Section 1 Flashcards

1
Q

What is bioinorganic chemistry?

A

the study of inorganic elements in biology

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2
Q

bioinorganic applications

A
  • catalysis
  • signalling
  • regulation
  • sensing
  • defence
  • structural support
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3
Q

all organisms depend on..?

A

metalloenzymes or metal contain enzymes, this is due to organic proteins and their side chains not being able to

  • activate small molecules, H2, N2, CH4 and CO -essential for life
  • hydrolyse (effectively) many compounds eg. peptides, phosphates and urea
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4
Q

how are metalloenzymes optimised?

A
  • the metal ion sites in metalloenzymes are optimized for
  • selective uptake
  • catalytic activity
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5
Q

Biomimetic relation

A
  • many things nature can do more efficiently and selectively that we are synthetically able to do
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6
Q

study of bioinorganics, aids research into

A
  • Energy: collection, conversion and storage
  • Catalytic activation: of inert compounds in mild cond.
  • Synthesis: efficient selective synthesis of high value substances
  • Detoxification: of chemical compounds or elements
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7
Q

abundance relation

A

There is a loose relationship between abundance of elements in the universe and abundance of elements in organisms on earth

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8
Q

What is a dose-response diagram?

A

PICTURE
An organism’s diet must contain the correct amount of all the esesential elements.
the essential element concentration for optimal health within any given organism can be represented by a dose-response diagram

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9
Q

Dose-response: axis

A
physiological response (positive @top, negative @ bottom)
concentration/ dose along bottom
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10
Q

name naturally occuring ligands

A
  • Water H2O
  • O2- and OH-
  • inorganic suphide S(2-)
  • phosphates XPO3(2-)
  • bioligands
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11
Q

What are the three most important bioligands?

A
  • Proteins
  • Nucleic acids
  • Macrocyclic chelate ligands
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12
Q

Bioligand 1: Proteins

A

c

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13
Q

Bioligand 2: Macrocyclic ligands

A
  • tetrapyrrole macrocycles are v well studied bioligands.
  • they are referred to as prosthetic groups
  • additional non-amino acid components of proteins
  • All tetrapyrroles are tetradentate and at least partially unsaturated
  • In deprotonated state, they are able to bind to specific metals very strongly (4xN-M bonds can form)
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14
Q

Macrocyclic ligands: examples and features

A

Features:-Planar or close to planar

  • Aromatic (18 pi electrons)
  • Often form intensely coloured compounds

Examples, porphyrin, chlorin, corrin

PICTURE

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15
Q

Bioligand 3: Nucleic Acids

A
  • Constructed from nucleotide segments (phosphate groups, sugars, nucleobases ( eg. A, C, G, T)
  • EG. ATP, DNA and RNA

Potential donor sites for binding to metals:
1- O atom on phosphate group
2. OH groups on sugar
3. N or O atoms from nucleobase

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16
Q

what is the HSAB

A

Hard-Soft Acid-Base theroem