Proteins Dash 3 (Part 2) Flashcards

1
Q

Experiments have
shown that the final
3D tertiary structure
of a protein ultimately
is determined by the

A

Primary structure (amino acid sequences)

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2
Q

The 3D fold (shape) of
the protein determines
its .

A

function

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3
Q

The primary structure of a
protein refers to its

A

Amino acid sequence

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4
Q

Amino acids in peptides ( — aas) and proteins (typically —- to —– aas) are joined together by peptide bonds (amide bonds) between the carboxyl and amino groups of adjacent amino
acids.

A

<30 aas
200 to 1,000

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5
Q

Only the R-group side-chains vary. By
convention, protein sequences are
written from left-to-right, from
the proteins ——–

A

N- to C-terminus.

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6
Q

The average yeast protein
contains how many amino acids?

A

466

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7
Q

molecular weight of an amino acid is — daltons (Da), the average
molecular weight of a yeast
protein is 52,728 Da. Note that
1 Da = 1 a.m.u. (1 proton mass).

A

113

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8
Q

refers to short-range, periodic folding
elements that are common in proteins.

A

Secondary Structure

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9
Q

Secondary structure includes the

A

a-helix and b sheet and in turns

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10
Q

In the α helix (Fig. 3.4), the backbone
adopts a ——- —– structure
in which there are 3.6 aas per
turn.

A

Cylindrical spiral

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11
Q

The α helix is stabilized by ??? between backbone carbonyl oxygen and amide nitrogen atoms that are oriented ??? to the helix axis.

A

H-bonds
parallel

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12
Q

H-bonds occur between residues located in the n and —- positions relative to one another.

A

n + 4

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13
Q

In β sheets (a.k.a. “???? ???? ”), each β strand adopts an ?????

A

pleated sheets

Extended conformation

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14
Q

ß strands tend to occur in
pairs or multiple copies in β
sheets that interact with one
another via —— directed
——
to the axis of each
strand.

A

H-bonds
Perpendicular

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15
Q

Strands can orient ———— or —— to one another in β sheets

A

Antiparallel or parallel

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16
Q

ß Turns consist of 3-4 amino acids
that form

A

tight bends

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17
Q

Longer connecting
segments between ß strands are called

A

Loops

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18
Q

refers to the
folded 3D structure of a protein

A

Tertiary Structure

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19
Q

Tertiary structure is also known as the —— structure or —— ——-

A

Native structure or active conformation

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20
Q

Tertiary structure mostly is
stabilized by ——— ——- between secondary structure elements and other internal sequence regions that
cannot be classified as a particular
type of secondary structure.

A

noncovalent
interactions

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21
Q

The structures of
hundreds of proteins have been
determined by techniques such as

A

x-ray crystallography and NMR.

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22
Q

are evolutionarily conserved collections of secondary structure elements which have a ——
conformation. They also have a ——- sequence because the aa sequence ultimately determines structure.

A

Secondary structure motifs
Defined
Consensus

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23
Q

Multisubunit (multimeric)
proteins have another level
of structural organization
known as —— ——-.

A

Quaternary Structure

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24
Q

refers to the
number of subunits, their
relative positions, and
contacts between the
individual monomers in a
multimeric protein

A

Quaternary
structure

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25
Q

independently folding and functionally specialized tertiary structure units within a protein.

A

Domains

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26
Q

The modular domain structure of many proteins has resulted from the ——– and ——- together
of their coding sequences within longer genes.

A

shuffling and splicing

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27
Q

multimeric proteins
achieve extremely large sizes,
e.g., of subunits

A

10s-100s

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28
Q

Such complexes exhibit the highest level of structural organization known as

A

Supramolecular structure

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29
Q

Typically,
supramolecular complexes function
as “——– ——–” in
reference to the fact that the
activities of individual subunits are
coordinated in the performance of
some overall task

A

macromolecular machines

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30
Q

Through ——- ——- and ——– —– —-
approaches, the sequences
of an enormous number of
proteins have been compiled.

A

Genome sequencing and classical gene cloning

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31
Q

Proteins that have a common
ancestor are called

A

Homologs

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32
Q

These —– proteins are composed of mostly α helical
secondary structure

A

Globular

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33
Q

Comparison of the sequences of the members of protein families has brought to light the fact that amino
acids within a given class
exhibit a large degree of
———- ——-

A

functional redundancy

34
Q

Many experiments have shown that
proteins can spontaneously fold
from an unfolded state to their

A

folded native state

35
Q

tends to occur via
successive conformational changes
leading to secondary and then
tertiary structure elements

A

Folding

36
Q

The ——— conformation of a
protein can be generated by
heating or treatment with certain
organic solvents.

A

unfolded
(denatured)

37
Q

The folding of many proteins, particularly large ones, is
kinetically slow and is assisted in ——– by folding agents known as ——-

A

Vivo
chaperone

38
Q

Chaperones assist in 1)
folding of ——- polypeptides made by —— , and 2) re-
folding of proteins denatured by ——— ——- such as
heat shock.

A

nascent polypeptides
Translation

environmental damage,

39
Q

Molecular chaperones bind to unfolded nascent polypeptide chains as they emerge from the —— ,
and prevent aggregation,
misfolding, and degradation.

A

ribosome

40
Q

The hydrolysis of ATP by the chaperone drives conformational
changes that prevent
—— and help drive
——– ——-.

