Biochem Exam 2 (pt 3)

  1. Lipids
    • A heterogeneous class of organic molecules with marginal solubility in water
    • Hydrophobic
    • Most functions relate to their hydrophobicity (directly or indirectly)
  2. Lipid functions
    • Biological membranes
    • Energy storage
    • Hydro insulation/water repelling
    • Electrical insulation
    • Thermal insulation
    • Signaling
    • Hormone and vitamin precursors
    • Digestion
  3. Lipid function: Biological membranes
    Compartmentation and separation of "self" from "non-self"
  4. Lipid function: Energy storage
    Triglycerides
  5. Lipid function: Hydro insulation/water repelling
    Waxes
  6. Lipid function: Electrical insulation
    • Impermeable for ions
    • Ex: myelin sheath of nerves
  7. Lipid function: Thermal insulation
    Adipose tissue-- low in water and capillaries
  8. Lipid function: Signaling
    Cholesterol, phosphatidylinositol, phosphoinositides
  9. Lipid function: Hormone and vitamin precursors
    Steroids, Vitamins D,E,K,A
  10. Lipid function: Digestion
    Example bile acids- emulsifiers that digest other lipids
  11. Two structural groups of lipids
    • Open chain: polar head groups with long non-polar aliphatic tails 
    • Fatty acids
    • Triacylglycerols
    • Phosphoacylglycerols
    • Sphingolipids
    • Eicosanoids
    • Waxes

    • Fused ring compounds
    • Isoprenoids (isoprene is precursor)
    • Steroids
    • Lipid vitamins
  12. Membrane lipid classification
    Scaffold (glycerol, glycerolipids, or sphingolipids)

    Polar groups (phospholipids or glycolipids)

    Non-polar groups: (saturated or unsaturated fatty acids)
  13. Saturated fatty acids
    No double bonds
  14. Unsaturated fatty acids
    • Double bonds
    • Mono-unsaturated and poly-unsaturated (2 or more)
  15. Laurate
    • Dodecanoate
    • 0 double bond
    • 12 C
  16. Myristate
    • Tetradecanoate
    • 0 double bonds
    • 14 C
  17. Palmitate
    • Hexadecanoate
    • 0 double bonds 
    • 16 C
  18. Stearate
    • Octadecanoate
    • 0 double bonds
    • 18 C
  19. Arachidate
    • Eicosanoate
    • 20:0
  20. Oleate
    • Cis-delta9-Octadecenoate
    • 18:1
  21. Linoleate
    cis, cis-delta9,12-Octadecadienoate
  22. Arachidonate
    • 20:4
    • all cis-delta 5,8,11,14-Eicosateraenoate
  23. Enzyme types
    LIL HOT

    • Lyases
    • Isomerases
    • Ligases
    • Hydrolases
    • Oxidoreductases
    • Transferases
  24. Fatty acids IUPAC
    Length: #double bonds (cys- or trans-delta position of bonds)
  25. Prefix for 12
    Dodeca
  26. Prefix for 14
    Tetradeca
  27. Prefix for 16
    Hexadeca
  28. Prefix for 18
    Octadeca
  29. Prefix for 20
    Eicosa
  30. Suffix for 0 double bonds
    -anoate/anoic acid
  31. Suffix for 1 double bond
    -enoate/enoic acid
  32. Suffix for 2 double bonds
    -dienoate/dienoic acid
  33. Suffix for 3 double bonds
    -trienoate/trienoic acid
  34. Suffix for 4 double bonds
    -tetraenoate/tetraenoic acid
  35. Suffix for 5 double bonds
    -pentaenoate/pentaenoic acid
  36. Omega fatty acids naming
    Regardless of length of a fatty acid, the last carbon is always omega

