James McEvoy

James McEvoy

I teach and research biological chemistry in the Department of Biological Sciences at Royal Holloway, University of London. Before that I taught in Denver, Colorado, and studied at Oxford and Yale.

Location UK

Activity

  • James McEvoy made a comment

    Folks, thank you for being with us over the last few weeks. I'm signing off this run, so until the next time, keep on enjoying your learning. It's been a pleasure.

  • @JoyceJ In your scenario, the amount of water produced is limited by how much hydrogen you start with. If you remove that limitation (by imagining, for instance, that you start with 2 mol H atoms and 1 mol O atoms) then the amount of water produced is limited by the position of equilibrium, and my statement holds. (BTW this question is certainly not dense and...

  • Welcome @ParbhjotK !

  • Reactions with very large equilibrium constants, like this one, are "irreversible": in other words, the products (water) are so much more stable than the reactants (hydrogen and oxygen) that they predominate by many orders of magnitude in the reaction mixture.

  • Sorry this wasn't working for you, @JoyceJ

  • It's a contentious issue, but some researchers are more optimistic than the BBC (see here, for instance https://www.pnas.org/doi/10.1073/pnas.1920877117).

  • Well, one day... if the rate of fixation had been able to keep up with combustion then the atmosphere wouldn't be accumulating CO2, of course.

  • Welcome @JoyceJ !

  • Researchers are still learning about the semidwarf varieties. Some of the most interesting recent molecular results are described here https://www.cell.com/action/showPdf?pii=S1674-2052%2821%2900002-2

  • Almost all of the carbon in plants (in cellulose, lignin, proteins etc) comes from the air, not from the soil. There's a recent paper on the subject here: https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.8b06089

  • Well done @AnnaSeggons, that's about what I got too!

  • Yes, "elevated CO2" does refer to increased levels in the atmosphere. Other things being equal (which they may not be), more CO2 should improve the efficiency of rubisco.

  • @ChrisG Done! But I'm not going anywhere for a while, to make up for missing so many of the early comments on this course run.

  • Thanks @AnnaSeggons , glad you enjoyed it!

  • Yes i'ts histidine, well done @ChrisG . The shape is rather complicated, you are right.

  • Welcome @AnnaBeach, glad to have you on the course.

  • You've hit on a rather sore point in evolutionary philosophy. To what extent should we ascribe a specific purpose to an evolved structure? It's hard to teach or learn about biology without doing so, but it ain't necessarily so.

  • @ChrisG Yes, so when an electron joins a bonding molecular orbital it experiences, on average, a greater positive charge than it did in the atomic orbital.

  • Right. Ethanol is metabolised oxidatively, generating NADH. Unfortunately the metabolic products must be processed by using ATP, so ethanol is not a good source of energy overall.

  • Great find, @ChrisG. It is true that fermentation can occur in the presence of oxygen under certain conditions, but generally cells use available oxygen to respire aerobically.

  • Great question @ChrisG . The answer is that the cell's objective is not only to create a potential gradient. The individual ion concentration gradients are also important and are used for different purposes, for instance in neurons to propagate action potentials.

  • @AnnaSeggons perfect!

  • Yes, some energy is certainly dissipated - but not all of it. Some is indeed converted into useful work.

  • As for other effects on body size, yes, it might not all be good news!

  • You are right @ChrisG , brain development is not the same as activity - although a more developed brain is implied to be more metabolically active in this study.

  • @ChrisG by letting the lid move up you are indeed allowing the gas to do work, decreasing the internal energy of the system.

  • The published value of the enthalpy change is 222 J / g, but with such a simple experiment you're not too far off!

  • @CrisM no, the units of entropy change are indeed J / K / mol.

  • Exactly - the closer they are to a positive charge the more stabilised they are.

  • That's what she needs to get through the day @ChrisG . The smaller figure is her baseline metabolic requirement, the rest for physical activity.

  • Welcome everyone! I'm looking forward to discussing the course with you.

  • James McEvoy replied to [Learner left FutureLearn]

    Thank you for your company and your thoughtful contributions @MicheleCampanelli

  • Just the one, actually - NADH donates a pair of electrons to reduce the carbonyl group to an alcohol.

  • Good question! Your finger did gain some kinetic energy as it moved - and some gravitational potential energy, too, because it moved upwards.

  • Ah, I understand now. I think it's the font that FutureLearn uses...

  • I'm glad you're enjoying the course, @AdamNDIFOR .Thank you for the feedback.

  • I agree Ken, it would be a game changer if it could be made to work.

  • Thanks for your contributions, @JohnSloman

  • Thanks for your company and the feedback, Ken.

  • Right on both counts!

  • Well, when you factor in transport then it may well not.

