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- Feb 11, 2012
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Whatever happened to arrow pushing in biochemistry?? Mechanisms are more intuitive, they describe what the electrons do and why.
I actually remember asking my biochem TA last year about a possible mechanism for some rxn and she said "forget about mechanisms, there are none in biochem" as if electrons just magically stop moving with a purpose because they react in the body. Is there some reason for the aversion to this approach?
Most biochem books explain reactions in a "just because" kinda way and encourage learning them in the very way we were taught not to in orgo - by rote memorization. This removes all the intuition behind it. Funny thing is that, for many of these reactions, it isn't very hard to use the more intuitive orgo way of analyzing the reactions. [Seeing why one nucleophile attacks instead of the other, or why such and such is unstable, why a particular carbon is attacked, etc]. I feel like using mechanisms would develop an intuitive way of figuring out the intermediates in many metabolic reactions without remembering what page blabla said. Back in orgo, this approach often equipped you to answer questions a few chapters ahead before having even read them.
I guess I should just take a bioorganic chem class and shutup lol.
I actually remember asking my biochem TA last year about a possible mechanism for some rxn and she said "forget about mechanisms, there are none in biochem" as if electrons just magically stop moving with a purpose because they react in the body. Is there some reason for the aversion to this approach?
Most biochem books explain reactions in a "just because" kinda way and encourage learning them in the very way we were taught not to in orgo - by rote memorization. This removes all the intuition behind it. Funny thing is that, for many of these reactions, it isn't very hard to use the more intuitive orgo way of analyzing the reactions. [Seeing why one nucleophile attacks instead of the other, or why such and such is unstable, why a particular carbon is attacked, etc]. I feel like using mechanisms would develop an intuitive way of figuring out the intermediates in many metabolic reactions without remembering what page blabla said. Back in orgo, this approach often equipped you to answer questions a few chapters ahead before having even read them.
I guess I should just take a bioorganic chem class and shutup lol.
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