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Cell Chemistry and Biosynthesis
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Chemical Components of A Cell Major Atoms Covalent bonds, Ionic bonds Four major families of small molecules Sugar, fatty acids, amino acids, nucleotides Three macromolecule families: polysaccharide, protein, nucleic acid Non covalent bonds determine molecular shape and interactions
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Carbon and Hydrogen
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Chemical Elements for Live Organisms
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Covalent Bond and Ionic Bond
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Sodium Chloride: ionic bond formation
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The geometry of covalent bonds
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Important Energy Levels
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The Van der Waals forces
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Acid Donate a proton Base Absorb a proton or donate OH - NH3+H2O->NH4 + +OH - NaOH->Na + +OH -
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Ionic bonds in Water
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Hydrogen bond Polar interaction: a elecgtropositive hydrogen is shared by two neighboring electornegative atoms
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Molecular Interaction in solution 1. H-bond (hydrogen bond), 2. Ionic bond, 3. Van der Waals 4. Hydrophobic “force”
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Four Major Small Organic Molecules
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Sugar [(CH2O)n, carbohydrates] Glucose
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Disaccharide Condensation and hydrolysis
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Fatty Acids
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Phospholipid (amphipathic)
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Amino Acid
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Amino Acid and pH values
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Peptides and proteins
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ATP (ribonucleotide adenosine triphosphate) Nucleotides
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Nucleotides and DNA, RNA DNA: deoxyribonucleic acids A(adenine) G(guanine) T(thymine) C (cytosine) RNA: ribonucleic acids A G U(Uracil) C
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Macromolecules
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Three families of macromolecules
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The assembly of macromolecules
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Proteins Protein Structures and Shapes Protein Functions
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Protein Structures and Shapes Amino acids Peptide bonds helix and sheet Domains and Modules Classification of Families Protein Assembly
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Amino Acids form polypeptide through peptide bond
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Structural Components of a protein
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The 20 Amino Acids 2 negative, 3 positive, 5 non-charged polar, 10 nonpolar Read Page 132-133, panel 3-1
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Limitations on the bond angles Ramachandran plot
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Three major noncovalent bonds that help protein folding 1. Ionic bond 2. van der Waals 3. Hydrogen bond
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Hydrophobic “forces”
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The importance of hydrogen bond
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Folding and Refolding
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Secondary structures helix and sheet
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Coiled-coil structure -keratin
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Two types of sheet structures
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Src Kinase The combination of - helix and -sheets
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Green Fluorescence Protein
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Classification of protein families Two serine proteases
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Two homeodomains from different species (yeast 2, green; drosophila engrailed protein, red)
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Domains and Modules Domain shuffling Calcium binding domain Kringle domain
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Module Examples
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The combination of Modules
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Design Strategy Weak FRET Phosphatase Strong FRET 433 nm 527 nm 433 nm 490 nm ECFP (1-227) SH2 (from c-Src) SubstrateEYFP Linker Src Activation
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The Src reporter with CFP and YFP monomers 0.5 0.35
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Protein Subunits Hydrophobic forces
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Hemoglobin
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Protein assemblies
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Actin Filaments
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Disulfide bonds
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Extracellular matrix protein are covalently cross-linked by Disulfide bonds
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Hexagonally packed globular protein subunits can form flat sheets
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Self-Assembly Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) Electron Micrograph Model Structure
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The formation of Virus shell
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X-Ray Crystallography of different virus (A) Tomato bushy stunt virus (B) poliovirus (C) simian virus 40 (SV40) (D) satellite tobacco necrosis virus
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Three mechanisms of length determination for self-assembly
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Protein assembly aided by assembly factors (insulin assembly)
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Protein Functions Protein Binding Protein conformation Antibody Enzyme and substrate Catalytic Reaction Kinase and phosphatase GTPase, GEF, GAP Motor protein Membrane-bound protein
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Protein binding
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Protein binding sites
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Protein binding site Cyclic AMP
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Protein binding sites 1.Restriction of water entrance 2.Alteration of reactivity
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Sequence Comparison to find conserved binding sites
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Three ways for two proteins to bind
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Antibody
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Noncovalent bonds and protein interactions
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Binding Energy and Equilibrium constant
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Enzyme Kinetics Read Panel 3-3, page 165
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