonessential
amino acids. While they can
synthesize
arginine and
histidine, they cannot produce
it in sufficient amounts for
young, growing animals, and so
these are often considered
essential amino acids.
If the amino group is removed
from an amino acid, it leaves
behind a carbon skeleton called an
α-keto
acid. Enzymes called
transaminases can easily
transfer the amino group from one
amino acid (making it an α-keto
acid) to another α-keto acid
(making it an amino acid). This is
important in the biosynthesis of
amino acids, as for many of the
pathways, intermediates from other
biochemical pathways are converted
to the α-keto acid skeleton, and
then an amino group is added,
often via
transamination. The amino
acids may then be linked together
to make a protein.
A similar process is used to
break down proteins. It is first
hydrolyzed into its component
amino acids. Free
ammonia (NH3,
existing as the
ammonium ion NH4+)
in blood) is toxic to life forms.
A suitable method for excreting it
must therefore exist. Different
strategies have evolved in
different animals, depending on
the animals' needs.
Unicellular organisms, of
course, simply release the ammonia
into the environment. Similarly,
bony fish can release the
ammonia into the water where it is
quickly diluted. In general,
mammals convert the ammonia into
urea, via the
urea cycle.
Lipids
- Main articles:
Lipid,
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The term lipid comprises a
diverse range of
molecules and to some extent
is a catchall for relatively
water-insoluble or
nonpolar compounds of
biological origin, including
waxes,
fatty acids, fatty-acid
derived phospholipids,
sphingolipids, glycolipids and
terpenoids, such as retinoids and
steroids. Some lipids are
linear
aliphatic molecules, while
others have ring structures. Some
are
aromatic, while others are
not. Some are flexible, while
others are rigid.
Most lipids have some
polar character in addition to
being largely nonpolar. Generally,
the bulk of their structure is
nonpolar or
hydrophobic ("water-fearing"),
meaning that it does not interact
well with polar solvents like
water. Another part of their
structure is polar or
hydrophilic ("water-loving")
and will tend to associate with
polar solvents like water. This
makes them
amphiphilic molecules (having
both hydrophobic and hydrophilic
portions). In the case of
cholesterol, the polar group
is a mere -OH (hydroxyl
or alcohol). In the case of
phospholipids, the polar groups
are considerably larger and more
polar, as described below.
Nucleic acids
- Main articles:
Nucleic acid,
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A nucleic acid is a complex,
high-molecular-weight
biochemical
macromolecule composed of
nucleotide chains that convey
genetic information. The most
common nucleic acids are
deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA)
and ribonucleic acid (RNA).
Nucleic acids are found in all
living
cells and viruses.
Nucleic acid, so called because
of its prevalence in cellular
nuclei, is the generic name of
family of
biopolymers. The
monomers are called
nucleotides, and each consists
of three components: a nitrogenous
heterocyclic
base (either a
purine or a
pyrimidine), a
pentose
sugar, and a
phosphate group. Different
nucleic acid types differ in the
specific sugar found in their
chain (e.g. DNA or
deoxyribonucleic acid contains 2-deoxyriboses).
Also, the nitrogenous bases
possible in the two nucleic acids
are different:
adenine,
cytosine, and
guanine are possible in both
RNA and DNA, while
thymine is possible only in
DNA and
uracil is possible only in
RNA.
Relationship to other
"molecular-scale" biological
sciences
Schematic relationship
between biochemistry,
genetics and molecular
biology
Researchers in biochemistry use
specific techniques native to
biochemistry, but increasingly
combine these with techniques and
ideas from
genetics,
molecular biology and
biophysics. There is not a
hard-line between these
disciplines as there once was. The
following figure is a schematic
that depicts one possible view of
the relationship between the
fields:
- Biochemistry is the
study of the chemical substances
and vital processes occurring in
living
organisms.
- Genetics is the study
of the effect of genetic
differences on organisms. Often
this can be inferred by the
absence of a normal component
(e.g. one
gene). The study of "mutants"
– organisms which lack one or
more functional components with
respect to the so-called "wild
type" or normal
phenotype.
Genetic interactions such as
epistasis can often confound
simple interpretations of such
"knock-out" studies.
- Molecular biology is
the study of molecular
underpinnings of the process of
replication, transcription and
translation of the
genetic material. The
central dogma of molecular
biology where genetic
material is transcribed into RNA
and then translated into
protein, despite being an
oversimplified picture of
molecular biology, still
provides a good starting point
for understanding the field.
This picture, however, is
undergoing revision in light of
emerging novel roles for
RNA.
- Chemical Biology
seeks to develop new tools based
on
small molecules that allow
minimal perturbation of
biological systems while
providing detailed information
about their function. Further,
chemical biology employs
biological systems to create
non-natural hybrids between
biomolecules and synthetic
devices (for example emptied
viral capsids that can deliver
gene therapy or drug molecules).