Chemistry of the Cell
Proteins
Polysaccharides
Lipids
Nucleic Acids
Chromatin and Chromosomes
100

Define "Valence"

The # of e- needed to stabilize the outermost orbital of an atom.

100

What are the monomers for proteins?

Amino acids

100

What is meant by sugars are "hydrates of carbon"?

For every molecule of carbon, there is an equivalent amount of water molecules.

100

What are the monomers for nucleic acids called? What are their three main components?

Nucleotides; a phosphate group, 5 carbon sugar, and a nitrogenous base

100

What are nucleosomes made out of?

DNA wrapped around an octamer of histone proteins

200

In the context of bonds, when is energy used, and when is it released?

Bond breakage = Requires energy

Bond formation = Releases energy

200

What is the name of the bond that forms between two proteins? What do you call the amino acids once the bond is formed?

Peptide bonds, residues

200

Which type of glycosidic bonds can we break? Which type can we not break?

Our body has enzymes that can break down alpha glycosidic bonds, but not beta glycosidic bonds.

200
Name the two differences between DNA and RNA

1. DNA has a deoxyribose sugar, while RNA has a ribose sugar
2. DNA has thymine, while RNA has uracil

200

What are histone "tails"?

Stretches of polypeptides that stick out of the histone protein that is prone to modification

300

___ reactions forms polymers, and ____ reactions breaks down polymers.

Condensation reactions form polymers, and hydrolysis reactions breaks down polymers.

300

Why are the shapes of proteins so important?

Structure determines function; proteins have special functions because of their specific shape
300

What is the difference between saturated and unsaturated fatty acids?

Saturated fatty acids have no dbl bonds in their structure --> Packs tightly --> Solid at room temp.
Unsaturated fatty acids have >1 dbl bond --> Packs less tightly --> Liquid at room temp.

300
Which two bases make 2 H bonds with each other? Which two make 3?

Adenine and Thymine: 2 H bonds

Cytosine and Guanine: 3 H bonds

300

Name the two types of histone modifications

Acetylation: Loosens histones grip on DNA

Methylation: Tightens histones grip on DNA

400

What are the three properties of water?

1. Polar and cohesive: Electronegativity difference makes H2O polar, and is able to from H bonds
2. Temperature stabilizer: ΔE affects H bonds first
3. Solvent: Dissolves polar molecules

400

Name all of the interactions that affect protein folding.

1. Disulfide bonds
2. H bonds
3. Ionic bonds
4. Van der Waals/London dispersion forces
5. Hydrophobic interactions

400

Why aren't lipids considered polymers?

Lipids aren't made of repeated monomeric subunits; they are akin to a rope than a chain.

400

Which nitrogenous bases are purines, and which are pyridines?

Purines: Adenine and Guanine
Pyrimidines: Cytosine, Thymine, and Uracil

400
Rank these in order of smallest --> largest:

Heterochromatin, chromosome, chromatin fiber, nucleosomes, loops

Nucleosomes --> Chromatin fiber --> Loops --> Heterochromatin --> Chromosome

500
Fully explain the "ball rolling down a hill" analogy

The hill represents the process of molecules forming lower energy bonds. An initial input of energy is needed to break the bonds of the reactants (push up the hill), and the reaction then proceeds spontaneously to create more stable, lower-energy bonds (ball rolling down the hill). 

500

Describe all four levels of protein folding.

1. Primary: The polypeptide sequence

2. Secondary: Folding caused by polypeptide backbone
3. Tertiary: Additional folding due to R group interactions
4. Quaternary: Multiple proteins forming a complex

500

What are the six main classes of lipids?

1. Fatty acids
2. Triglycerides
3. Phospholipids
4. Glycolipids
5. Steroids
6. Terpenes

500

What is the full name for a DNA nucleotide that has a adenine as a nitrogenous base? 

Deoxyadenosine monophosphate
500

Why is DNA wrapped around histone proteins?

1. To condense DNA
2. To protect DNA
3. To regulate gene expression