SOMETHING COOL CH339K. Wooly Mammoth – Mammuthus primigenius Disappeared about 10,000 BC Frozen...

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SOMETHING COOL CH339K

Transcript of SOMETHING COOL CH339K. Wooly Mammoth – Mammuthus primigenius Disappeared about 10,000 BC Frozen...

Page 1: SOMETHING COOL CH339K. Wooly Mammoth – Mammuthus primigenius Disappeared about 10,000 BC Frozen remains found periodically Wooly mammoth hemoglobin reconstructed.

SOMETHING COOLCH339K

Page 2: SOMETHING COOL CH339K. Wooly Mammoth – Mammuthus primigenius Disappeared about 10,000 BC Frozen remains found periodically Wooly mammoth hemoglobin reconstructed.

Wooly Mammoth – Mammuthus primigenius

• Disappeared about 10,000 BC• Frozen remains found periodically• Wooly mammoth hemoglobin reconstructed• Campbell, K.L. et al.(2010) Nature Genetics Advance Online

Publication

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Structure

• Asian elephant (left) and mammoth (right) deoxyhemoglobin with BPG (chimeric molecule)

• Blue = location of mammoth mutations• Yellow = positive residues on b-chain

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Typical hemoglobin

Increasing temperature shifts binding to right

Blood entering warm, exercising muscles unloads more O2.

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O2 Binding Curves: Mammoth vs. Asian Elephant

• Intrinsic O2 affinity of mammoth Hb is 2 that of modern elephant

• In the presence of normal cofactors, the two are essentially identical• Increased cofactor affinity, however, reduces temp effects on O2 binding

• Mammoth Hb spec\ialized to deliver O2 to tissues whether cold or hot• Same adaptation seen in reindeer, musk oxen

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PHOTOSYNTHESISCH339K

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6CO2 + 6 O2 ⇄ C6H12O6

• Requires energy (big surprise)• Provided by radiation• 1017 kcal/year (1010 tons of

carbohydrate produced - 2 tons/person)

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Chloroplasts will reduce an artificial electron acceptor when illuminated

Hill Reaction

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hE Where h = 6.626 x 10-34 Jsec

And n = frequency (NOT wavelength)

For cyan-colored light, this works out to ~ 240 kJ/mol photons

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Absorption of light

• Internal conversion - electronic energy converted to heat, time frame < 10-11 s

• Fluorescence - excited state decays to ground state by emitting photon, time frame ~10-8 s

• Exciton transfer (resonance energy transfer) – excited molecule transfers its excitation energy to nearby unexcited molecules, important in funneling light energy to photosynthetic reaction centers

• Photooxidation - light-excited donor molecule transfers an electron to an acceptor molecule, the oxidized donor relaxes to ground state by oxidizing some other molecule

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Chlorophyll is assembled in light harvesting complexesExample shown contains

Chlorophyll A (green)Chlorophyll B (red)Lutein (yellow)

Chlorophylls and accessory pigments harvest incoming photons and are excited

Energy is passed on through exciton transfer to a reaction center

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Need 2 e- to reduce the quinone

Pheo = pheophytinQ = quinone

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Rhodospirillum action center1) Excited chlorophyll passes electron to pheophytin2) Electron then passed to menaquinone3) Electron passed through Fe to ubiquinone QB 4) Cytochrome donates electron back to action center chlorophyll

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Green sulfur bacteria also have a non-cyclic system that passes electrons through ferridoxin to NADPHFerridoxin is an iron-sulfur proteinBelow is ferridoxin 1 from AzotobacterContains one [4Fe-4S] cluster and one [3Fe-4S] cluster

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Energetics

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Need 2 ferredoxins

Produces good reductant (Ch*) and strong oxidant (Z)

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Organization of Photosystem 1

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Cytochrome b6f Complex

• Proton pump• Transfers electrons to Plastocyanin (carrier to PS1)• As is complex 3 of ETC, electrons from QH2 have to cycle through one at a

time

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Ubiquinone

Plastoquinone

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To fix 1 CO2 requires: 2 NADPH molecules 3 ATP molecules

• Each molecule of oxygen released by the light reactions supplies the 4 electrons needed to make 2 NADPH molecules.

• 4 electrons passingthrough cytochrome b6/f complex provides enough energy to pump 12 protons into the interior of the thylakoid.

• To make 3 molecules of ATP, the ATPase in chloroplasts needs about 14 protons (H+)

Deficit is made up by cyclic photophosphorylation. • Electrons expelled by the energy of light absorbed by photosystem I pass, as

normal, to ferredoxin (Fd). • Then pass to plastoquinone (PQ) and on back into the cytochrome b6/f

complex. • Here each electron liberates pumps 2 protons (H+) into the interior of the

thylakoid — enough to make up the deficit left by noncyclic photophosphorylation.

Cyclic Photophosphorylation

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Splitting Water

Complex associated with PS II uses several Mn ions to extract 4 electrons from 2 water molecules.P680 is rereduced by Tyrosine in the PSII reaction centerTyrosine radical is rerreduced by increasing oxidation state of a Mn clusterWhen Mn cluster reaches +4 state, it can grab 4 e- from 2 H2O

e- source for PS II