Essential Cell Biology 3rd ed: Ch2 Chemical Components of the Cell
- One of the hardest things to
wrap your head around in biology is the fact that all living creatures
are just chemical systems.
- Until the 19th century it
was mostly believed that animals contained a vital force,
"animus", that was responsible for the behavior of living
organisms. But this doesn’t mean that the chemistry of life is not a
special one
- Almost all chemical
reactions take place in aqueous solutions.
- The chemistry involved is
extremely complicated
- It is coordinated by
polymeric molecules, whose properties enable cells and organisms to grow and
reproduce and do all of the other things that they do.
- Matter is made up of
elements
- The smallest particle of an
element that still retains its distinctive chemical properties is an
atom. These are then grouped together to form molecules
- Cells are made of relatively
few types of atoms
- Hydrogen - has an atomic
number of 1 and is the lightest element.
- Carbon - atomic number of
6, can be the stable Carbon-12 (the most common) Carbon-13, and
Carbon-14 also play a role in chemistry.
- The outer most electrons
determine how atoms interact.
- Electrons are in constant
motion and move in orbitals call electron shell. But the outermost
electrons are the ones that interact with other atoms electrons to form
molecules and compounds.
- The state of the outer
electron shell determines the chemical properties of an element.
- Ionic bonds are formed by
the gain or loss of electrons, and are a type of electrostatic
attraction. While covalent bonds are formed when atoms share electrons
(molecules are always covalent).
- Electrostatic attractions
help bring molecules together in cells
- In aqueous solutions,
covalent bonds are between 10 and 100 times stronger than the other
attractive forces between atoms, allowing their connections to define
the boundaries of one molecule from another.
- Polar covalent bonds are
extremely important in biology because they allow molecules to interact
though electrical forces, using positively and negatively charged
regions to interact with specific portions of other molecules.
- Water is held together by
hydrogen bonds.
- 70% of a cell's weight is
water, and most intercellular reactions occur in an aqueous environment.
- Hydrogen bonds are much
weaker than covalent bonds and are broken relatively easily by random
thermal motions, so each bond only lasts a short time.
- These bonds can form when
a positively charged hydrogen is held in one molecule by a polar
covalent bond and then comes into close proximity to a negatively
charged atom- usually oxygen or nitrogen, but there are others.
- Like dissolves like is the
rule of thumb. Polar will mix with polar and non polar will mix with
non polar.
- Hydrophilic- water loving
- Hydrophobic- water
fearing, these are uncharged and will form few if any hydrogen bonds,
and will not dissolve in water.
- Hydrocarbons fall into
this category
- Some polar molecules form
acids and bases in water.
- Hydronium ion (H3O+) is
made when a highly polar covalent bond between a hydrogen and another
atom dissolves in water, then hydrogen is given up and is made into a
hydronium ion when it is surrounded by water. So this will be common in
the cell.
- Many of the acids that
are important in the cell are weak acids.
- Many bases of biological
importance are weak bases containing an amino group. (NH2) and can
generate OH- by taking a hydrogen from water.
- These two concentrations
are in a biological tug-a-war, in that an increase in the OH
concentration forces a decrease in the other and vice versa.
- Pure water can act as a
buffer: where acid and bases can react while the environment of the
cell is kept relatively constant under a variety of conditions.
- Carbon compounds make up the
cell's of living things and are able to make large and complex molecules
with not upper limit to their possible size.
- Functional groups are
combinations of atoms that occur repeatedly and have distinct chemical
and physical properties that influence the behavior of the molecule in
which the group occurs.
- The combination of a
phosphate and a carboxyl group, or two or more phosphate groups, gives
an acid anhydride. (PICS !!!)
- Cells contain four major
families of small organic molecules
- Monosaccharides (CH2O)n-
the simple sugars where n is usually 3, 4, 5, or 6 make up and compose
compounds called carbohydrates. Each sugar can exist in two forms, D or
L, mirror images of each other (isomers)
- Glycosidic bonds =
covalent bonds that hold monosaccharides together to form larger
carbohydrates.
- These can then be
labeled as disaccharides, trisaccharides, tetracaccharides, and so
forth. The prefix "oligo-" is used for a small number of
monomers, between 3 and 50, polymers would indicate more.
- The carbon that carries
the aldehyde or the ketone can react with any hydroxyl group on a
second sugar molecule to form a disaccharide.
- Maltose (glucose +
glucose)
- Lactose (galactose +
glucose)
- Sucrose (glucose +
fructose)
- The OH- group of one sugar
can be bonded to the OH- group of another sugar through a condensation
reaction (water expelled) and they can be separated by hydrolysis (consumption
of water). Because each monosaccharide has several OH groups they can
link together in several different ways, and even branch making it
relatively difficult to determine the arrangement of the sugars in
polysaccharides.
- Glucose has a central role
as the energy source for the cell. Animals will use glycogen and plants
will use starch as long term storage of glucose, both of which are
composed only of glucose units.
- Polysaccharides also make
up cellulose, chitin (insect exoskeletons/fungal cell walls), and are
the main component of slime, mucus, and gristle.
- Glycolipids- small
oligosaccharides that are covalently linked to proteins. These tend to
be found in cell membranes.
- These sugar side chains
can be recognized selectively by other cells, (blood type)
- This molecule has two main
regions; a long hydrocarbon chain that is hydrophobic and not very
reactive, and a carboxyl group (COOH-) which is very hydrophilic and
acts as an acid.
- If the hydrocarbon tail
is saturated, that means that it has no double bonds between its
carbon atoms, containing the maximum number of hydrogens. But there
are types of fatty acids that are termed unsaturated, and may contain
one or more double bond along their length.
