Proteins Flashcards

1
Q

What is the general structure of an amino acid?

A
  • COOH carboxyl/carboxylic acid group
  • R variable side group
  • NH2 amine/amino group
  • Central carbon atom
  • A hydrogen atom
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2
Q

Describe how to test for proteins in a sample

A

Biuret test confirms presence of peptide bond

  1. Add equal volume of sodium hydroxide to sample at room temperature
  2. Add drops of dilute copper (II) sulfate solution, swirl to mix (1 & 2 make biuret reagent)
  3. Results:
    - Positive result: colour changes from blue to purple
    - Negative result: solution remains blue
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3
Q

How many amino acids are there and how do they differ from one another?

A
  • 20

- Differ only by one side ‘R’ group

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4
Q

How do dipeptides and polypeptides form?

A
  • Condensation reaction forms peptide bond (-CONH-) & eliminates molecule of water
  • Dipeptide: 2 amino acids
  • Polypeptide: 3 or more amino acids
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5
Q

How many level of protein structure are there?

A

4

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6
Q

Define ‘primary structure’ of a protein

A
  • Sequence, number & type of amino acids in the polypeptide

- Determined by sequence of codons on mRNA, and determines the proteins function in the end

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7
Q

Define ‘secondary structure’ of a protein

A
  • The shape that the chain of amino acids chains – either alpha
    helix or beta pleated sheet
  • The hydrogen in the -NH has a slight positive charge whilst
    the oxygen in the -C=O has a slight negative charge
  • As a result weak hydrogen bonds can form leading to alpha helices or beta pleated sheets
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8
Q

Describe the 2 types of secondary protein structure

A

α-helix:
- All N-H bonds on same side of protein chain
- Spiral shape
- H-bonds parallel to helical axis
β-pleated sheet:
- N-H & C=O groups alternate from one side to the other

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9
Q

Define ‘tertiary structure’ of a protein, name the bonds present

A

3D structure formed by further folding of polypeptide

  • Disulfide bridges
  • Ionic bonds
  • Hydrogen bonds
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10
Q

Describe each type of bond in the tertiary structure of proteins

A
  • Disulfide bridges: strong covalent S-S bonds between molecules of the amino acid cysteine
  • Ionic bonds: relatively strong bonds between charged R groups (pH changes cause these bonds to break)
  • Hydrogen bonds: numerous & easily broken
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11
Q

Define ‘quaternary structure’ of a protein

A
  • Functional proteins may consist of more than one polypeptide
  • Precise 3D structure held together by the same types of bond as tertiary structure
  • May involve addition of prosthetic groups e.g. metal ions (haemoglobin) or phosphate groups
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12
Q

Describe the structure and function of globular proteins

A
  • Spherical & compact
  • Hydrophilic R groups face outwards & hydrophobic R groups face inwards = usually water-soluble
  • Involved in metabolic processes e.g. enzymes & haemoglobin
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13
Q

Describe the structure and function of fibrous proteins

A
  • Can form long chains or fibres
  • Insoluble in water
  • Useful for structure and support e.g. collagen in skin
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14
Q

Outline how chromatography could be used to identify the amino acids in a mixture

A
  1. Use capillary tube to spot mixture onto pencil origin line & place chromatography paper in solvent
  2. Allow solvent to run until it almost touches other end of paper, amino acids move different distances based on relative attraction to paper & solubility in solvent
  3. Use revealing agent or UV light to see spots
  4. Calculate Rf values & match to database
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15
Q

What are enzymes?

A
  • Biological catalysts for intra & extracellular reactions
  • Specific tertiary structure determines shape of active site, complementary to a specific substrate
  • Formation of enzyme-substrate (ES) complexes lowers activation energy of metabolic reactions
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16
Q

Explain the induced fit model of enzyme action

A
  • Shape of active site is not directly complementary to substrate & is flexible
  • Conformational changes enables ES complexes to form
  • This puts strain on substrate bonds, lowering activation energy
17
Q

How have models of enzyme action changed?

A
  • Initially lock & key model: rigid shape of active site complementary to only 1 substrate
  • Currently induced fit model: also explains why binding at allosteric sites can change shape of active site
18
Q

How could a student identify the activation energy of a metabolic reaction from an energy level diagram?

A

Difference between free energy of substrate & peak of curve

19
Q

Name 5 factors that affect the rate of enzyme-controlled reactions

A
  • Enzyme concentration
  • Substrate concentration
  • Concentration of inhibitors
  • pH
  • Temperature
20
Q

How does substrate concentration affect rate of reaction?

A
  • Given that enzyme concentration is fixed, rate increases proportionally to substrate concentration
  • Rate levels off when maximum number of ES complexes form at any given time
21
Q

How does enzyme concentration affect rate of reaction?

A
  • Given that substrate is in excess, rate increases proportionally to substrate concentration
  • Rate levels off when maximum number of ES complexes form at any given time
22
Q

How does temperature affect rate of reaction?

A
  • Rate increases as kinetic energy increases & peaks at optimum temperature
  • Above optimum, ionic & H-bonds in tertiary structure break = active site no longer complementary to substrate (denaturation)
23
Q

How does pH affect rate of reaction?

A
  • Enzymes have a narrow optimum pH range

- Outside range, H+/OH- ions interact with H-bonds & ionic bonds in tertiary structure = denaturation

24
Q

What are competitive inhibitors?

A
  • Similar shape to substrate = bind to active site
  • Do not stop reaction; ES complexes forms when inhibitor is released
  • Increasing substrate concentration decreases their effect
25
Q

What are non-competitive inhibitors?

A
  • Bind to allosteric binding site
  • May permanently stop reaction; trigger active site to change shape
  • Increasing substrate concentration has no impact on their effect