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2006-11-03 23:09:45 · 5 answers · asked by amit s 1 in Education & Reference Homework Help

5 answers

biochemistry
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science concerned chiefly with the chemistry of biological processes; it attempts to utilize the tools and concepts of chemistry, particularly organic and physical chemistry, for elucidation of the living system. The science has been variously referred to as physiological chemistry and as biological chemistry. Molecular biology, a term first used in 1950, is used to describe the area of research, closely related to and often overlapping biochemistry, conducted by biologists whose approach to and interest in biology are principally at the molecular level of organization. The related field of biophysics brings to biology the techniques and attitudes of the physicist. Cell biology is concerned with the organization and functioning of the individual cell and depends greatly on biochemical techniques. As the study of life forms demonstrated similar or even identical processes occurring in widely divergent species, it has taken the biochemist to unravel the underlying chemical basis for these phenomena. Biochemists study such things as the structures and physical properties of biological molecules, including the proteins, the carbohydrates, the lipids, and the nucleic acids; the mechanisms of enzyme action; the chemical regulation of metabolism; the molecular basis of genetic expression; the chemistry of vitamins; chemoluminescence; biological oxidation; and energy utilization in the cell. The study of the chemistry of the immune response offers the possibility of treatment and cure for such diseases as AIDS and lupus.

1. The study of the chemical substances and vital processes occurring in living organisms; biological chemistry; physiological chemistry.
2. The chemical composition of a particular living system or biological substance: viral biochemistry.

2006-11-03 23:17:52 · answer #1 · answered by sue l 4 · 0 0

Biochemistry is study of the chemistry of biology i.e. application of the tools and concepts of chemistry to living systems.

Biochemistry studies the structures and physical properties of biological molecules, including proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids; the mechanisms of enzyme action; the chemical regulation of metabolism; the chemistry of nutrition; the molecular basis of genetics (inheritance); the chemistry of vitamins; energy utilization in the cell; and the chemistry of the immune response.

2006-11-03 23:23:14 · answer #2 · answered by Prabhakar G 6 · 0 0

Objectives of Biochemistry
Enzyme kinetic behaviour and mechanisms
Chromatin structure in relation to gene expression
DNA damage repair, and integrity, immortalisation
RNAi and microRNA
Protein synthesis and translational control
molecules to function in disease
tumour suppressor genes and carcinogenesis
Molecular imaging
Mechanism and control of DNA transcription in animals
Control of gene expression in eukaryotes
Protein targeting to the endoplasmic reticulum, internal organelles and the cell surface
Aspects of protein structure

In Details about Biochemistry Describe in M Sc Biochemistry

2014-10-28 00:19:43 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Biochemistry is the study of biological phenomena at the molecular level. Its aim is to understand the fundamental chemical principles that govern complex biological systems. The program is an interdepartmental major between biology and chemistry that emphasizes the importance of a solid foundation in the natural sciences, including mathematics and physics. The major focuses, however, on disciplines within biology and chemistry, ranging from cell biology and molecular biology to analytical chemistry and physical chemistry. The program seeks to graduate biochemists who are conversant in concepts ranging from biological evolution to quantum chemistry. Understanding the molecular logic of life and being able to participate in the acquisition of this knowledge is integral to the liberal education.Our required courses come from the existing offerings in biology and chemistry. We rely on the goodwill of both to fulfill these general education responsibilities. We also rely on those departmental courses to develop our students' cognitive and technical skills, skills that will make them scientifically literate and able to contribute to the discipline during their Vassar careers and after graduation. There is no introductory biochemistry offering; consequently, we do not see non-majors in our one capstone course. However, our majors do achieve scientifically literacy and leave Vassar ready to engage in advanced research in graduate and professional programs ranging from biochemistry to health policy, medicine, and law. Further, many of our students have contributed to society directly after graduation by joining the Peace Corps or the Teach for America program.The primary objectives of the major are 1) to give students a solid foundation in biology and chemistry; 2) to develop analytical and critical-thinking skills that allow independent exploration of biological phenomena through the scientific method); and 3) to introduce students to modern methods of biochemical experimentation within the disciplines of biology and chemistry.

2015-08-21 19:18:35 · answer #4 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

BIOCHEMISTRY
... contributed to the great diversity of life. OBJECTIVES: 1. ... their similarities, the different classes of compounds have different properties. OBJECTIVES: ...www.sirinet.net/~jgjohnso/biochemistry.html

2006-11-03 23:15:31 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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