proteins Flashcards

1
Q

fibrous proteins

A

insoluble in water
stable and tough
have structural function
polypeptide chains parallel with little or no tertiary structure
different proteins may have similar shapes, and the length of the same protein may vary
eg collagen

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2
Q

globular proteins

A

soluble in water
not stable, as easily changed chemically
have metabolic function
polypeptide chains have tertiary structure and fold into compact shape
each protein has its own specific shape and length of chains
eg haemoglobin

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3
Q

collagen

A

3 identical polypeptide chains
the 3 chains are twisted around each other to form a triple helix ie mainly 2 structure & 4 structure, very little 3 structure
no prosthetic group
35% of the amino acids are glycine
insoluble in water
function - connective tissue eg ligaments, tendons

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4
Q

haemoglobin

A

4 polypeptide chains
the 4 chains form a globular protein showing 3 and 4 structure
contains the haeme prosthetic group which contains an FE2+ ion
a wide range of amino acids are used
soluble in water
function - transport of oxygen in red blood cells

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5
Q

test for proteins

A

biuret test
add biuret solution/reagent to the sample & mic
if protein is present, the colour changes from blue to purple/lilac

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6
Q

functions of proteins

A

fibrous proteins have a structural role - eg keratin in nails
enzymes eg amylase
protein hormones eg insulin
receptor proteins on cell membrane eg insulin receptor
antibodies - immunoglobulins to bind to antigens
channel proteins - transport polar substances across membranes by FD
carrier proteins - transport polar substances across membranes by FD and AT
glycoproteins - on cell membrane for cell-cell signalling
motor proteins - eg myosin and actin in muscle

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7
Q

name two elements that are present in proteins that are not in lipids

A

nitrogen and sulphur

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8
Q

why does a change in primary structure affect the function of haemoglobin

A

the change in the amino acid sequence causes a change in the R groups
H-bonds, ionic bonds, disulphide bonds form in different places
3 structure is changed
this means it cannot bind to O2

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9
Q

amino acids

A

monomers from which proteins are made

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10
Q

how is a dipeptide formed

A

a condensation reaction between two amino acids

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11
Q

what is many amino acids joined

A

poly peptide

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12
Q

what is the bond

A

peptide bond

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13
Q

functional protein

A

one or more polypeptides

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14
Q

primary structure

A

sequence of amino acids

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15
Q

secondary structure

A

folding of amino acids into alpha helices or beta-pleated sheets
- hydrogen bonds hold them together

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16
Q

hydrogen bonds

A

alone - weak

collective - strong

17
Q

tertiary structure

A

alpha-helices/beta sheets fold further to form a specific 3D structure
- ionic bonds and disulphide bridges hold the tertiary structure

18
Q

quaternary structure

A

consists of more than one polypeptide chain

polypeptide can bind to a prosthetic/non-peptide group