Protein Structure Flashcards

1
Q

What is the conformation of a protein?

A

The final folded structure of a protein. Proteins typically have a limited number of stable conformations

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2
Q

What determines a protein’s conformation

A

Amino acid sequence

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3
Q

Is proper folding of protein guaranteed? Why or why not?

A

No. Sometimes protein misfold, sometimes they require help from chaperone proteins

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4
Q

What makes a protein conformation stable?

A

Gives the protein the lowest free energy.

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5
Q

Can protein conformation change?

A

Yes, protein conformation can change when interacting with different molecules.

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6
Q

List the four protein structures.

A

Primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary

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7
Q

What is the primary structure of a protein?

A

The linear amino acid sequence

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8
Q

What is the secondary structure of a protein?

A

Small segments of peptide backbone folding to form simple structures like a helix and beta sheet.

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9
Q

What is the tertiary structure of a protein?

A

The entire peptide backbone folds into the full 3D structure of the protein.

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10
Q

What is the quaternary structure of a protein?

A

More than one protein combining to form a larger structure.

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11
Q

In reality, does protein folding occur sequentially, with each stage occurring at their own moments in time?

A

No, typically it is all occurring simultaneously.

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12
Q

Give an example of how a single amino acid change in a protein sequence can have catastrophic effects.

A

Sickles cell anemia: glutamic acid is switched for hydrophobic valine, which completely changes the shape of hemoglobin.

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13
Q

What creates and stabilizes secondary structures?

A

Intramolecular hydrogen bonds between backbone

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14
Q

In which ways can beta sheets be arranged?

A

Parallel, antiparallel, a combination

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15
Q

Where does the R group point in an alpha helix?

A

Outwards

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16
Q

What type of helix is an alpha helix?

A

Right handed

17
Q

How many amino acids per turn of an alpha helix?

A

3.6

18
Q

Explain exactly how the N-C-C backbone forms hydrogen bonds in the alpha helix.

A

Every backbone C=O group forms a hydrogen bond with the N-H group of the amino acid residue 4 residues downstream of the peptide.

19
Q

Is the primary sequence of an amino acid actually random?

A

Frequently, hydrophobic/hydrophilic amino acids are grouped on the same side of an alpha helix, resulting in one side of the helix being hydrophobic and one side hydrophylic.

20
Q

How are beta sheets held together?

A

Adjacent chains held together by hydrogen bonds between backbone residues. Hydrogen bonding occurs one every two amino acid pairs.

21
Q

How many amino acids are in one beta strand? How many strands per sheet?

A

5-10 amino acids; 2-15 strands/sheet

22
Q

How are the side chains oriented in beta sheets?

A

Alternating up and down

23
Q

What determines the folding of the tertiary structures?

A

Amino acid residues

24
Q

What is a protein domain? How many domains can a single protein have?

A

unit of protein that can fold and perform a function on its own without the help of outside molecules. There can be multiple domains within one protein.

25
Q

What happens to a protein domain when you remove it from the parent protein?

A

It retains its function.

26
Q

What is meant by domain shuffling?

A

Evolution doesn’t have to reinvent new domains for new functions, oftentimes they simply recombines previously selected domains.