Building blocks of proteins Flashcards

1
Q

What is an alpha carbon?

A

Alpha carbon of amino acids is the one which has the side chain attached to it

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2
Q

What are the non polar amino acids?

A

They are hydrophobic
Glycine, proline, cysteine, alanine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, methionine, tryptophan and phenylalanine

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3
Q

Properties of glycine, proline and cysteine

A

Gly: R=H, non-chiral, flexible, almost in a group by itself
Pro: R-group bonds back to main chain N, imino acid, rigid, almost in a group by itself
Cys: not really non polar or polar

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4
Q

What are the charged polar amino acids?

A

-ve charge : aspartic acid and glutamic acid
+ve charge : lysine, arginine and histidine
Found in surface of proteins or in active sites due to being charged

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5
Q

What are the uncharged polar side chains?

A

Serine, threonine, tyrosine, asparagine and glutamine
Hydrophilic often found at surface of proteins

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6
Q

What are the properties of non polar amino acids?

A

Only C or H at the end of their side chain
Hydrophobic

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7
Q

What are the properties of polar amino acids?

A

Have -OH, -NH2 or -O in their side chain
Able to form bonds with other atoms
Hydrophilic

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8
Q

What are the properties of +ve charged polar amino acids?

A

Have -OH, -NH2 or -O in their side chain
Able to form bonds with other atoms
Hydrophilic
+ charge at pH 7

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9
Q

What are the properties of -ve charged polar amino acids?

A

Have -OH, -NH2 or -O in their side chain
Able to form bonds with other atoms
Hydrophilic
-ve charge at pH 7

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10
Q

What is pKa and pI?

A

pKa value for an ionisable group on an amino acid or protein is the pH at which the group is 50% ionised
pI is the pH at which the net charge on an amino acid is zero
pH<pKa = side chain protonated
pH>pKa = side chain deprotonated

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11
Q

How do we know if something is ionisable?

A

Its polar
Has an H-atom that can participate in acid-base reactions
Donates and accepts electrons

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12
Q

What is a post translational modification (PTM)?

A

When a chemical group is added to an amino acid residue after translation has occur. Added via covalent attachment

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13
Q

What ways can amino acids be modified?

A

Phosphorylation, hydroxylation, carboxylation, metal binding, iodination, glycosylation

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14
Q

What is phosphorylation?

A

An amino acid modification often used to control enzyme activity - like a chemical on/off switch

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15
Q

What is hydroxylation?

A

An amino acid modification needed to prevent connective tissues diseases and scurvy, often proline and lysine involved

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16
Q

What is carboxylation?

A

An amino acid modification needed for blood clotting, often glutamate involved

17
Q

What are peptide bonds?

A

A covalent bond, planar (flat), trans (prevents steric hinderince), dipole (ends have opposite charges), partial double bond character, formed via dehydration reaction between C-terminal of one AA and N-terminal of another

18
Q

What are peptides and polypeptides?

A

A short stretch of amino acids joined together by peptide bonds
A polypeptide is a very long chain of amino acids

19
Q

What is a protein?

A

A longer chain of amino acids joined together usually with a defined biological function

20
Q

What are amino acid residues?

A

Amino acids that are covalently joined in a peptide or protein that are no longer complete, individual, amino acids