Unit 1 Bonding & Water Flashcards
(51 cards)
What is the difference between covalent and noncovalent bonding?
Covalent - strong, High energy covalent bonds define the BASIC molecular components of the cell.
Non cov. - weak, noncovalent bonds govern the FINAL 3D shapes of molecules and how they interact with each other.
What are biological processes?
Biological processes are essentially chemical reactions and interactions between molecules inside the cell.
True/False: Noncovalent bonds involve intimate electron sharing and contain much less energy than covalent bonds.
False; noncovalent bonding does NOT contain intimate electron sharing.
What is the class, structural formula, and an example of Hydrophobic functional groups?
Hydrocarbon chains, R —CH3, and Alanine
What is the class, structural formula, and an example of Hydroxyl groups?
Alcohol, R—OH, and Ethanol
What is the class, structural formula, and an example of Aldehydes?
Aldehydes, R - C w/double bonded O - H, and Acetaldehyde.
What is the class, structural group, and an example of Keto groups?
Ketones, R— C w/ double bonded O —R, Acetone.
What is the class, structural formula, and an example of Caboxyl groups?
Carboxylic acids, R— C w/double bonded O—OH, Acetic Acid.
What is the class, structural formula, and an example of Amino groups?
Amines, R—NH2, Alanine
What is the class, structural formula, and an example of Phosphate groups?
Organic phosphates, R—O—P w/ double bonded O and 2- O, 3 - Phosphoglyceric Acid.
What is the class, structural formula, and an example of Sulfhydryl acids?
Thiols, R—SH, Cysteine
What is special about noncovalent bonds? What are the three types of noncovalent bonds?
Noncovalent bonds play essential roles in the faithful replication of DNA, the folding of proteins into intricate 3D forms, the specific recognition of substrates by enzymes, and the detection of molecular signals.
The three types of noncovalent bonds are Ionic Interactions (aka salt bridges), Hydrogen bonding, and Van der Waals interactions.
What differentiates the three types of non covalent bonding?
They differ in geometry, strength, and their specificity. They also differ in the way they are affected in the presence of water.
Order the following bonding from strongest to weakest: Hydrogen bonding, van der waals, covalent, ionic
Covalent, ionic, hydrogen bonding, van der waals
What are Ionic interactions? Provide an example.
Ionic interactions are the interaction between distinct electric charges on atoms, usually between atoms bearing a completely negative charge and a completely positive charge. These are Protein - nucleic acids interactions and metal ion and protein interactions.
Example: NaCl, Na+ Cl- Or —COO- and +H3N-
What is Coulomb’s Law? What does it tell us?
Coulomb’s Law: E = (kq1q2)/Dr E = energy K = constant Q1q2 = the charges on the ions D = the dielectric constant R = the distance between two ions
Coulomb’s law tells us the energy of an electrostatic (ionic) interaction between two charges in a given compound.
What are the properties of water?
Water is a solvent and it is essential to the formation of macro molecular structures and the progress of chemical reactions.
WATER IS POLAR
The shape is bent, so the distribution of charge is asymmetric - the oxygen nucleus draws electrons away from the hydrogen nuclei, thus water is an electrically polar structure.
How does water effect hydrogen bonding?
Water disrupts hydrogen bonding between two molecules by competing for the hydrogen bonding capability.
What are the two conditions of Hydrogen bonding strength?
The distance and bond angle.
True/False: Water forms hydrogen bonds with each other and other biomolecules.
True, because of its ability to form hydrogen bonds, water is HIGHLY cohesive which accounts for its high surface tension. It is also less dense than similar size molecules.
What are Van der Waals interactions?
Van der Waals interactions are transient dipole - dipole interactions between transiently charged groups.
For biomolecules that are neither polar nor charged, van der Waals interactions can occur. The basis of van der waals interactions is that the distribution of the electric charge around an atom changes with time. At ANY INSTANT the charge distribution is not perfectly symmetrical: there will be regions of partial positive charges and partial negative charges - this is a TRANSIENT ASYMMETRY: the electronic charge around an atom acting through electrostatic interactions to induce a complementary asymmetry in the electron distribution around its neighboring atoms.
True/False: Van der Waal interactions have a strong dependence on distance.
True: E is proportional to 1/r^6.
A van der waal interaction is most attractive when the VDW spheres of two atoms touch. If they interpenetrate, repulsive forces dominate. If they move apart, attractive forces rapidly decrease.
The are weak but in abundance they can become stronger.
True/False: The “structuring” of water around the non polar surface decreases the entropy of the system.
True
When water molecules come in contact with non polar molecules, they form “cages” around the nonpolar molecules, becoming more well ordered than water molecules free in solution.
When there are large amounts of nonpolar molecules are in water, they form large aggregates to minimize their contact with water molecules. THIS exclusion of non polar substances from an aqueous solution is known as hydrophobic effects.
What are Amphiphilic molecules?
Molecules that have both a hydrophilic part and a hydrophobic part. These molecules in water experience both hydrophilic interactions and the hydrophobic effect.
Parts: polar head group, nonpolar tail
The polar head group = hydrophilic
Non polar tail = hydrophobic