The Cell 3
The Cell 3
The Cell 3
• Diagnosis of diseases
Structure/ Information
Function
Bioenergetics
Objective of Biochemistry
• is the complete understanding at the
molecular level of all of the chemical
processes associated with living cells
Hydrogen Bonds
Electrostatic Interactions
Van der Waals Forces
Hydrophobic Interactions
Types of Van der Waals Forces
Dipole-dipole interactions
Dipole-induced dipole interactions
Induced dipole-induced dipole
interactions
Types of Van der Waals Forces
Dipole-dipole interactions
- Keesom interactions
Types of Van der Waals Forces
Hydrophobic Interactions
THERMAL PROPERTIES OF
WATER
- hydrogen bonding is responsible for this
property
- each water molecule can form hydrogen
bonds with four other water molecules
- hydrogen bonding is maximum in the solid
form of water
THERMAL PROPERTIES OF
WATER
- at melting point, 15% of hydrogen bonds
break
- hydrogen bonds continuously break and
form at liquid state of water
- at boiling point, water molecules break
free from one another and water vaporizes
THERMAL PROPERTIES OF
WATER
- Heatof Vaporization – energy required to
vaporize one mole of liquid at a pressure of one
atmosphere
- Heat Capacity – energy that must be added or
removed to change the temperature by one
degree Celsius
- water has very high heat of vaporization and
heat capacity
SOLVENT PROPERTIES OF
WATER
- water is a remarkable solvent because of
water
- amphipathic molecules, those that contain
both polar & nonpolar groups form
micelles when mixed with water
How Life Started
Condensation of matter
Thermonuclear reactions
Heavier elements:
carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, etc.(periodic table members)
The Big Bang
Maturation
Instability
EXPLOSION
Condensation
1. Organization level
3. Organ level
2. System level
Macromolecules
Proteins 20 species of amino
acids
Nucleic acids 8 types of nucleotides
synthesized in nucleolus
Eukaryotic and Prokaryotic Cells
SUBCELLULAR
FRACTIONATION
Biochemical research often requires the isolation
of a particular subcellular organelle either:
- to study the organelle intact
- more commonly to isolate and to study a
specific substance from that organelle
SUBCELLULAR
FRACTIONATION
• usual process by which an organelle is isolated
for study
• method involves:
• essentially the homogenization or destruction of cell
boundaries by different mechanical or chemical
procedures
• then separation of the subcellular fractions according
to mass, surface, & specific gravity
• generally entails three phases:
• Extraction
• Homogenization
• Centrifugation
SUBCELLULAR
FRACTIONATION
Extraction / Cell Disruption
objective:
- maximum disruption of whole cell with
minimum damage to subcellular
compartments particularly the organelles to
be studied
- must be done using mild conditions to
prevent loss of biologic activities of the cell
Methods Available to Lyse Cells
Blending
- shearing of cellular tissue by rotating blades
Grinding
- cells are merely rubbed against an abrasive, hence
against each other
- makes use of mortar and pestle, ground- glass
beads, sand & aluminum or glass homogenizers
Sonication
- most popular method because:
(a) subcellular organelles can be recovered in a reasonably
intact, undamaged state
(b) the severity of the treatment can be finely controlled
Methods Available to Lyse Cells
Osmotic Shock
- mildest technique
- cells are suspended in a solution of high solute
concentration causing migration of water out of the cell,
then transferred to pure water, whereupon the water
rushes into the cell and it bursts open
High-pressure Extrusion
- forcing a concentrated suspension through a small
opening under several thousand pounds of pressure
- efficient method for small cells such as bacteria
Methods Available to Lyse Cells
Treatment with Lysozyme
- most delicate procedure confined to bacterial cell
- uses lysozyme which is an enzyme that breaks up the
rigid cell wall structure of bacteria yielding a protoplast:
cell protected only by its membrane
- the protoplast is then subjected to osmotic shock
Methods Available to Lyse Cells
Homogenization
- once cells have been disrupted, their constituents
will be liberated into the sucrose solution
- the resulting suspension is a cell-free system
containing many intact organelles:
- is known as the homogenate
Methods Available to Lyse Cells
Centrifugation
- process of separation of the soluble cell fluid from
the particulate matter as well as the further
fractionation of the latter in the homogenate
Methods Used in Centrifugation
Differential-velocity or Rate-zonal Centrifugation
principle:
• homogenates have a different mass-to-volume ratio
(density) i.e., heavier bodies will sediment under low
speeds and low gravitational forces while lighter
substances will require higher speeds and higher
gravitational forces.
• Classification:
prokaryotes
eukaryotes
Prokaryotic Cell
Comparison – Prokaryotes and Eukaryotes
Property Prokaryotic Cells Eukaryotic Cells
Genetic Information DNA molecules complex with DNA complex with proteins
relatively few proteins notably histones to form
chromosomes
Processing of RNA Little Much
ACID HYDROLASES
NUCLEASES
PROTEASES
GLYCOSIDASES
LIPASES
pH 5 PHOSPHATASES
SULFATASES
PHOSPHOLIPASES
pH 7.2
H+
ATP ADP + Pi
Peroxisomes
Peroxisomes
• Microbodies
• Surrounded by only a single membrane
• Do not contain DNA nor ribosomes
• Source of 3 hepatic oxidative enzymes:
= D-amino acid oxidase
= urate oxidase
= catalase – constitute up to 40% of
total peroxisomal protein
• Found in all cells
Peroxisomes
• Important site of O2 utilization
RH2 + O2 R + H 2O 2