    Fatty acids with last double bond three carbons from the end are omega 3

    Those with the last double bond six carbons from the end are omega 6
  37. Two essential fatty acids
  38. Cis bonds in natural unsaturated fatty acids
    • Cause a bend in the hydrocarbon tail
    • In the membrane context, cis-fatty acids make membranes more fluid
  39. Trans-fat
    • Unnatural unsaturated fatty acids
    • Found in hydrogenated vegetable oils, in which unsaturation is in trans form
  40. Trans-conformation of fatty acids
    • Stabilizes the hydrocarbon tail in the extended conformation
    • Enables tight packing with other extended tails
    • Makes the extended structures more rigid, less flexible
    • Cis-Fatty acids do the opposite, break the extended state
  41. Relative Melting Temps
    • More carbons = higher melting temp (each C pair ~5-10 degrees)
    • More hydrogen bonds decreases melting point more dramatically
  42. Triglycerides (triacylglycerols) structure and function
    Structure: three fatty acids are attached via ester bonds to OH groups of Glycerol

    • Functions:
    • energy (main and best way to store chemical energy long-term)
    • thermo insulation
    • major dietary lipid (Glycerol)

    Low unsaturation in fats, high unsaturation in oils
  43. Why do fatty acids have ~2.2 times higher energetic value per weight compared to carbohydrates?
    • Energy is gained by oxidation of organic molecules
    • Fatty acids are less oxidized and therefore can release more energy upon oxidation
  44. Triglyceride storage
    White fat: nutrient storage, thermoinsulation (present in kids and adults)

    Brown fat: produces heat=thermoregulation (abundant in newborns and hibernating mamals); scarce in adults-energy-burning adipose tissue rich in mitochondria-- which causes brown coloration
  45. Why is the seal fat rich in unsaturated fatty acids?
    They live in colder areas
  46. Effects of omega-3 fatty acids
    • Decrease risk of arrhythmias 
    • Decrease triglyceride levels
    • Slow the growth rate of atherosclerotic plaque
    • Lower blood pressure
    • Found in good sources of seafood i.e salmon or tuna, walnuts, canola, and soybeans
  47. Ratio of omega 6 linoleic and omega 3 linolenic acids
    Essential since humans cannot synthesize

    • Omega 6-derivatives promote inflammation
    • Omega 3-anti inflammatory

    Healthy ratio of w6:w3= 1:1=1:4
  48. Membrane lipids
    • Phosphoglycerides or glycerophospholipids
  49. Phosphatidate
    • Water head group
  50. Phosphatidyl choline
    • Choline head group
    • Major membrane constituent
  51. Phosphatidyl ethanolamine
    • Ethanolamine head group
    • Major membrane constituents
  52. Phosphatidyl serine
    • Serine head group
    • Major constituent of the cytosolic (inner) side of cell membranes-- in apoptosis, this gets translocated to outer leaflet to trigger cell phagocytosis
  53. Phosphatidyl glycerol
    • Glycerol head group
    • Diphosphatidyl glycerol (cardiolipin)
    • Inner mitochondrial membrane
    • Involved in regulation of proton transport
    • Phosphatidyl inositol
    • Signaling & membrane tracking
    • Minor constituent of the cytosolic side of membrane
    • Can be phosphorylated at multiple positions of inositol hydroxyls
  54. Sphingolipids
    • Sphingosine dialcohol instead of glycerol
  55. Sphingosine
    The foundation for other molecules (alcohol)
  56. Ceramide
    • Sphingosine+fatty acid
    • Only 1 fatty acid attached via an amide bond
  57. Sphingomyelin
    • Ceramide+phosphate+choline or ethanolamine
    • Electral insolation of nerves
  58. Cerebroside
    • Membranes of muscle and neural tissues
    • Ceramide+glucose or galactose
  59. Ganglioside
    • Membranes rafts-- signaling
    • Ceramide+oligosaccharide
  60. Myelin sheaths
    • Built of multiple layers of schwann cell membrane rich in cerebroside and sphingomyelin
    • Electrical insulation
    • Increase the speed at which impulses propagate along the myelinated fiber
  61. Demyelination
    Loss of myelin sheaths as a result of neurodegenerative autoimmune diseases, e.g. multiple sclerosis
  62. Cholesterol
  63. Function of cholesterol
    • Essential component of mammalian, but not prokaryotic, cell membranes (est. proper fluidity and permeability)
    • Precursor of steroid hormones, bile acids, and vitamin D
  64. Excessive accumulation of cholesterol in arterial walls results in what?
    Arteriosclerosis, thrombosis, heart attacks and strokes
  65. Steroids
    • Control metabolism, inflammation, immune functions, mineral balance, sexual characteristic
  66. Androgens
    Testosterone: male sex hormone, anabolic steroid
  67. Estrogenes
    • Progesterone
    • Estradiol

