This blog intends to display concepts, informations, musics, videos, games, cartoons, curiosities about biochemical issues. Because Biochemistry does not have to be incomprehensible...
Pages
- Home
- Functional groups
- Non-covalent interactions
- Isomers
- Carbohydrates
- Proteins
- Digestion of biomolecules
- Glycolysis and fates of pyruvate
- Krebs cycle
- Cellular respiration
- Glycogen metabolism and gluconeogenesis
- Pentose phosphate pathway
- Fatty acids metabolism
- Cholesterol metabolism
- Lipoproteins
- Aminoacids metabolism
Friday, January 31, 2014
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Sunday, January 19, 2014
Friday, January 17, 2014
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Monday, January 13, 2014
Intermolecular forces and melting/boiling point
One thing that tends to make confusion
to my students is the relationship between non-covalent intermolecular forces
and the melting/boiling point of a substance. In fact, how one can explain in a
molecular point of view, the existence of the liquid and solid states? The
answer lies precisely by the existence of intermolecular forces. Both states
are characterized by a higher order spatial distribution of the molecules
compared to the gaseous state. This order is a consequence of the attractions between
the different molecules that make up a substance. Thus, in the liquid state,
each molecule establishes various interactions (non-covalent!) with neighboring
molecules, and in the solid state the amount of interactions is further
increased.
When it is reached the
melting/boiling point, which is going on is a transition from a state in which
there are more intermolecular forces to one where there are fewer. In other
words, what is being done is to provide energy to break the non-covalent forces
established between the molecules, by increasing their kinetic energy.
Therefore, the greater the
intensity of the non-covalent forces existing between the molecules, the
greater the amount of energy required to break these interactions, and thus the
higher the melting/boiling point.
I often ask to my students
what happens when it is reached the boiling point of a substance, and the
answer that I invariably get is: "You are breaking the bonds." The
problem comes when I ask what kind of bonds, because usually their tendency is
to say the covalent bonds. I, playfully, then tell them that if so, the water
in the gaseous state is no longer H2O, and then they realize that indeed
that what it is cleaved are not the covalent bonds but the non-covalent ones.
In short, there is a direct
relationship between intermolecular forces and melting/boiling point, and the greater
the sum of these forces, the higher the melting/boiling point of a substance.
.
Thursday, January 9, 2014
Music about metabolic energy
The Beatles, with its famous song Let it Be, inspired Dr. Ahern to make a music about metabolic energy... :)
Download the music here
En-er-gy
Instructor sings
When I was walking through the forest
Grizzly bears came after me
So I was badly needing
En-er-gy
My body dumped some epinephrine
Out into the blood for me
'Cause I was badly needing
En-er-gy
Everyone sings
En-er-gy / En-er-gy
En-er-gy / En-er-gy
I was badly needing
En-er-gy
Instructor sings
The epinephrine gave a kick to
Enzymes deep inside of me
To make a bunch of cyclic
AMP
And when this hit my protein kinase
Catalytic ecstasy
The C subunits started
Adding P's
Everyone sings
Adding P's, adding P's
Adding P's, adding P's
Phosphorylation city
Adding P's
Instructor sings
The protein kinase put a phosphate
Onto PBK for me
Using energy from
ATP
And PBK in turn provided
GPa from GPb
So I released a ton of
G1P
Everyone sings
G1P / energy
G1P / energy
California needs some
G1P
Instructor sings
And when the chaos had subsided
I consumed some Frito Lays
Which soon began reversing
These pathways
The glucose halted epinephrine
Insulin began the race to
Turn on Phosphoprotein
Phosphatase
Everyone sings
Phosphatase - cleaves the P's
Phosphatase - cleaves the P's
The dephosphorylation
Cleaves the P's
Download the music here
En-er-gy
Instructor sings
When I was walking through the forest
Grizzly bears came after me
So I was badly needing
En-er-gy
My body dumped some epinephrine
Out into the blood for me
'Cause I was badly needing
En-er-gy
Everyone sings
En-er-gy / En-er-gy
En-er-gy / En-er-gy
I was badly needing
En-er-gy
Instructor sings
The epinephrine gave a kick to
Enzymes deep inside of me
To make a bunch of cyclic
AMP
And when this hit my protein kinase
Catalytic ecstasy
The C subunits started
Adding P's
Everyone sings
Adding P's, adding P's
Adding P's, adding P's
Phosphorylation city
Adding P's
Instructor sings
The protein kinase put a phosphate
Onto PBK for me
Using energy from
ATP
And PBK in turn provided
GPa from GPb
So I released a ton of
G1P
Everyone sings
G1P / energy
G1P / energy
California needs some
G1P
Instructor sings
And when the chaos had subsided
I consumed some Frito Lays
Which soon began reversing
These pathways
The glucose halted epinephrine
Insulin began the race to
Turn on Phosphoprotein
Phosphatase
Everyone sings
Phosphatase - cleaves the P's
Phosphatase - cleaves the P's
The dephosphorylation
Cleaves the P's
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)