Assignment 01
Assignment 01
/100 marks
Questions 1 to 20 are related to material selected from Units 1 to 5 of the Study Guide and
pertinent reading material from the textbook. The remaining questions refer to the paper
below, which you can access through the CHEM 301 Digital Reading Room.
Talhaoui, I., Shafirovich, V., Liu, Z., Saint-Pierre, C., Akishev, Z., Matkarimov, B.T., Gasparutto,
D., Geacintov, N.E., and M. Saparbaev. (2015). Oxidatively Generated Guanine (C8)-
(3 marks)
1. What is a redox reaction? Why are redox reactions common in biological systems?
which the oxidation number of a molecule, atom, or ion changes by gaining or losing an
electron. Redox reactions are common and vital to some of the basic functions of life,
Cellular respiration is a biological process in which organic compounds are converted into
energy. ... We shall soon see how the cell uses a series of redox reactions to break down
glucose to release energy. That energy is used to change ADP into ATP that can be used to
Where the reaction occurs at 293 kelvin, the change in heat is 19,070 calories, and
3. Outline the three forms or states of ATP synthase, and indicate the function of
each.
Atp synthase generally occurs in the inner membrane of bacterial cells, present in both
mitochondria and chloroplast. Its main function is to produce ATP ,necessary to power all the
cellular processes. ATP is produced through three different methods like one is through cellular
inner membrane of bacteria and archaea. The binding model of the ATP synthase shows the
state of it,
The loose site with ADP and Pi becomes the tight site.
this helps in releasing ATP and binding more ADP and phosphate ,ready for the next cycle of
ATP production.
(5 marks)
a. aspartate
b. lysine
c. cysteine
d. tryptophan
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14
15 16 17 18
Leu---His---Ile---Thr---Arg---Phe---Phe---Pro---Cys---Met---Gly---Glu---Ala---Ile---Pro---His---Thr---
Glu-
19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32
--Asp---Cys---Gln---Met---Ile---His---Cys---Pro---Arg---Lys---Gln---Pro---Tyr---Leu---
(2 marks)
a. Discuss where in this sequence one would find cross-linked disulfide bonds.
(2 marks)
b. Would you consider this molecule to be in an α-helix formation? Explain your answer.
1: Plasma proteins : Plasma proteins, also termed serum proteins or blood proteins, are proteins
present in blood plasma. They serve many different functions, including transport of lipids,
hormones, vitamins and minerals in the circulatory system and the regulation of acellular
2: Cytoskeletal proteins: These are proteins that make up the cytoskeleton, flagella or cilia of
cells. Generally, cytoskeletal proteins are polymers, and include tubulin (the protein component
intermediate filaments).
(5 marks)
7. Draw the structures of all of the nitrogenous bases found in DNA and RNA
(4 marks)
complementary sequence? If the DNA sequence was transcribed to RNA, what would
5-ATGCAACGCTTCAAGATAGGCATCTAA-3
9.Using the standard genetic code described on page 132 of the textbook, interpret
(5 marks)
5-ACAGCUAAGCUAGCAAUGAGGAGUCUGGUAGCAAGAUGA-3
What amino acid sequence is represented here following the translation of this mRNA
molecule?
The translation of the mRNA gives the following amino acid sequence:
mRNA 5'-ACA GCU AAG CUA GCA AUG AGG AGU CUG GUA GCA AGA UGA-3'
b. Describe how the amino acid sequence would change if the 20th base (G) was mutated to
C.
If 20th base G was mutated to C, the amino acid sequence changes in the following way,
mRNA 5'-ACA GCU AAG CUA GCA AUG ACG AGU CUG GUA GCA AGA UGA-3'
(2 marks)
(4 marks)
10. Draw the structures of the -anomer and the -anomer of D-glucose.
A cyclic hemiacetal is formed by the reaction between one of the hydrotyl groups in the chain
Formation of cyclic structure introduces another chiral center resulting in two diastereomers
known as anomers.
Asymmetry is introduced at anomeric carbon. Two anomers of D-glucose are -D-glucose and -
D-glucose.
11. Identify the structure below, and indicate its role or significance.
The structure given in the question is glycogen molecule. Glycogen is made up of several
glucose molecules linked to each other by a-1,4/1,6 linkages. Glucose molecules are linked
linearly by a-1,4 bond and branching is by a-1,6 bonds. Glycogen is the major storage form of
carbohydrates. The excess glucose molecules gets converted into glycogen and stored in liver.
