Introduction to protein biochemistry Flashcards

1
Q

Proteins are diverse and important

A

Very versatile biomolecules
Large variety structural properties lead to wide variety of jobs e.g:
- Hormones - small, travel in bloodstream, bind specific receptor in different place to start
- Antibodies - recognise foreign material, communicate to immune system
- DNA binding proteins - binding specific DNA sequences, affect gene expression

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2
Q

Movement of other molecules

A

Porin - On outside bacteria membrane, allows diffusion certain molecules, makes hole in membrane
Ferritin - Stores, transport and releases iron

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3
Q

Structural Functions

A

Lots of protein components of cytoskeleton e.g. microtubules

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4
Q

Enzymes

A

Are proteins accelerate rate chemical reactions
Don’t change final equilibrium, just make reaction faster
Reduces energy required for reaction
Enzymes have active site, bind to substrate, yields product

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5
Q

Protein structure and folding

A

Protein made of amino acids with varied side chains
Have many different shapes, size, electric charge, polarity

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6
Q

Primary structure

A

Order of amino acids (called residues) in polypeptide/protein
protein sequence defined by gene sequence
DNA transcribed to RNA translated to protein
3 bases = 1 amino acid

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7
Q

Amino acids joined by peptide bonds

A

Peptide bond - loss of water
N-terminus and C-terminus - shows chains beginning (N) and ending (C)
Proteins generally between 50-2000 amino acids
Can be tens of thousands
Shorted than 50 called peptides not proteins
Rotation can’t occur around peptide bond as rigid but other bonds more flexible

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8
Q

Proteins fold into 3D structure

A

Folding based on properties of component amino acids
Unfolded = denatured
Folded = native
Denatured proteins are simply an amino acid chain and is thermodynamically unstable
Bond form between amino acids - native protein

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9
Q

Secondary structure

A

Regular repeating structure
Between amino acids close together in first sequence
Stabilised by hydrogen bonds (relatively negative electric charge O, relatively positive H)
H bond not relatively strong on own but strong when there’s lots of them

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10
Q

Alpha helix

A

H-bond between NH (relatively positive) and CO (relatively negative) groups of amino acids that are 4 residues apart
Gives spiral structure with side chains sticking out

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11
Q

Beta sheet

A

H-bonds between NH and CO groups of amino acid are further away from each other on 1st sequence and on different strands
Parallel - adjacent strands, run in same direction
Anti-parallel - run opposite to each other

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12
Q

Tertiary structure

A

Tightly packed, thermodynamically stable, 3D structure
Determined by noncovalent interactions of side chains, interactions have different strengths
Electrical charges - similar repel, opposite attract
Size, shape side chains also important can limit structures that can be made

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13
Q

Interaction of amino acids with polar water molecules

A

Hydrophobic - dislike water, nonpolar, no H bonds/ionic interactions
Hydrophilic - like water, can form H bonds/ionic interactions

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14
Q

Hydrophobic amino acids

A

Usually on inside tertiary structure
Polar residues tend to be on outside of protein so can interact with polar water
Non-polar residues tend to fold into centre of protein, away from aqueous environment of cell

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15
Q

Disulphide bridges between cysteine residues

A

Interactions between sulphur atoms in cysteine amino acids
Oxidation to Crosslinks between different parts of primary sequence
Rigid strengthening of tertiary structure e.g. insulin

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16
Q

Protein domains

A

Some proteins (e.g. Myoglobin) fold into single compact structures
Many proteins fold into several domains - regions fold tightly
Separated flexible regions that less tightly folded
Domains often carry out specific part of proteins function
Same domain can appear in several evolutionary linked proteins

17
Q

Quaternary structure

A

Some polypeptides form part of a more complex structure with 2 or more subunits
Subunits can be identical or different
Dimer, trimer, tetramer - quaternary structure made of 2, 3 ,4 subunits
E.g. haemoglobin made 2 alpha and 2 beta subunits

18
Q

Post-translational modification

A

Removal specific part sequence e.g. of signal peptides
Addition molecules, modulating protein function e.g:
- Methylation - add CH3 groups - methylation histones used to control which parts genome expressed
- Glycosylation - addition of sugars - especially on cell surface and secreted proteins
- Ubiquitination - add of a 76 amino acid polypeptide - Ubiquitin polymers marl out protein for degradation

19
Q

Phosphorylation

A

Reversible addition of PO3 groups
Added by enzymes cladded as kinases
Important way to regulating enzymes function
Phosphorylation amino acids in/around active site can change properties of region e.g. alter substrate binding

20
Q

Protein tareting

A

Different organelles require different types of proteins
Some proteins need to be moved to the membrane or secreted from cell
Many proteins contain short ce

21
Q

Protein target to cell membrane

A

Can occur via secretory pathways
Ribosomes associated with endoplasmic reticulum

22
Q

Posttranslational modifications anchor membrane proteins

A

Other proteins anchored in membrane by additional hydrophobic groups added to protein sequence e.g:
- Addition of fatty acid groups to small G proteins (e.g. RAS) - inserted into membrane