Protein Structure

Terminology relating to proteins, globular V fibrous proteins, membrane proteins, hierarchical structures, bonds involved in hierarchical structures, structure V function relationship, interesting proteins, amino acid structure, peptide bond formation, properties of amino acids, importance of R-groups, mixture polymers

Terminology relating to proteins, globular V fibrous proteins, membrane proteins, hierarchical structures, bonds involved in hierarchical structures, structure V function relationship, interesting proteins, amino acid structure, peptide bond formation, properties of amino acids, importance of R-groups, mixture polymers


Set of flashcards Details

Flashcards 28
Language English
Category Biology
Level University
Created / Updated 04.01.2020 / 07.09.2021
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Protein composition (CHNOS)

Carbon, Hydrogen, Nitrogen, Oxygen, Sulfur

Amino Acid (one, hundreds)

One amino acid is a monomer, proteins are made of hundreds of amino acid units

Di-,t ri-, tetrapeptide 

Di = 2 amino acids

Tri = 3 amino acids

Tetra = 4 amino acids 

 

Oligopeptide 

Peptide chain with up to 25 amino acid units

Polypeptide

Chain with more than 25 amino acid units

Protein definition

Native structure of a folded polypeptide

Denaturation definition

Process where protein looses the quaternary, tertiary and secondary structure

Zwitterion definition

amino acids in solution become dipolar ions -> NH3+ & COO- (both negatively and positively charged

Amphoteric

Proteins can either be acidic or basic, depending on the condition of the solution they are in

Primary structue (structure, function)

Sequence of polypeptide chain (connected with peptide bonds) & contains a amino end (N-terminus) and a carboxyl end (C-terminus).

Dictates the function of the protein indirectly, is unique for every protein.

 

Secondary structure (structure (2), difference (2) bonds (2))

Determined by the structure of the backbone or linear chain 

Amino acids either coil into a alpha helix or form a beta pleated sheet 

Bonding: Peptide bonds, hydrogen bonds 

Alpha helix (2)

Right handed helix, which is stabilized via hydrogen bonds (secondary structure)

Beta pleated sheet (2)

Polypeptide chains fold back upon itself and forming anti-parallel chains.

Hydrogen bonds stabilize the structure

Tertiary structure (structure, bond types (5))

 

Combination of secondary structures, three dimensional arrangement

Bonding: Hydrogen, ionic, disulfide (very strong), hydrophobic interactions, van der waals 

Quarternary structure (structure (2), bond (7))

Proteins with more than one polypeptide chain, each chain has an iron containing HAEM group which binds to oxygen.

Bonding:  Hydrogen, ionic, disulfide (very strong), hydrophobic interactions, van der waals

Native conformation definition

The shape a protein naturally folds into, also the useful conformation in which it can do catalization.

Globular Protein (appeareance, function, example)

Spheric shape

Hydrophilic (soluble in water)

Hemoglobin (enzymes, some transport & hormones)

Fibrous Protein (appearance, function, example)

Strand-like shape

Hydrophobic (not soluble in water)

Example: Collagen 

Membrane Protein (structure, solubility)

Contain globular regions 

soluble in non-polar solvents and hydrophobic (insoluble in water) -> anchores them in lipid layer of the membrane 

 

Bonds in structures (1,2,3,4,)

Primary: Peptide bonds 

Secondary: " and hydrogen bonds 

Tertiary: Hydrogen, ionic, hydrophobic interactions, disulphide bonds, van der waals

Quaternary: Hydrogen, ionic, hydrophobic interactions, disulphide bonds, van der waals

 

 

Bonding (Peptide, Hydrogen, Disulphide, Ionic, Hydrophobic, Van der Waals)

Peptide bonds: Water molecule is eliminated when NH2- (from aa 1) and COO-  (from aa 2) react to build a bonds between two amino acids -> linear structure

Hydrogen bonds: Hydrogen binding to a highly electronegative atom (oxygen,nitrogen, fluorine) -> responsible for helical or beta pleated structure 

Disulphide bonds: Occur between cysteine amino acids (cause of SH group) and form S-S bonds -> provides rigidity to structure

Ionic bond: Bond between oppositely charged amino acids

Hydrophobic bond: Bonds to create a hydrophobic core (exterior is hydrophilic)

Van der Waals forces: Adjacent weak interaction 

Structure impacts function (globular (3), fibrous (2) , membrane (3))

Globular: Hydrophillic surface -> Act in aquaeous environment (cytoplasm), move around, interaction with other soluble molecules 

Fibrous: Very stable -> suitable for main components in long-live structures (others stretch and recoil without tearing)

Membrane: Hydrophobic part on outside and hydropilic part on inside -> lipid soluble (embedded in membrane)

Myosin (structure linked to function)

Both globular and fibrous parts

Important for movement -> length have fibrous structure and globular enzyme 

Actin (structure linked to function)

Important for movement -> Globular protein which forms a filamentous shape

Collagen (structure linked to function)

Quatenary but no tertiary structure

 

Structure of amino acid

Carbon with:

a amino group (NH2)

Caboxyl group (COOH)

Hydrogen 

R- side chain 

 

What is an L-amino acid?

Every amino acid (except from cystine) can form two steroisomers around central carbon atom (amino and carboxyl group switch sides)

L = left handed configuration (amino group is left)

 

Why is R-group important?

Determines size, pH, polarity, reactivity, hydrophobicity of amino acids