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I'm now to the end of my course, and I have the two token days of bioinorganic coming up. Much like solid state, this is a topic which I think is really important, but which I've never felt qualified to teach. Maggie posted a great "7 things students need to know about solids" post a while back, and I was wondering what those with some experience in bioinorganic thought were the "irreducible concepts" of bioinorganic chemistry.
... I'll play
I think the most important things to cover are the role of amino acids as ligands for metals, the role of the organic "spinach" to hold the metal in werid shapes (the entatic state, I'm thinking of trigonal planar irons in nitrogenase or the 1/2 way between D4h and Td Cu ions in plastocyanin).
I also use bioinorganic as an opportunity to teach "weird" spectroscopies that they won't see elsewhere, like X-ray, EXAFS, EPR, Møssbauer, etc.
I'd love to see what a real bioinorganic chemist has to say though!
In reply to I'm not a bioinorganic chemist but... by Adam Johnson / Harvey Mudd College
I'm not a bioinorganic chemist either, although several years ago, I did agree to team-teach a seminar course in bioinorganic chemistry with a biochemistry colleague...
I like to illustrate for students the different approaches in understanding a particular problem in bioinorganic chemistry: for example, characterizing the structure of the active site of a metalloenzyme vs. the use of small molecule model complexes.
In reply to I'm not a bioinorganic chemist but... by Adam Johnson / Harvey Mudd College
In reply to I'm not a bioinorganic chemist but... by Adam Johnson / Harvey Mudd College
I think all the comments so far are in line with what I teach. Every few years I get to teach a junior/senior level elective in bioinorganic. Because there's a mix of biochem and chem majors, I usually start with a brief review of TM complexes and basic biochem. I agree - it's important to show how biomolecules like amino acids can be used as ligands - but please don't forget that nucleotides can be ligands, too!
I also cover the "weird" spectroscopies. Topics I tend to do (although it varies from year to year) are metal ion uptake & availability, metals in medicine, toxic metal ions, etc.
I normally get at the range of research in bioinorganic by having students present papers from the literature. That normally shows them how the field runs from people doing small molecule enzyme mimics (which is very inorganic) to ones doing mechanistic work on metalloenzymes (which is very biochem). Using papers from the literature also helps show how the "weird" spectroscopies are used.