Tài liệu Lubert Stryer - Biochemistry

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    I. The Molecular Design of Life

    1. Prelude: Biochemistry and the Genomic Revolution

    1.1. DNA Illustrates the Relation between Form and Function

    1.2. Biochemical Unity Underlies Biological Diversity

    1.3. Chemical Bonds in Biochemistry

    1.4. Biochemistry and Human Biology

    Appendix: Depicting Molecular Structures

    2. Biochemical Evolution

    2.1. Key Organic Molecules Are Used by Living Systems

    2.2. Evolution Requires Reproduction, Variation, and Selective Pressure

    2.3. Energy Transformations Are Necessary to Sustain Living Systems

    2.4. Cells Can Respond to Changes in Their Environments

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    3. Protein Structure and Function

    3.1. Proteins Are Built from a Repertoire of 20 Amino Acids

    3.2. Primary Structure: Amino Acids Are Linked by Peptide Bonds to Form Polypeptide

    Chains

    3.3. Secondary Structure: Polypeptide Chains Can Fold Into Regular Structures Such as the

    Alpha Helix, the Beta Sheet, and Turns and Loops

    3.4. Tertiary Structure: Water-Soluble Proteins Fold Into Compact Structures with Nonpolar

    Cores

    3.5. Quaternary Structure: Polypeptide Chains Can Assemble Into Multisubunit Structures

    3.6. The Amino Acid Sequence of a Protein Determines Its Three-Dimensional Structure

    Summary

    Appendix: Acid-Base Concepts

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    4. Exploring Proteins

    4.1. The Purification of Proteins Is an Essential First Step in Understanding Their Function

    4.2. Amino Acid Sequences Can Be Determined by Automated Edman Degradation

    4.3. Immunology Provides Important Techniques with Which to Investigate Proteins

    4.4. Peptides Can Be Synthesized by Automated Solid-Phase Methods

    4.5. Three-Dimensional Protein Structure Can Be Determined by NMR Spectroscopy and X-

    Ray Crystallography

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    5. DNA, RNA, and the Flow of Genetic Information

    5.1. A Nucleic Acid Consists of Four Kinds of Bases Linked to a Sugar-Phosphate Backbone

    5.2. A Pair of Nucleic Acid Chains with Complementary Sequences Can Form a Double-

    Helical Structure

    5.3. DNA Is Replicated by Polymerases that Take Instructions from Templates

    5.4. Gene Expression Is the Transformation of DNA Information Into Functional Molecules

    5.5. Amino Acids Are Encoded by Groups of Three Bases Starting from a Fixed Point

    5.6. Most Eukaryotic Genes Are Mosaics of Introns and Exons

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    6. Exploring Genes

    6.1. The Basic Tools of Gene Exploration

    6.2. Recombinant DNA Technology Has Revolutionized All Aspects of Biology

    6.3. Manipulating the Genes of Eukaryotes

    6.4. Novel Proteins Can Be Engineered by Site-Specific Mutagenesis

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Reading

    7. Exploring Evolution

    7.1. Homologs Are Descended from a Common Ancestor

    7.2. Statistical Analysis of Sequence Alignments Can Detect Homology

    7.3. Examination of Three-Dimensional Structure Enhances Our Understanding of

    Evolutionary Relationships

    7.4. Evolutionary Trees Can Be Constructed on the Basis of Sequence Information

    7.5. Modern Techniques Make the Experimental Exploration of Evolution Possible

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    8. Enzymes: Basic Concepts and Kinetics

    8.1. Enzymes Are Powerful and Highly Specific Catalysts

    8.2. Free Energy Is a Useful Thermodynamic Function for Understanding Enzymes

    8.3. Enzymes Accelerate Reactions by Facilitating the Formation of the Transition State

    8.4. The Michaelis-Menten Model Accounts for the Kinetic Properties of Many Enzymes

    8.5. Enzymes Can Be Inhibited by Specific Molecules

    8.6. Vitamins Are Often Precursors to Coenzymes

    Summary

    Appendix:

    V

    and

    K

    Can Be Determined by Double-Reciprocal Plots

    max

    M

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    9. Catalytic Strategies

    9.1. Proteases: Facilitating a Difficult Reaction

    9.2. Making a Fast Reaction Faster: Carbonic Anhydrases

    9.3. Restriction Enzymes: Performing Highly Specific DNA-Cleavage Reactions

    9.4. Nucleoside Monophosphate Kinases: Catalyzing Phosphoryl Group Exchange between

    Nucleotides Without Promoting Hydrolysis

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    10. Regulatory Strategies: Enzymes and Hemoglobin