    Female sex hormones, menstrual cycle, pregnancy, embryogenesis
  68. Glucocorticoids
    Cortisol

    • Sugar-, fat-, protein-metabolism 
    • Immune suppressor
  69. Mineralocorticoids
    Aldosterone

    Water and salt homeostasis
  70. Cholesterol esters
    Transport
  71. Bile acids
    Cholic acid & deoxycholic acid: emulsifiers/digestion

    • Ursudeoxycholic acid (UDCA- bear bile): reduces cholesterol absorption, dissolves cholesterol gallstones
    • Used in traditional medicine
  72. Eicosanoids
    Derivatives of arachidonate (20:4 all-cis delta5,8,11,14)

    • Arachidonic acid
    • Prostaglandin E2
    • Thromboxane A2
    • Leukotriene D4

    Have powerful hormone-like, but local action
  73. Arachidonic Acid
    • Starting material
  74. Prostaglandin E2 
    PG
    • Blood vessel tonus, anti-microbe function, reproduction, inflammation
    • Aspirin acts by reducing PGE2 synthesis
  75. Thromboxane A2
    TX
    • Produced by platelets
    • Blood clot formation and vasoconstriction
  76. Leukotriene D4
    LT
    • Vaso- and bronchoconstriction
    • Involved in anaphylactic response (immune reaction)
  77. Waxes
    • Esters of fatty acids and long-chain alcohols
    • Highly hydrophobic, high melting temp
    • Waterproof coatings for plants and animals
  78. Emulsification by bile acids
    • Bile acids are produced by the gall bladder
    • Work as detergent, brake large fat/oil droplets to smaller particles accessible to enzymes
  79. Enzymatic cleavage of phospholipids and triacylglycerols by
    Triglyceride lipases (cleave triglycerides at positions 1&3)

    • Phospholipases (produced by the pancreas)
  80. Phospholipases are found in venoms (i.e snake and bee venoms. Why?
    Venoms cause damage by breaking down membranes
  81. Chylomicron
    • Lipoproteins of "extremely low density" produced in intestines to transport water-insoluble lipids by blood 
    • Highest lipid content
    • Fatty acids and monoacylglycerols get converted back into triglycerides and transported by these

    Remnants consumed by liver
  82. Lipoprotein composition
    Protein component: apolipoprotein

    Lipid component: triacylglycerols, phospholipids, cholesterol esters, lipid vitamins
  83. VLDL, IDL, LDL
    • Very low density
    • High lipid, lower protein than chylomicrons

    • Intermediate density
    • Lower lipid, higher protein

    • Low density
    • Lower lipid than VLDL but high lipid, low protein

    • Produced by liver, consumed by liver
    • Function: primary transporters of TAG & cholesterol to tissues
  84. Bad cholesterol
    • VLDL
    • IDL
    • LDL
  85. HDL
    • Produced by liver, removed by liver
    • High density and low lipid content

    Function: scavengers of excessive cholesterol from tissues
  86. Good cholesterol
    HDL
  87. Lipids and hydrophobic effect
    • Lipids are highly hydrophobic
    • In polar solutions they are under strong influence of hydrophobic effect and will self organize into noncovalent assemblies

    Have 2 hydrophobic tails which means they are likely to be found in the membrane
  88. Micelles
    • Large head and thin tails form this
    • This lipid forms fatty acids
    • Unstable
    • Lipids form glycerophospholipids
    • Stable
    • Triacyglycerols
    • Unstable
  89. Membranes
    Non-covalent assemblies of lipids and proteins that form boundaries of cells and organelles