A

aggregation
protein folding.

41
Q

Eukaryotic chaperonins such as the —- —— are large
multimeric complexes related to the bacterial GroEL and GroES
proteins.

A

TriC complex

42
Q

In neurodegenerative diseases
such as ———- disease and
—– —- disease, insoluble misfolded proteins accumulate in the brain in
pathological lesions known as
——— , resulting in neurodegeneration

A

plaques

43
Q

In Alzheimer’s disease, the
protein known as —— ——- protein
is cleaved into a peptide product (β-amyloid) that aggregates and precipitates
in amyloid filaments.

A

amyloid precursor protein

44
Q

The misfolding of β-amyloid, which
involves a transition from α
helical to β sheet conformation
leads to ——– ——-

A

filament formation.

45
Q

In mad cow disease, ——- proteins
precipitate causing lesions.

A

Prion

46
Q

The term —– refers to any molecule that can be bound by a
protein

A

Ligand

47
Q

Ligand binding requires ——- complementarity. The
greater the degree of complementarity, the higher the —— and —— of the interaction

A

molecular
specificity
and affinity

48
Q

The complementarity-determining regions (CDRs) of
the antibody make highly specific contacts with —— in the
antigen

A

epitopes

49
Q

Enzymes are proteins (a few are RNAs called ——-) that catalyze chemical reactions within living organisms.

A

Ribozymes

50
Q

In an enzyme-catalyzed reaction, the reactant or what we called a —– ) is converted into the product

A

Substrate

51
Q

is
achieved due to the
fact that enzymes are
most complementary to
the transition state
structure formed in
the reaction

A

Rate enhancement

52
Q

The transformation of a substrate to the product occurs in the ——- of an
enzyme

A

Active site

53
Q

The active site can be subdivided
into a ———— wherein amino acids that catalyze the reaction reside, and a ——– —- that recognizes a specific feature of the substrate, conferring
specificity to the enzyme-substrate
interaction

A

catalytic site
binding pocket

54
Q

The French mathematicians —– and —— developed a kinetic
equation to explain the behavior of most enzymes

A

Michaelis and Menten

55
Q

They showed that the maximal rate of an enzyme-catalyzed reaction (Vmax) depends on the ——– (Fig. 3.22a) and the
—— —–
for the rate-limiting step of the reaction

A

concentration of enzyme rate constant

56
Q

Michaelis and Menten also derived a kinetic constant, the
——- ——
(KM),

A

Michaelis constant

57
Q

The lower the KM the higher the —–
of the enzyme for the substrate

A

Affinity

58
Q

is the indicative of the affinity of most enzymes for their substrates.

A

Michaelis Constant (KM)

59
Q

The KM happens to be the concentration of substrate at which the reaction rate is —– ——.

A

half-maximal

60
Q

are enzymes that cleave peptide bonds in other protein

A

Proteases

61
Q

The ____ proteases, which are important for digestion and blood coagulation

A

Serine

62
Q

Also present are aspartate and
histidine residues that together with serine make up what is
called the

A

catalytic triad.

63
Q

The active sites of serine proteases also contain ——- —- that confer specificity by positioning the peptide bond that is to be cleaved next to the
reactive serine

A

binding pockets

64
Q

Trypsin-
Chymotrypsin-
Elastase-

A

basic aas
aromatic aas
small side-chain aa

65
Q

In the serine protease reaction mechanism, ———– is formed transiently after peptide bond cleavage by serine.

A

An acyl enzyme intermediate

66
Q

the rates of pathway
reactions can be increased if
the substrates and products
of each step are —— to
the next enzyme in the
pathway

A

Channeled

67
Q

is enhanced in multisubunit enzyme complexes and by attachment of enzymes to scaffolds or even by fusion of encoded enzymes into a single polypeptide chain

A

Channeling

68
Q

The proteolytic ——- (——) of proteins is important for regulatory processes, cell renewal, and disposal of denatured and
damaged proteins.

A

Degradation (turnover)

69
Q

carry out degradation of endocytosed proteins and retired organelles.

A

Lysosomes

70
Q

Cytoplasmic protein degradation
is performed largely by the
molecular machine called the

A

Proteasome

71
Q

is a 76-amino-
acid protein that after
conjugation to the protein,
targets it to the proteasome

A

Ubiquitin

72
Q

recognize and degrade
ubiquinated proteins

A

Proteasome

73
Q

is a very important
messenger in cell signaling

A

Calcium
ion (Ca2+)

74
Q

contains 4 helix-loop-helix motifs
(EF hands) each of which can bind
calcium

A

Calmodulin

75
Q

Protein function also can be regulated by allosteric transitions
caused by covalent modification via

A

phosphorylation

76
Q

typically occurs on serine, threonine, and tyrosine

A

Phosphorylation

77
Q

Cells
maintain cytoplasmic calcium
concentration at about .
When calcium concentration rises
above this level due to hormone-
receptor signaling processes, etc.,
it binds to a protein known as

A

10-7 M

calmodulin

78
Q

Enzymes known as —— carry out phosphorylation

A

Kinases

79
Q

The bindinf of a ligand to a protein typically triggers an ———- (—— —–) conformational change resulting in the modification of its activity.

A

Allosteric (other shape)

80
Q

Enzyme catalyzed reactions typically are highly specific, and rate enhancements of

A

10⁶-10¹²