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Lecture notes

QMUL BMD116A W2 - Chemical Components of the Cell

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Extensive lecture notes for Cells module. Full lecture notes, revision for exams etc. I study medical genetics.










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Uploaded on
October 28, 2025
Number of pages
9
Written in
2024/2025
Type
Lecture notes
Professor(s)
Hatch
Contains
Week 2

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116A WEEK 2 - Chemical components of the cell (Biological
molecules)

Learning outcomes:
- Describe the role water plays in biological systems
- Explain how the different levels of protein organisation effects
structure and function.
- Detail the structure of different types of carbohydrates
- Describe the range of lipids found in nature.
- Describe how fatty acid structure effects the physical properties of
triglycerides

Biological molecules:
- It is the arrangement, then, of these simple monomers that allows
for the bewildering array of biological diversity we
see
- All the monomers are arranged, first, by joining
several of them together to form long chains
called polymers.
- Monomers are joined to each other by
condensation reaction.
- All condensation reactions:
○ Join small monomers to form larger
molecules
○ A small molecule (usually water) is released


Proteins:

- Amino acids are one of the four monomers used to
make one class of macromolecule: proteins.
- Each amino acid has directionality (front & back)
o Amine group is first as it’s produced first
- Biological amino acids have the following structure 
- It is the variable ‘R’ group, then, that makes proteins
so variable.
- There are broadly three classes of amino acids: charged, polar and
non-polar
- A charged amino acid is called super-polar
- Protein hydrophobic residues form in the middle of the structure
- All proteins have secondary structures, they usually have tertiary
ones too but not always

, Joining amino acids together:
- Amino acids join together by condensation reactions
- One amino joins to one carboxyl
- Water is lost
- The bond formed is called a peptide bond

The 4 levels of protein structure:
- Primary: sequence of amino acids
- Secondary: simple motifs
- Tertiary: the overall structure of an individual polypeptide (including
prosthetic groups)
- Quaternary: an arrangement of more than one polypeptide

Primary structure:
- This is the sequence of amino acids
- The primary structure is held together by peptide bonds
○ These bonds are strong and covalent
- This sequence is given from the amino end to the
carboxyl end
- Although the primary sequence is simple, it gives rise to
all the higher order structures
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GCSE/A-Level/Uni notes

Concise notes from a grade 9/A*/first class student :) I studied maths, biology and chemistry A-Level and am now doing Medical Genetics at QMUL.

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