Information About Biochemistry Louisville KY

Organic compounds (those containing carbon and hydrogen) were thought to be made only in living systems. However, in 1828, Friedrich Wöhler in Germany heated an inorganic compound, ammonium carbamate, and made an organic one, urea, found naturally in animal urine.

Local Companies

Advanced Massage Therapeutics
502-895-3500
2700 Bardstown Rd
Louisville, KY
Langsford Learning Acceleration Center
502 473 7000
2520 Bardstown Road
Louisville, KY
Louisville Tutoring Agency
502-410-0235
4050 Westport Rd., Ste # 216
Louisville, KY
Campbellsville University Louisville Campus
502-753-0264
2300 Greene Way
Louisville, KY
Alfred Binet Education School
502-485-8209
3410 Bon Air Ave
Louisville, KY
Chance School
502-425-6904
4200 Lime Kiln Ln
Louisville, KY
Tutoring By Leslie Moise, PhD.
502-231-4774
8808 Pennsylvania Run Rd
Louisville, KY
Sullivan University College of Pharmacy
502-413-8645
2100 Gardiner Lane
Louisville, KY
Paradise Divers Inc
502-423-7055
10013 Brownsboro Rd
Louisville, KY
McKendree University
502-266-6696
11850 Commonwealth Dr
Louisville, KY

In the early nineteenth century, as chemistry became recognized as a scientific discipline, a distinction was made between inorganic and organic chemistry. Organic compounds (those containing carbon and hydrogen) were thought to be made only in living systems. However, in 1828, Friedrich Wöhler in Germany heated an inorganic compound, ammonium carbamate, and made an organic one, urea, found naturally in animal urine. Wöhler's experiment showed that the chemistries of the living and nonliving worlds are continuous:



At the end of the nineteenth century, a parallel controversy arose as organic chemists debated whether an intact, living cell was needed to carry out biochemical reactions. Hans Büchner in Germany reproduced the synthesis of ethanol with a cell-free extract of brewer's yeast, showing that reactions of living systems can be reproduced in vitro (literally, in glass), that is, away from a living system. Reactions in living cells occur because they are catalyzed by enzymes — the very word enzyme is derived from the Greek word for yeast, zymos.

Biochemistry became a distinct science in the early twentieth century. In the United States, it arose from the merger of physiological chemistry and agricultural chemistry. Contemporary biochemistry has three main branches:

  • Metabolism is the study of the conversion of biological molecules, especially small molecules, from one to another—for example, the conversion of sugar into carbon dioxide and water, or the conversion of fats into cholesterol. Metabolic biochemists are particularly interested in the individual enzyme-catalyzed steps of an overall sequence of reactions (called a pathway) that leads from one substance to another.

  • Structural Biochemistry is the study of how molecules in living cells work chemically. For example, structural biochemists try to determine how the three-dimensional structure of an enzyme contributes to its ability to catalyze a single metabolic reaction.

  • Molecular Genetics is concerned with the expression of genetic information and the way in which this information contributes to the regulation of cellular functions.

These distinctions are somewhat artificial, as contemporary biochemistry is intimately connected with other branches of biology and chemistry, especially organic and physical chemistry, physiology, microbiology, genetics, and cell biology.

Cliffs Notes Online

Featured Local Company

Advanced Massage Therapeutics

502-895-3500
2700 Bardstown Rd
Louisville, KY

Related Local Events
Grow Your Business Workshop-June 26, 2009
Dates: 6/26/2009 - 6/26/2009
Location: Business First 455 S. Fourth St
Louisville, KY
View Details

Grow Your Career-June 17, 2009
Dates: 6/17/2009 - 6/17/2009
Location: University of Phoenix Louisville Campus
Louisville, KY
View Details

Grow Your Business Workshop-June 12, 2009
Dates: 6/12/2009 - 6/12/2009
Location: Business First 455 S. Fourth St
Louisville, KY
View Details

KAVA meeting
Dates: 6/11/2009 - 6/11/2009
Location: Metro United Way
Louisville, KY
View Details