Biochemical

Biochemical
Relating to biochemistry, the application of the tools and concepts of chemistry to living systems. Biochemists study such things as 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. Fields closely related to biochemistry include biophysics, cell biology, and molecular biology. Biophysics applies to biology the techniques of physics. Cell biology is concerned with the organization and functioning of the individual cell. Molecular biology, a term first used in 1950, It overlaps biochemistry and is principally concerned with the molecular level of organization. The science of biochemistry has also been called physiological chemistry and biological chemistry. History: Modern chemistry: Antoine-Laurent Lavoisier (1743-1794), the father of modern chemistry, carried out fundamental studies on chemical oxidation and showed the similarity between chemical oxidation and the respiratory process. Organic chemistry: In the 19th century, Justus von Liebig studied chemistry in Paris and carried the inspiration gained by contact with the former students and colleagues of Lavoisier back to Germany where he put organic chemistry on a firm footing. Enzymes: Louis Pasteur proved that various yeasts and bacteria were responsible for "ferments," substances that caused fermentation and, in some cases, disease. He also demonstrated the usefulness of chemical methods in studying these tiny organisms and was the founder of what came to be called bacteriology. Later, in 1877 Pasteur's ferments were designated as enzymes. Proteins: The chemical nature of enzymes remained obscure until 1926,when the first pure crystalline enzyme (urease) was isolated. This enzyme and all others proved to be proteins, which had already been recognized as high-molecular-weight chains of amino acids which we now know are the building blocks of protein. Vitamins: The mystery of how minute amounts of dietary substances prevent diseases such as beriberi, scurvy, and pellagra came clear in 1935 when riboflavin (vitamin B2) was found to be an integral part of an enzyme.
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Relating to biochemistry.

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bio·chem·i·cal -'kem-i-kəl adj
1) of or relating to biochemistry
2) characterized by, produced by, or involving chemical reactions in living organisms <\biochemical derangements>
biochemical n
bio·chem·i·cal·ly -k(ə-)lē adv

Medical dictionary. 2011.

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  • biochemical — i o*chem ic*al n. a chemical substance produced by a living organism, or such a substance produced synthetically. [WordNet 1.5] …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • biochemical — also bio chemical, 1851, after Ger. biochemisch, from BIO (Cf. bio ) + CHEMICAL (Cf. chemical). Related: Biochemically …   Etymology dictionary

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