When there is requirement of energy, the glucose molecules are produced from glycogen by the
(2 marks)
12. What type of molecule are bile acids? What is their function?
Ans)Bile acids are part of the bile system ,these are steroid acids and are Amphipathic in nature having both
(6 marks)
13. Describe the structure of a biological membrane, and name three functions of a
membrane.
which consists of proteins that are embedded in the bilayer, in the form of integral proteins as
well as peripheral proteins. These proteins are used in transportation of ions and chemicals and
in transportation.
heads. This implies that the phospholipid molecules are amphipathic. The tail would be pointing
on the inner side and the head would be pointing on The outer side. These molecules are not
bound together, rather, staying together provides a complete stability to the molecule. The non
polar molecules, that are smaller in size, squeeze through the bilayer and these do not get
(4 marks)
14. What type of transport is responsible for allowing glucose across the membrane?
Glucose transport is a secondary active transport. The GLUT or SLC2A family are a protein
family that acts as glucose transporter. Glucose transport is said to be secondary active
transport as this transport is driven by some ion carriers like Na+ ions. Hence energy released
from hydrolysis of ATP is not directly used, so it is not primary active transport. ATP-driven
In the plasma membrane Na+ is the usual co-transported ion whose electrochemical gradient
provides a large driving force for the active transport of a second molecule like glucose. The
Na+ pump in the plasma membrane which by maintaining the Na+ gradient indirectly drives
the transport.
(2 marks)
15. Cataracts are associated with a deficiency in which vitamin? Is this a water-
synthesize after the addition of phosphates in riboflavin and FAD formed by the transfer of an
FMN and FAD are each capable of reversibly accepting two hydrogen atoms, forming FMNH2
(or) FADH2,
(5 marks)
16. What is feedback inhibition? What type of enzymatic control is it? Give an
Feedback inhibition is an event where the output of a process is used as an input for control the
enzyme’s end product. It permits cells to regulate how much of an enzyme’s end product is
formed. It acts on the first enzyme unique to a given pathway. This inhibition is completed by
the help of allosteric site, which is a site on an enzyme that alters the shape of an enzyme and
the behavior of the active site. Binding of the end product to the allosteric site slows down or
Feedback inhibition prevents waste, when more of a product is made than the requirement of
cell. It also prevents harm when too much of the pathway’s end product may actually be
Examples of Feedback Inhibition: Feedback inhibition controls the production of amino acids.
The advantages of feedback inhibition are that the building blocks are essential to other
processes such as the Calvin cycle and glycolysis are used optimally and without waste.
Cholesterol in little amounts is useful to the cell membranes, but in large amounts, it can build
was added to the glycogen-enzyme suspension and reacted using the same
below.
(6 marks)
(3 marks)
b. Determine the form of inhibition observed from these results, and explain your rationale
(4 marks)
Okazaki fragments are short , newly synthesized DNA fragments formed on the lagging strand
during DNA replication. Okazaki fragments are joined together by DNA ligase .They were
19. In the absence of lactose, where does the lac repressor protein bind in the lac
Allolactose (modified form of lactose) is required for removing the lac repressor that is bound to
the operator region of the lac operon. Only if the repressor is removed, the RNA polymerase
(2 marks)
Lactose or lac operon is a constitutive type of operon which is actively engaged in metabolism
and transport of lactose across the cells. It is a constitutive operon by nature which suggests
that the operon is "switched on" in the presence of repressor. The operon constitues an
operator onto which the RNA polymerase binds. The operator can be masked by the repressor
under certain conditions and thus the RNA polymerase cannot bind to it and hence, no
accumulation of lactose in the cells. Thus the primary site of binding for the repressor is the
When there is excessive lactose present in the cells, a regulatory protein called activator is
required for essential binding and support to the RNA polymerase. The RNA polymerase then
gets stabilized since no free repressor is available to bind to the operator site. Hence, free
movement of RNA polymerase takes place on the operon thus leading to active transcription
and translation of lactose metabolizing genes. This ultimately leads to metabolism of excessive
(3 marks)
21. Describe the DNA damage that occurs in human cells as a result of oxidative
damage.
Oxidative damage due to reactive oxygen intermediates causes the intrastand and interstand
cross linked Lesions in DNA helix. These are difficult to remove by DNA repair
mechanism.These lesions are as result of covalent coupling of two nucleotides on opposite DNA
strands, while the coupling of two nucleotides on the same strand gives rise to intrastrand
(3 marks)
22. How did the authors determine that base excision repair corrected errors from
oxidative damage?
Base excision repair corrected errors from oxidative damage: The author has investigated
various eukaryotic and prokaryotic bifunctional DNA glycosylases/lyases and PAGE and MALDI-
TOF/MS show that the G*[C8-N3]T* lesions in 17-mer duplexes are incised on either side of G*
fragment cleavage products. This capability of DNA glycosylases to incise the DNA strand
23. What did the authors conclude about BER and NER repair systems?
The author concluded that 8,5′-cyclo-2′-deoxypurine lesions are not repaired by DNA
glycosylase-mediated BER mechanisms, but are excellent substrates of mammalian NER and
prokaryotic NER repair pathways. And both BER and NER can function in parallel in incising