unit 2 Flashcards
ORGANIC REACTIONS
RELEVANT TO
BIOCHEMICAL SYSTEMS
- Oxidation-Reduction reactions
- Hydrolytic reactions
- Transamination and Deamination reactions
- Condensation reactions
- Dehydration-Hydration reactions
- Esterification and Amination reactions
- Rearrangement
- Decarboxylation
is a chemical reaction which one or more water molecules are split into hydrogen and hydroxide ions in the process of a chemical mechanism.
Hydrolosis
refers to the transfer of an amine group from one molecule to another.
- Transamination
- is the removal of an amine group from a molecule.
- It is the process by which amino acids are broken down when too much protein has been taken in.
- The amino group is removed from the amino acid and converted to ammonia.
- Deamination
is a chemical reaction in which two molecules or moieties (functional groups) combine to form one single molecule, together with the loss of a small molecule.
Condensation reaction
-
reaction is a chemical reaction in which a hydroxyl group (OH-) and a hydrogen cation (H+) are added to the two carbon atoms bonded together in the carbon-carbon double bond which makes up an alkene functional group
Hydration
reaction is usually defined as a chemical reaction that involves the loss of water from the reacting molecule.
Dehydration
is the general name for a chemical reaction in which two reactants (typically an alcohol and an acid) form an ester as the reaction product.
Esterification
-reaction is a broad class of organic reactions where the carbon skeleton of a molecule is rearranged to give a structural isomer of the original molecule.
* Often a substituent moves from one atom to another atom in the same molecule.
- A rearrangement