  • Odd, it works for me

  • There's a difference between energy efficiency and temperature difference. Energy is sometimes measured in British Thermal Units in this context (see here for example https://www.greenbuildingadvisor.com/question/calculating-furnace-efficiency)

  • Thanks for the question. Engineers struggle to get the jet power they need from electric motors. The alternative might indeed be a net-zero emission, high energy density alternative to a fossil fuel.

  • Absolutely true!

  • Thank you for your company!

  • Thanks @MarieG for putting the issue so clearly.

  • The biggest generators of biomass energy in the UK are power plants which burn compressed wood pellets. Much of the wood comes from renewable forests in Canada.

  • Great question. The answer is that "viability" shifts with the price of oil. If fossil fuels see a price hike then cellulosic biofuels become an option.

  • Thanks for your contributions, @KenEvans

  • I imagine that this surge in energy usage coincided with rapid improvements in living standards. Other things being equal, greater prosperity in that period meant more energy use. Nowadays the two are decoupling in developed countries.

  • Agreed. You might be interested in Bill Gates' recent book "How to Avoid a Climate Disaster" - it details some of these mitigating technologies.

  • @MarieG The newer varieties covert nutrients into seed mass more efficiently. Older varieties need more nutrients to produce the same yield. All other things being equal, that means more fertilizer.

  • Fascinating! Thanks for sharing that, @KenEvans

  • Hmm can you give me the context, @RosalindM ?

  • But the old varieties would have needed even more fertilizer, @MarieG , and would have needed much more land (with the corresponding environmental degradation) to feed the same number of people.

  • Thanks @JohnSloman, and for pointing out this mistake. The automatic transcription system struggles sometimes with technical terms.

  • Thank you for that, @MariaGrigg

  • Welcome @HagerAbdo !

  • James McEvoy replied to [Learner left FutureLearn]

    Thank you @MicheleCampanelli for that interesting insight.

  • You are right that the extensive redox chemistry of manganese made it ideal for this job. And it is not rare (though not as famous as some other metal) so not hard to obtain.

  • Welcome to the course @LucyCousins !

  • An electrostatic interaction, but partially covalent too. Well done!

  • Heme and chlorophyll have similar structures and it is likely that chlorophyll came from heme, evolutionarily speaking https://academic.oup.com/gbe/article/5/1/200/729709#

  • Thanks for your thoughtful contribution @MarkWard. You are right that China is now increasing to a 3-child limit, but birth rates in that country remain low.

  • James McEvoy replied to [Learner left FutureLearn]

    Welcome to the course @MicheleCampanelli

  • It gets less mathematical next week!

  • Equilibrium is reached when the free energy change is zero. At that point there is no net reaction.

  • Oh dear! Let's hope some more learners besides Kirsten can manage this tricky exercise.

  • These ion gradients give each cell a source of energy which they can use to do work, like transmitting nervous impulses, or moving compounds around. It's a bit like a hydroelectric power plant, using the potential energy stored in the water to drive other processes.

  • Yes a kind of 3D L shape...

  • Yes, he's a superb writer on bioenergetics too.

  • Glycolysis never happens by itself. What happens to the pyruvate when the yeast begins to respire?

  • Right, we've filled in some details but the broad picture here has remained the same.

  • Glad to hear it and thanks for the feedback @AdamNDIFOR

  • Very thorough, well done @KenEvans

  • This course is more about energy than environmental toxins, @JohnDuffey , but I hope you find it interesting anyway.

  • Great to have you on board @StephenJohnson

  • I hope so, @RosalindM !

  • Right, it's a delicate question as to whether a big public health challenge always deserves the name "epidemic". I tend to think not, not others have different views.

  • Good question. Because mitochondria make ATP in their membranes it is more energetically efficient for the cell to contain lots of little mitochondria (with a large surface area : volume ratio) than a few big ones.

  • Definitely true, good point @KenEvans

  • Sure - and those compounds might be stored in the wrong place, too. Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease has become quite common, for instance.

  • That’s right - although our skin does use solar energy to synthesise vitamin D, so it’s important in that sense.

  • Welcome to the course, @AdamNDIFOR .

  • Welcome to the course @AliceBarrell !

  • Good question @NefiseArıt . There are a number of techniques, and some of them are described here https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Respirometry

  • Yes, smart meters are a great way to learn about your domestic energy usage.

  • Welcome to the course @NefiseArıt ! I hope you enjoy it.

  • Welcome to the course @MariaGrigg. Always good to get out of your comfort zone!

  • Welcome @CarolMeasures !

  • Thanks for sharing @JohnSloman

  • Welcome to the course @LynneoliviaLuckhurst !

  • Right.

  • Of course when I say "reduction of oxygen gas" I mean giving it electrons, not reducing its quantity. The addition of oxygen gas to the atmosphere was of revolutionary importance, as we'll see in Week 3.

  • I'm no Trekkie, but I do know about dilithium crystals.

  • Right... Exothermic.

  • That's right. The hot molecules used some of their energy to expand the space, pushing the lid upwards against the force of the virtual finger.