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Biochemistry - Metabolism Summary (B-B2META09)

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Summary book biochemistry covers all important chapters and images

Institution
Course

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Chapter 1 biochemical similarities
demonstrate the unity of life
Combustion: biological fuels react with oxygen to produce carbon
dioxide and water

Covalent bonds are stable linkages between two atoms within a
molecule due to the sharing of valence electrons
- Strongest bond between atoms

Consequences of stronger bonds
- Greater stability to larger molecules
- More energy is released when these bonds undergo combustion

Proteins: linear array of amino acids joined by peptide bonds
- Translations of genetic information
- Signal molecule
- Receptor for signal molecules
- Catalysts: agents that enhance the rate of a chemical reaction
without being permanently changed -> enzymes

Nucleic acids: composed of nucleotide monomers that stores and
transfers information in cells
- Nucleotide: five carbon deoxyribose or ribose sugar attached to a
nitrogen ring structure (base) and one to three phosphoryl groups
- DNA: adenine, cytosine, guanine and thymine
- RNA: thymine -> uracil and additional -OH group
- mRNA is a template for the synthesis of proteins

Lipids: water-insoluble biomolecules that are soluble in organic solvents
- Storage form of fuel
- Serve as a barrier
- Composed of both hydrophilic and hydrophobic regions
- Structure

Carbohydrates: fuels as well as structural and recognition molecules
that can form branched structures
- Glucose
- Cell-cell communication

,Chapter 2 Water, weak interactions and the
generation of order out of chaos
Distance between twee nonbonded noncovalently atoms -> 4 angstroms
1 angstrom = 0.1 nanometers

Thermal motion: the constant and random movement of all matter due
to inherent kinetic energy
- All substances at temperatures above zero have kinetic energy and
therefore thermal motion
- Brownian motion

Biochemical timescale: the timescale over which most chemical
interactions take place, measured in picoseconds to microseconds

Polar: non-uniform distribution of charge
- Oxygen atoms are slightly negatively charged
- Hydrogen atoms are slightly positively charged

Hydrogen bond: dipole-dipole interaction in which a hydrogen atom is
partially shared by two electronegative atoms

Nonpolar molecules: a molecule that cannot participate in dipole,
hydrogen or ionic interaction

Noncovalent interactions
1. Ionic interactions
2. Dipole-dipole interactions
3. Van der Waals interactions

Ionic interactions: the interactions between distinct electrical charges
on atoms
- Between negative charged and positive charged atoms
- Energy of interaction given Coulomb force:

- F = the force
- Q = the charges of the atoms
- R = the distance between two atoms
- D = the dielectric constant -> intervening
medium
- K = the proportionality constant

,Molecules can be partially negatively charges which leads to electric
dipoles: electrostatic interactions with other dipoles, with ions or with
non-polar groups

Hydrogen-bond donor is the group that includes both
the atom to which the hydrogen is covalently bonded
and the hydrogen atom itself.

Hydrogen-bond acceptor is the lone pair of electrons

Van der Waals interaction: a weak interaction due to fluctuating
dipoles in one group inducing complementary dipoles on a nearby group
- Non specific
- Van der Waals contact distance

Biochemical benefit of weak interactions?
Weak interactions allow repeated interactions among biomolecules

Entropy is a measure of randomness

Hydrophobic effect: the tendency of nonpolar molecules to associate
with one another in aqueous solutions because they are driven together
due to the resulting increase in entropy of water molecules
- Hydrophobic interactions form spontaneously -> no input of energy
is required because when they form, the entropy of water increases
- Membrane formation

Amphipathic molecule: a molecule with both hydrophobic and
hydrophilic parts

pH = a measure of concentration of hydrogen ions in solution, given by
the equation pH = -log [H+]




The species formed by the ionization of acid is its conjugated base




Larger the value of Ka, the stronger the acid

, Henderson-Hasselbalch equation: Relation between pH and the conjugate
acid/base ratio:




pKa is the pH at which the acid is half protonated and half deprotonated
At a pH higher than the pKa less will be protonated than be deprotonated
At a pH lower that pKa there will be more protonated than deprotonated
protein

Buffer: a solution of an acid-base conjugate pair that resists change in pH
upon the addition of acid or base


Chapter 3 amino acids
Proteogenic amino acids: the common set of 20 amino acids used to
build protein by every organism on earth

Essential amino acids: an amino acid that cannot be synthesized and
therefore must be acquired from the diet

Every amino acid
- Central carbon atom -> alfa carbon
- Amino group
- A carboxyl acid group
- Hydrogen atom
- Side chain -> R-group

Alpha amino acids: contain a chiral carbon that is bound to an amino
group, a carboxyl group, a hydrogen atom and a R-group (side chain)
L isomer and D isomer -> only L amino acids are constituent proteins

Zwitterions: an ion carrying both a positive and a negative charge
(dipolar ion)
- Amino group is protonated (NH3+)
- Carboxyl group is deprotonated (COO-)

4 groups of amino acids
1. Hydrophobic amino acids with nonpolar R groups
2. Polar amino acids with neutral R groups but the charge is not evenly
distributed
3. Positively charged amino acids with R groups that have a positive
charge at physiological pH

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Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Hoofstuk 1 t/m 5, 7 t/m 10, 12, 14 t/m 21 & 24 t/m 26
Uploaded on
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Number of pages
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Written in
2025/2026
Type
SUMMARY

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