    10.1. Aspartate Transcarbamoylase Is Allosterically Inhibited by the End Product of Its

    Pathway

    10.2. Hemoglobin Transports Oxygen Efficiently by Binding Oxygen Cooperatively

    10.3. Isozymes Provide a Means of Regulation Specific to Distinct Tissues and

    Developmental Stages

    10.4. Covalent Modification Is a Means of Regulating Enzyme Activity

    10.5. Many Enzymes Are Activated by Specific Proteolytic Cleavage

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    11. Carbohydrates

    11.1. Monosaccharides Are Aldehydes or Ketones with Multiple Hydroxyl Groups

    11.2. Complex Carbohydrates Are Formed by Linkage of Monosaccharides

    11.3. Carbohydrates Can Be Attached to Proteins to Form Glycoproteins

    11.4. Lectins Are Specific Carbohydrate-Binding Proteins

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    12. Lipids and Cell Membranes

    12.1. Many Common Features Underlie the Diversity of Biological Membranes

    12.2. Fatty Acids Are Key Constituents of Lipids

    12.3. There Are Three Common Types of Membrane Lipids

    12.4. Phospholipids and Glycolipids Readily Form Bimolecular Sheets in Aqueous Media

    12.5. Proteins Carry Out Most Membrane Processes

    12.6. Lipids and Many Membrane Proteins Diffuse Rapidly in the Plane of the Membrane

    12.7. Eukaryotic Cells Contain Compartments Bounded by Internal Membranes

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    13. Membrane Channels and Pumps

    13.1. The Transport of Molecules Across a Membrane May Be Active or Passive

    13.2. A Family of Membrane Proteins Uses ATP Hydrolysis to Pump Ions Across

    Membranes

    13.3. Multidrug Resistance and Cystic Fibrosis Highlight a Family of Membrane Proteins

    with ATP-Binding Cassette Domains

    13.4. Secondary Transporters Use One Concentration Gradient to Power the Formation of

    Another

    13.5. Specific Channels Can Rapidly Transport Ions Across Membranes

    13.6. Gap Junctions Allow Ions and Small Molecules to Flow between Communicating Cells

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    II. Transducing and Storing Energy

    14. Metabolism: Basic Concepts and Design

    14.1. Metabolism Is Composed of Many Coupled, Interconnecting Reactions

    14.2. The Oxidation of Carbon Fuels Is an Important Source of Cellular Energy

    14.3. Metabolic Pathways Contain Many Recurring Motifs

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    15. Signal-Transduction Pathways: An Introduction to Information Metabolism

    15.1. Seven-Transmembrane-Helix Receptors Change Conformation in Response to Ligand

    Binding and Activate G Proteins

    15.2. The Hydrolysis of Phosphatidyl Inositol Bisphosphate by Phospholipase C Generates

    Two Messengers

    15.3. Calcium Ion Is a Ubiquitous Cytosolic Messenger

    15.4. Some Receptors Dimerize in Response to Ligand Binding and Signal by Cross-

    phosphorylation

    15.5. Defects in Signaling Pathways Can Lead to Cancer and Other Diseases

    15.6. Recurring Features of Signal-Transduction Pathways Reveal Evolutionary Relationships

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    16. Glycolysis and Gluconeogenesis

    16.1. Glycolysis Is an Energy-Conversion Pathway in Many Organisms

    16.2. The Glycolytic Pathway Is Tightly Controlled

    16.3. Glucose Can Be Synthesized from Noncarbohydrate Precursors

    16.4. Gluconeogenesis and Glycolysis Are Reciprocally Regulated

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    17. The Citric Acid Cycle

    17.1. The Citric Acid Cycle Oxidizes Two-Carbon Units

    17.2. Entry to the Citric Acid Cycle and Metabolism Through It Are Controlled

    17.3. The Citric Acid Cycle Is a Source of Biosynthetic Precursors

    17.4. The Glyoxylate Cycle Enables Plants and Bacteria to Grow on Acetate

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    18. Oxidative Phosphorylation

