mat 272/bmse 272 mechanical force and biomolecules : lecture 1

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MAT 272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and Biomolecules: Lecture 1

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MAT 272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and Biomolecules : Lecture 1. Introduction: Why is force important for biomolecules?. 1951: Pauling predicts alpha helix 1954: Watson and Crick propose double-helix Late 50s: Perutz, Kendrew attain first protein structures from X-ray crystallography - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

MAT 272/BMSE 272Mechanical Force and

Biomolecules:Lecture 1

Page 2: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Introduction:Why is force important for

biomolecules?

Page 3: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

1951: Pauling predicts alpha helix1954: Watson and Crick propose double-helixLate 50s: Perutz, Kendrew attain first protein

structures from X-ray crystallography60s: Genetic code determined70s: Amino acid sequences shown to

uniquely determine protein function (Anfinsen)

80s: Biotechnology explodes(Molecular cloning , PCR)

90s: Genomes sequenced

Page 4: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

A eucaryotic cell

Page 5: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Information must be stored in an ‘aperiodic crystal’-Schrodinger, 1944

replication

Page 6: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Eucaryotic genome packaging

Page 7: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

A single-stranded RNA molecule can fold into an enzymatically active

structure (a ribozyme)

Proteins: Polypeptide chains that fold into globular structures with a wide variety of activities

Folded structuresMyoglobin : one chain of 153 monomers; 17 kDa

Proteasome: 28 chains of ~200 monomers each; 6.8 MDa total

Page 8: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

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Page 9: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1
Page 10: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

How can you measure single molecules?

1) With electrical current through an ion channel (Neher and Sackmann, Nobel Prize 1991)

2) With a fluorescent dye

3) With manipulation That is, applying a relevant force to a biomolecule, and measuring resulting changes in length Single kinesins moving along

microtubules (Vale lab website)

From Nobel prize announcement

Page 11: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

The common techniques

The Atomic Force

MicroscopeThe Optical

TweezerThe Magnetic

Tweezer

The actuator A cantilever A dielectric bead

A paramagnetic bead

Position detection Quad photodiode Quad

photodiode Video tracking

Force range 10-1000 pN 1-200 pN 0.1-100 pN

Advantages Bandwidth, sensitivity

Bandwidth, manipulation

Simplicity, constant force,

rotationDisadvantag

esLimited low-force

ability Complicated Low precision in position detection

Page 12: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Units, and the interesting range of forceForce~ Energy/Length; kBT ~ 4 pN nm

Process Energy Length Force

Stretching DNA ~kBT 50 nm 0.1 pN

Weak bonds ~kBT ~nm 4 pN

Unzipping DNA

2/3 H bonds = a few kBT

~nm 10-15 pN

Motor motion ATP ~ 20 kBT

1-10 nm 8-80 pN

Denaturing a protein

[many weak bonds] nm 10-200

pNCovalent

bonds1 eV ~ 40

kBT0.1 nm 1 nN

AFM

Optical

tweezers

Magnetic tw

eezers

Page 13: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Caveat:Reductionism

Page 14: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Certain proteins can only fold in the crowded interior of the cell; remove the crowding, and you’ve removed the physical impetus from the problem.Interior of an E. coli cell; from Goodsell,

1991, by way of Albertsgreen: ribosomes; red: proteins; blue: Rna

Page 15: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Anti-reductionism tracts

1) P. W. Anderson, Science (1972) “More is Different”

This is the start of an argument that eventually killed the SSC.2) C. R. Woese, Microbio. Mol. Bio. Rev. (2004) “A New Biology for a New Century”

In which the author questions the significance of nearly the entire field of molecular biology.

Page 16: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

“If you read trendy intellectual magazines, you may have noticed that ‘reductionism’ is one of those things, like sin, that is only mentioned by people who are against it. To call oneself a reductionist will sound, in some circles, a bit like admitting to eating babies. But, just as nobody actually eats babies, so nobody is really a reductionist in any sense worth being against.”– Richard Dawkins

Page 17: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Practical mattersEvaluation

-Two graded problem sets (30% of grade)

-Half-lecture presentations (70%):These will be based on a recent paper from the field. You will get a list of papers to choose from. With my approval, you can use a paper not on the list.

The rough plan: I give 16 lectures, students give last 2-3, plus during final exam week (if necc.)

Prereq: Prior knowledge of stat. mech., not of bio

Note 5/28 is a UCSB holiday.

Page 18: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

The websitehttp://www.engr.ucsb.edu/~saleh/#Teaching

I have posted, and will continually update:1. PPT slides from lectures (when used)2. pdf of lecture notes3. pdf of journal articles referenced (e.g. Woese

and Anderson articles)

Also, there are some links to online resources (e.g. textbooks, journal search engines) that could be useful for background research for your presentation

Page 19: MAT  272/BMSE 272 Mechanical Force and  Biomolecules : Lecture 1

Practical Matters:The syllabus

Schedule and textbooks