    Major consitiuents of all membranes: cytoplasmic, nuclear, ER, golgi, endosome
  90. Which membranes have 2 lipid layers
    • Mitochondrion
    • Autophagosome
  91. Liposome preparation
    • Can be done by sonication of phospholipids in water solutions of a desired drug
    • As a result, the water soluble drug will be trapped in the lipid bilayer
  92. Liposomes in medicine
    • Can carry different classes (hydrophobic and/or hydrophilic) of trapped molecules
    • Can be targeted to a particular organ/region (i.e tumor) via targeting peptides
    • Can be used for drug delivery
  93. Properties of biological membranes
    • Form spontaneously
    • Seal-sealing
    • Semi-permeable (nonpolar compounds)
    • Asymmetric
  94. Asymmetry on membranes
    The asymmetric distribution of FA between leaflets of the cytoplasmic membrane contributes to signaling, recognition of intruders (bacterial cells) and to apoptosis of cells destined to die
  95. Which membrane phospholipids have most FA in the inner monolayer rather than the outer?
    • Phosphatidylserine
    • Phosphatidylinositol
    • Phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate
    • Phosphatidylinositol 4,5-biphosphate

    All negatively charged which allows the membrane to detect them
  96. Two types of diffusion for lipids
  97. Lateral Diffusion of lipids
    • Lipid can travel across ~1um of membrane in 2 second
    • Avg size of human cell is ~30um
  98. Transverse diffusion
    Hydrophobic bilayer is nearly impermeable to polar groups, including the polar or charged head groups of membrane lipids
  99. Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP)
    • Fluorescent membrane marker (i.e lipid or protein)
    • Defined membrane area is bleached with laser. Membrane remains undamaged
    • Return of fluorescence to the photo-bleached area indicates lateral diffusion within the membrane
    • Method can be used to evaluate the rate of diffusion and therefore, the size and association of diffusion molecules
  100. Flippase and Floppase
    Leaflet polarity are maintained by these enzymes; Flippase moves from outer to cytosolic leaflet and floppase is reverse

    • Create and maintain asymmetry between the leaflets
    • Break this difference when required (i.e initiate phagocytosis of apoptotic cells)
  101. Ttr or melting point Tm
    Membranes undergo a "phase transition" from a "solid-like" to "fluid" state at a transition temperature

  102. Transition temperature directly proportional to
    • Chain length
    • Degree of saturaturation

    • Longer lipids w/ high saturation degree are required to maintain membrane integrity at higher temperatures
    • Unsaturated lipids maintain membrane fluidity at low temperatures (in arctic animals or even in the peripheral organs (skin) of warm-blooded animals)
  103. Which lipids are relative more abundant in the membranes and adipose tissues of arctic as compared to tropic fish? 



    B) Eicosapentaenoate (EPA)
  104. Lipid mobility
    • Lipid tails are constantly in motion
    • Viscosity is estimated to be that of light machine oil

    • Mobility is high at the terminal methyl groups bc there is more variability in length
    • Mobility is more limited near the head groups
  105. Dual role of cholesterol in phase transition
    • Rigid planar structure forces fatty acid tails into extended conformations= more rigid structure at high T degrees C
    • Short length of rigid ring leads to increased mobility of neighboring fatty acid tails near terminal methyl groups

    Consequently, cholesterol broadens the temp range of bilayer phase transition by supporting the "ordered liquid" state in between the solid and fluid membrane phases
  106. Lipid rafts
    • Organized patches of lipids which enrich cholesterol
    • Also enriched by glycosphingolipids with large head groups

    These rafts "float" in the membrane "sea" and diffuse as a group instead of as individual lipids; allows the membrane to be more fluid with melting temp
  107. What are lipid rafts involved in
    Endocytosis, exocytosis and signal transduction
  108. Fluid mosaic model
    Membrane proteins diffuse freely unless they are restricted by the cytoskeleton (inside) or extracellular matrix (outside)
  109. Integral proteins
    Directly interact with membrane lipids via their hydrophobic domains (require detergents for isolation)
  110. Peripheral membrane proteins
    Non-covalently interact with lipid head groups or membrane proteins (only mild treatment (salts) to isolate)
  111. Lipid anchored proteins
    • Covalently attached to lipid heads
    • Can be extracted after phospholipase C or D treatment
  112. Transmembrane proteins
    • Have hydrophobic regions that span the membrane
    • 30A/5.4A per turn= 5.6 turns
    • 5.6 turns, at 3.6 residues per turn: ~20 residues