    18.1. Oxidative Phosphorylation in Eukaryotes Takes Place in Mitochondria

    18.2. Oxidative Phosphorylation Depends on Electron Transfer

    18.3. The Respiratory Chain Consists of Four Complexes: Three Proton Pumps and a

    Physical Link to the Citric Acid Cycle

    18.4. A Proton Gradient Powers the Synthesis of ATP

    18.5. Many Shuttles Allow Movement Across the Mitochondrial Membranes

    18.6. The Regulation of Cellular Respiration Is Governed Primarily by the Need for ATP

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    19. The Light Reactions of Photosynthesis

    19.1. Photosynthesis Takes Place in Chloroplasts

    19.2. Light Absorption by Chlorophyll Induces Electron Transfer

    19.3. Two Photosystems Generate a Proton Gradient and NADPH in Oxygenic

    Photosynthesis

    19.4. A Proton Gradient Across the Thylakoid Membrane Drives ATP Synthesis

    19.5. Accessory Pigments Funnel Energy Into Reaction Centers

    19.6. The Ability to Convert Light Into Chemical Energy Is Ancient

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    20. The Calvin Cycle and the Pentose Phosphate Pathway

    20.1. The Calvin Cycle Synthesizes Hexoses from Carbon Dioxide and Water

    20.2. The Activity of the Calvin Cycle Depends on Environmental Conditions

    20.3 the Pentose Phosphate Pathway Generates NADPH and Synthesizes Five-Carbon Sugars

    20.4. The Metabolism of Glucose 6-Phosphate by the Pentose Phosphate Pathway Is

    Coordinated with Glycolysis

    20.5. Glucose 6-Phosphate Dehydrogenase Plays a Key Role in Protection Against Reactive

    Oxygen Species

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    21. Glycogen Metabolism

    21.1. Glycogen Breakdown Requires the Interplay of Several Enzymes

    21.2. Phosphorylase Is Regulated by Allosteric Interactions and Reversible Phosphorylation

    21.3. Epinephrine and Glucagon Signal the Need for Glycogen Breakdown

    21.4. Glycogen Is Synthesized and Degraded by Different Pathways

    21.5. Glycogen Breakdown and Synthesis Are Reciprocally Regulated

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    22. Fatty Acid Metabolism

    22.1. Triacylglycerols Are Highly Concentrated Energy Stores

    22.2. The Utilization of Fatty Acids as Fuel Requires Three Stages of Processing

    22.3. Certain Fatty Acids Require Additional Steps for Degradation

    22.4. Fatty Acids Are Synthesized and Degraded by Different Pathways

    22.5. Acetyl Coenzyme A Carboxylase Plays a Key Role in Controlling Fatty Acid

    Metabolism

    22.6. Elongation and Unsaturation of Fatty Acids Are Accomplished by Accessory Enzyme

    Systems

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    23. Protein Turnover and Amino Acid Catabolism

    23.1. Proteins Are Degraded to Amino Acids

    23.2. Protein Turnover Is Tightly Regulated

    23.3. The First Step in Amino Acid Degradation Is the Removal of Nitrogen

    23.4. Ammonium Ion Is Converted Into Urea in Most Terrestrial Vertebrates

    23.5. Carbon Atoms of Degraded Amino Acids Emerge as Major Metabolic Intermediates

    23.6. Inborn Errors of Metabolism Can Disrupt Amino Acid Degradation

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    III. Synthesizing the Molecules of Life

    24. The Biosynthesis of Amino Acids

    24.1. Nitrogen Fixation: Microorganisms Use ATP and a Powerful Reductant to Reduce

    Atmospheric Nitrogen to Ammonia

    24.2. Amino Acids Are Made from Intermediates of the Citric Acid Cycle and Other Major

    Pathways

    24.3. Amino Acid Biosynthesis Is Regulated by Feedback Inhibition

    24.4. Amino Acids Are Precursors of Many Biomolecules

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    25. Nucleotide Biosynthesis

    25.1. In de Novo Synthesis, the Pyrimidine Ring Is Assembled from Bicarbonate, Aspartate,

    and Glutamine

    25.2. Purine Bases Can Be Synthesized de Novo or Recycled by Salvage Pathways

    25.3. Deoxyribonucleotides Synthesized by the Reduction of Ribonucleotides Through a

    Radical Mechanism

    25.4. Key Steps in Nucleotide Biosynthesis Are Regulated by Feedback Inhibition

    25.5. NAD

    +

    , FAD, and Coenzyme A Are Formed from ATP

    25.6. Disruptions in Nucleotide Metabolism Can Cause Pathological Conditions

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    26. The Biosynthesis of Membrane Lipids and Steroids

