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AP Biology Unit 1 - Biochemistry Cheat Sheet (DRAFT) by

AP Biology Unit 1 Review for AP Exam

This is a draft cheat sheet. It is a work in progress and is not finished yet.

most common elements in all living matter

CHONPS

bonds

ionic
transfer of electrons
covalent
sharing of electrons
^polar
unequal sharing
^non polar
equal sharing
hydrogen bonds
weak bonds between hydrogen and negatively charged item
hydrop­hobic intera­ctions
how non-polar compounds congregate together (lipids)
van der waal
weak forces over short distances bet non polar, elecs end up in one part of mlc

strong vs weak bonds

strong bond
covalent
weak bond
hydrogen, ionic

pH

ranges from 0-14
measures amount of hydrogen ion concen­tration
acid
0-6, molecule that increases hydronium concen­tra­tion, more H+ concen­tration
distilled water / neutral
7
base
8-14, molecule that increases hydroxide concen­tra­tion, less H+ concen
formula
pH = −log [H+]
each increment on the pH scale is a tenfold change
-pH 3 = 10^-3 = 1/1000
Blood-7.4, stomach-2, small intest­ine-8
enzymes are specific to pH
buffer
accept­­­s­/­d­­o­­nates H+ to stabilize pH

chemical reactions

dehydr­ation synthesis
loss of water, monomers join together to make polymers, water is BYPRODUCT
hydrolysis
input of water, polymers are broken down, water is USED

isomers

organic compounds that have the same molecular formula, but diff structures
structural
differ in arr of atoms
cis-trans
spatial arrang­ement of double bonds (double not flexible like single)
enanti­omers
mirror images of each other, think hands
 

properties of water

properties are all because of hydrogen bonding
except for high heat of vap and specific heat
polarity
cohesion
water mlcs stick to itself
caused by polar mlcs//­surface tension
adhesion
water mlcs sticking to/att­racted to other charged compounds
capillary action­//water climbs glucose and glass
low density when frozen
most substances become denser as a solid, not water//ice floats­//h­ydrogen bonds create a lattice and puts space bet mlcs
ocean doesn't freeze solid/­surface ice insulates below water
versatile solvent
solute - sub you dissolve into a liq (sugar­)//­solvent - dissolves other subs (water­)//­aqueous soluti­on-­sol­ution in which water is the solvent
like dissolves like, water can dissolve other polar mlcs//­water’s a versatile solvent due to its polarity - it forms H-bonds easily
high heat of fusion­/va­por­ization
the heat a liquid must absorb for 1g to be converted to gas
evapor­ative coolin­g:s­urface cools down once water leaves it
high specific heat
Must add lots of heat to increase temp
H2O moderates earths temper­­ature
 

carboh­ydrates

CHO
1:2:1
monomer
monosa­cch­aride
(2 mono)
disacc­haride
polymer (3 or more mono)
polysa­cch­aride
Provide cells with quick/­sho­rt-term energy, source of dietary fiber
Used for energy (cell respir­ation)
end with suffix -ose
glycosidic bond/l­inkages
covalent bond formed by dehydr­ation synthesis formed bet monosa­cch­arides to form di- and polysa­cch­arides
maltose
glucos­e/g­lucose
sucrose
glucos­e/f­ructose
lactose
glucos­e/g­ala­ctose
disacc­haride
C12 H22 O11 (double then remove H2O)
glucose
C6 H12 O6

types of carbs

function
animal
plant
storage
glycogen (stored in liver and skeletal muscle) "­animal starch­"
starch (two forms are amylose and amylop­ect­in/are both glucose monomers
(starc­h)j­oined through alpha glycosidic bonds (CAN be digested by humans)
structural
chitin (exosk­eleton in arthropods and cell wall in fungi)
cellulose used for plant cell walls
both are by beta glycosidic bonds (CANNOT be broken down by animals

glucose

lipids

Provide cells with long-term energy, make up biological membranes
in all membranes; stored energy, protec­tion, insula­tion, myelin sheath of nerves
generally considered hydrop­hobic
used for insulation and buoyancy in marine and Artic animals
monomer
fatty acids and glycerol
CHO (P only in phosph­oli­pids)
NOT in 1:2:1 ratio
Phosph­olipids (glycerol + phosphate + TWO fatty acids)
makeup cell membranes (Hydro­philic head, hydrop­hobic tail)
amphip­athic
having both hydrop­hilic and hydrop­hobic parts
steroids
liquids that consist of 4 fused rings; many steroid hormones in animals are produced from choles­terol
saturated
single bonds between carbons
unsatu­rated
have at least one double bond between carbons (kinky)
plants make polyun­sat­urated
several double or triple bonds between carbon atoms
animals make monoun­sat­urated
saturated except for one multiple bond

structure of lipids

fat/tr­igl­yceride ( glycerol + 3 fatty acids)
most energy­-rich of biolog­ically important compounds
too much leads to buildup in arteries - athero­scl­erosis

lipid structure

unsatu­rated vs saturated

proteins

protein carriers in the cell membrane, antibo­dies, hemogl­obin, enzymes, most hormones
Provide cell structure, send chemical signals, speed up chemical reactions, etc
perform struct­ural, catalytic, signal­ling, defense, and transport duties in a cell
CHON (may have other elements in R group)
monomer
amino acid (20 types)
 
dipeptide
polymer (3 or more)
polype­ptide
parts of an amino acid
carboxyl (COOH) group on one end, amino a group on the other end (NH2), the central carbon atom and variable R-group
Protein folding
shape determines function
protein shape
depends on primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure
denatu­ration
a protein back to an inactive form can take place with changes to pH, salt concen­tra­tion, temper­ature, or exposure to toxic compounds

amino acid structure

protein folding

primary
amino acid chain
secondary
beta pleated sheet or alpha helix (hydrogen bonds)
tertiary
globular; folds in on itself (disulfide bridges, hydrogen bonds, hydrop­hobic intera­ction; ionic bonding
quaternary
more than one polype­ptide.

protein folding

nucleic acids

Store and pass on genetic inform­ation
CHONPS
monomer
nucleotide
 
dinucl­eotide
polymer (3 or more mono)(3 or more)
polynu­cle­otide
nucleotide structure
sugar, phosphate, and base
DNA
double­-st­randed, has deoxyr­ibose, bases A, G, C, T
RNA
single­-st­randed, has ribose, bases A, G, C, U

nucleotide structure

deoxyr­ibose vs ribose (these are CARBS)