    So it takes 20 residues in an alpha-helix to span a 30A lipid bilayer
  113. How to predict transmembrane domains
    By clusters of hydrophobic residues in protein sequence
  114. Beta-sheet transmembrane proteins
    • Exterior residues interact with the membrane, and are hydrophobic
    • Interior residues (lining the pore) are polar
    • Minimum of 8 beta-strands are necessary to form a membrane spanning beta-barrel
    • Large beta-barrel proteins may contain a hydrophillic pore (porins)
  115. Membrane transport
    • Biological organisms are not at equilibrium with the environment
    • Cells and organelles are not at equilibrium with other cells and organelles-- non-equilibrium= gradients of energy and compounds
  116. Barriers to maintain gradients for transport
    • Membranes: most prominent and important barriers in our bodies
    • Need to create and control gradients: membrane transport proteins
    • Transfer information across: membrane signaling proteins= receptors
  117. Diffusion across membrane vs polarity of molecule
    • Inversely proportional to polarity
    • Diffustion depends on hydrophobicity/polarity and size of the molecule
    • Predominately Hydrophobic molecules move freely (Hexanoic acid 100)
    • Water is able to diffuse but not as well (10-2.5)
    • Small ions have low permeability (transport must be facilitated)
  118. Urushiol
    • Oily compound produced by poison oak, Lacquer Tree, Poison ivy, poison sumac and mango tree
    • Integrates into membrane and sticks to proteins, modifying their antigenic properties (gaptens)
    • Antibody can be raised against "urushiol+proteins" and immune cells cann attack cell membranes containing urushiol
  119. Urushiol
  120. Simple vs Facilitated Diffusion
    • Simple: unassisted
    • Facilitated: assisted
  121. Simple diffusion
    • Polar molecules have to shed their water shells and overcome high energy barrier to cross a hydrophobic bilayer
    • Limited to hydrophobic and small uncharged molecules, gases
  122. Facilitated diffusion
    Protein transporters can be considered as catalysts that lower the activation energy barrier for transport across a membrane

    A substance moves through the membrane with the aid of a protein channel or carrier
  123. Passive transport (facilitated diffusion)
    • Substances move through the membrane down a concentration or charge gradient
    • Proteins: pores, channels, (passive carriers)

    Can be regulated by gates (open under certain circumstances)
  124. Active transport
    Substances move through the membrane up a concentration gradient with an aid of protein pumps (active carriers)

    Requires ATP hydrolysis or coupling to another energy source (another gradient)
  125. Channels
    • Pores in bacteria
    • Simultaneously open to both sides of the membrane
    • Always passive, but can be selective and regulated (weakly selective and follow linear kinetics)
  126. Carriers
    • Open to only one side of the membrane at a time, involve conformational changes
    • Can be passive or active
    • Usually selective and regulated
    • Follow hyperbolic (michaelis-menten) kinetics
    • Saturated by a substrate
  127. Bacterial porins
  128. Aquaporins (water channels)
  129. Potassium selective channel
    The high selectivity for K+ reflects the geometry of selectivity filter

    K is bigger than Na, but it is selective bc carbonyl groups are arranged to coordinate and peel off a water shell from K, but not from smaller Na cations (Na w/water shell is bigger than K without it)
  130. How do aquaporins allow free passage of water but do not affect pH (not H3O+)
    Electrostatic barrier and breaking hydrogen bonds between passing waters by forming bonds with Asn residues
  131. Primary Active transport
    • Energy of ATP hydrolysis (Na+/K+ pump)
    • Energy of light (i.e. bacteriorhodopsin)
    • Energy from red-ox reactions
  132. Secondary Active transport
    • Utilizes gradients created by a primary active transport
    • Uphill transport of one solute is coupled to downhill transport of another solute
  133. Classes of transporters
    • Transporters are classified by ligand and directionality:
    • Uniport
    • Symport
    • Antiport
  134. Uniport transporter
    Moves one substance at a time
  135. Symport
    Transports two different substances in the same direction
  136. Antiport
    Moves two different substances in opposite directions across the membrane
  137. Sodium-Potassium Pump Utilizes ATP


    3Na out, 2K in, 1 ATP hydrolyzed
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Biochem Exam 2 (pt 3)
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