    26.1. Phosphatidate Is a Common Intermediate in the Synthesis of Phospholipids and

    Triacylglycerols

    26.2. Cholesterol Is Synthesized from Acetyl Coenzyme A in Three Stages

    26.3. The Complex Regulation of Cholesterol Biosynthesis Takes Place at Several Levels

    26.4. Important Derivatives of Cholesterol Include Bile Salts and Steroid Hormones

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    27. DNA Replication, Recombination, and Repair

    27.1. DNA Can Assume a Variety of Structural Forms

    27.2. DNA Polymerases Require a Template and a Primer

    27.3. Double-Stranded DNA Can Wrap Around Itself to Form Supercoiled Structures

    27.4. DNA Replication of Both Strands Proceeds Rapidly from Specific Start Sites

    27.5. Double-Stranded DNA Molecules with Similar Sequences Sometimes Recombine

    27.6. Mutations Involve Changes in the Base Sequence of DNA

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    28. RNA Synthesis and Splicing

    28.1. Transcription Is Catalyzed by RNA Polymerase

    28.2. Eukaryotic Transcription and Translation Are Separated in Space and Time

    28.3. The Transcription Products of All Three Eukaryotic Polymerases Are Processed

    28.4. The Discovery of Catalytic RNA Was Revealing in Regard to Both Mechanism and

    Evolution

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    29. Protein Synthesis

    29.1. Protein Synthesis Requires the Translation of Nucleotide Sequences Into Amino Acid

    Sequences

    29.2. Aminoacyl-Transfer RNA Synthetases Read the Genetic Code

    29.3. A Ribosome Is a Ribonucleoprotein Particle (70S) Made of a Small (30S) and a Large

    (50S) Subunit

    29.4. Protein Factors Play Key Roles in Protein Synthesis

    29.5. Eukaryotic Protein Synthesis Differs from Prokaryotic Protein Synthesis Primarily in

    Translation Initiation

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    30. The Integration of Metabolism

    30.1. Metabolism Consist of Highly Interconnected Pathways

    30.2. Each Organ Has a Unique Metabolic Profile

    30.3. Food Intake and Starvation Induce Metabolic Changes

    30.4. Fuel Choice During Exercise Is Determined by Intensity and Duration of Activity

    30.5. Ethanol Alters Energy Metabolism in the Liver

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    31. The Control of Gene Expression

    31.1. Prokaryotic DNA-Binding Proteins Bind Specifically to Regulatory Sites in Operons

    31.2. The Greater Complexity of Eukaryotic Genomes Requires Elaborate Mechanisms for

    Gene Regulation

    31.3. Transcriptional Activation and Repression Are Mediated by Protein-Protein Interactions

    31.4. Gene Expression Can Be Controlled at Posttranscriptional Levels

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    IV. Responding to Environmental Changes

    32. Sensory Systems

    32.1. A Wide Variety of Organic Compounds Are Detected by Olfaction

    32.2. Taste Is a Combination of Senses that Function by Different Mechanisms

    32.3. Photoreceptor Molecules in the Eye Detect Visible Light

    32.4. Hearing Depends on the Speedy Detection of Mechanical Stimuli

    32.5. Touch Includes the Sensing of Pressure, Temperature, and Other Factors

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    33. The Immune System

    33.1. Antibodies Possess Distinct Antigen-Binding and Effector Units

    33.2. The Immunoglobulin Fold Consists of a Beta-Sandwich Framework with Hypervariable

    Loops

    33.3. Antibodies Bind Specific Molecules Through Their Hypervariable Loops

    33.4. Diversity Is Generated by Gene Rearrangements

    33.5. Major-Histocompatibility-Complex Proteins Present Peptide Antigens on Cell Surfaces

    for Recognition by T-Cell Receptors

    33.6. Immune Responses Against Self-Antigens Are Suppressed

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    34. Molecular Motors

    34.1. Most Molecular-Motor Proteins Are Members of the P-Loop NTPase Superfamily

    34.2. Myosins Move Along Actin Filaments

    34.3. Kinesin and Dynein Move Along Microtubules

    34.4. A Rotary Motor Drives Bacterial Motion

    Summary

    Problems

    Selected Readings

    Appendix A: Physical Constants and Conversion of Units

    Appendix B: Acidity Constants

    Appendix C: Standard Bond Lengths

    Glossary of Compounds

    Answers to Problems

    Common Abbreviations in Biochemistry
     

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