- Different fatty acids
differ only in the length of the carbon chain, and the number and
placement of the double bonds.
- Amphipathic- molecules
that possess both hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions.
- Triacylglycerol- a
compound made of three fatty acid chains joined to a glycerol molecule.
- This compound is found in
the cytoplasm, and how fatty acids are stored in many cells. When the
cell needs energy, the fatty acid chains can by released and broken
down into two carbon units which are identical to those made from breaking down
glucose, and will enter the same energy producing reaction pathways as
well.
- Lipids- a derivative of
fatty acids, typically containing long hydrocarbon chains and isoprenes
(2-methyl-1,3-butadiene) or multiple linked aromatic rings.
- This class of molecules
has the common feature of being insoluble in water but soluble in fat
and organic solvents.
- Lipids and their
derivatives can form larger aggregates help together by hydrophobic
forces.
- Phospholipids- similar to
triacylglycerol, but the glycerol is joined to two fatty acids here,
and in the place of the third glycerol us a hydrophilic phosphate.
- This is what makes up
cell membranes.
- Other lipids present in
the cell membrane may contain one or more sugar instead of the
phosphate (glycolipids) and play an important role in intracellular
cell signaling.
- When these sheets of
phospholipids are arranged tail to tail, they form what is known as
the phospholipid bilayer.
- These are a varied class
of molecules with one defining property: they all possess a carboxylic
acid group and an amino group, both linked to the same carbon atom
called the Alpha carbon. Their chemical variety comes from the side
chain that is also attached to the alpha carbon.
- These are used to build
proteins, which are polymers of amino acids joined head to tail in a
long chain that is then folded into a three dimensional structure.
- Peptide bond- the
covalent linkage between two adjacent amino acids in a protein chain.
These are also formed through condensation reactions.
- The four atoms in the
peptide bond form a rigid planar unit, so there will be no rotation
around the C-N bond.
- Amino acids will always
have an amino (NH2) group at one end (N-terminus) and a carboxyl group
at the other end (C-Terminus)
- 20 types of amino acids
are commonly found in proteins.
- Similar to sugars, all
amino acids, with the exception of glycine, exist as optical isomers.
Proteins will only have the L-isomer, while some D-amino acids will
occur in parts of bacterial cell walls and in some types of
antibiotics.
- Five of the twenty amino
acids have side chains that can be positively charged, all the
others are uncharged.
- Nucleoside- a molecules
made of a nitrogen-containing ring compound linked to a five-carbon
sugar, which can be either ribose of deoxyribose. A nucleoside that has
one or more phosphate groups attached to the sugar is a nucleotide.
- Pyrimidines- these are
all derived from a six-membered pyrimidine ring; Cytosine, Thymine,
and Uracil.
- Purine- these are similar
to pyrimidines except they have a five-membered ring attached to the
six-membered ring; Guanine and adenine.
- Adenosine triphosphate
(ATP)- this is an example of how nucleotides can act as short term
carriers of chemical energy.
- ATP is formed through the
reactions that are driven by the energy released by the breakdown of
food. The phosphates are linked in series by two phosphoanhydride
bonds, when these bonds are broken, large amounts of energy are
released. The terminal phosphate tends to be the one that is lost
through hydrolysis, providing the energy required for biosynthetic
reactions.
- The most fundamental role
of nucleotides though, is the storage and retrieval of biological
information. When this is the case they will form long chains linked by
a phosphodiester bond, between the phosphate group attached to the
sugar of one nucleotide and a hydroxyl group on the sugar of the next
nucleotide. (between the 5' carbon and the 3' carbon)
- As these chains are
formed from nucleoside triphosphates through a condensation reaction,
a phosphodiester bond will form with the release of an inorganic
pyrophosphate.
- They are given names DNA
or RNA depending on the sugar that is being used.
- RNA -adenine, guanine,
cytosine, and uracil
- DNA - adenine, guanine,
cytosine, and thymine.
- Not all compounds fit into
these categories. (enzymes and macromolecules)
- Polymers grow by the
addition of a monomer onto one end of the polymer chain via a
condensation reaction, and are catalyzed by specific enzymes to ensure
that only monomers of the appropriate type are incorporated into the
polymer and in the right sequence.
- This reaction will occur
over and over again to extend the length of the polymer chain.
- Most of the single
covalent bonds in a macromolecule allow rotation of the atoms they
join, allowing the polymer chain to have a high level of flexibility
and allows the macromolecule to adopt an almost unlimited number or
conformations. But these shapes tend to be highly constrained because
of the formation of noncovalent bonds that form in different parts of
the molecule.
- While these bonds are
weak, in large numbers they can cause the chain to adopt one
particular conformation that is dependent on the linear sequence of
monomers in the polymer chain.
These bonds will be primarily formed by electrostatic
attractions and hydrogen bonds, and at times the van der Waals
attraction.
- Water is also present in
most if not all of the cell, and can also play a roll in the shape of
these molecules. Water will force hydrophobic groups together in
order to minimize the disruptive effect water will have on the
hydrogen bonds. This is referred to as hydrophobic interaction, and
is responsible for the globular shape that most protein molecules and
is the force that pushes the phospholipid molecules together in cell
membranes.
- These shapes that the
polymers are forced into will effect which polymers they can interact
with. This underlines all biological catalysis, making it possible for
proteins to function as enzymes, and allow macromolecules to be used
as building blocks for the formation of much larger structures. ( an
example of this would be histones or any of the polymerase that
interact and catalyze the replication/repair of DNA.
- All organic molecules are
synthesized from, and are broken down into- the same set of simple
compounds. Both their synthesis and their breakdown occur through
sequences of simple chemical changes that are limited in variety and
follow definite step-by-step rules.
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