Primary and Secondary Protein Structures (Zhao L2) Flashcards

0
Q

What are the two main types of secondary structures in proteins?

A
  1. Alpha helix

2. Beta sheet

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1
Q

What is the primary structure of a protein?

A

The aa. sequence

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2
Q

How many high energy bonds are required to form one peptide bond?

A

Four

2 for “charging” the tRNA (ATP –> AMP + PPi)
1 for charged tRNA to enter A site (GTP –> GDP)
1 for translocation of the whole shebang (GTP –> GDP)

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3
Q

Why is the peptide bond so strong?

A

Partial double bond character

side note: Does not rotate - peptide plane :)

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4
Q

Which angle is the phi angle?

A

Angle of the

alpha carbon - amide nitrogen

bond

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5
Q

Which angle is the psi angle?

A

angle of the

Alpha carbon - Carbonyl carbon

bond

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6
Q

What is the difference between an “peptide” and a “protein”?

A

“peptides” just refers to a really short polypeptide chain

“protein” is a longer polyeptide + possible cofactors

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7
Q

What is a co-factor in the realm of proteins?

A

Functional non-amino acid component

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8
Q

What is a prosthetic group in the realm of proteins?

A

A covalently attached non-amino acid component

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9
Q

How many amino acids are “changed” in sickle cell anemia?

A

One!

E6V

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10
Q

What is a protein polymorphism?

A

Slightly different (non-disease causing) sequence of same protein in different individuals.

Is how we get our individual traits.

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11
Q

Give an example (from lecture) of a protein that is used to trace the evolutionary connections between various species.

A

Cytochrome C

Same function, similar aa sequence. The diff. in aa. seq. from species to species determines how far they are, evolutionarily, from one another.

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12
Q

What is a protease or a peptidase?

A

Enzyme that hydrolyzes peptide bonds. “Digest” proteins.

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13
Q

Where in the body might we need proteases/peptidases that will digest at a specific aa. but within any protein?

What are some examples of these proteases?

A

Digestive system.

Pepsin, Trypsin
Submaxillarus protease
Chymotrypsin

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14
Q

What are some examples of proteases that digest only specific proteins or peptides?

A

HIV protease

Angiotensin Converting Enzyme (ACE)

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15
Q

Name some examples of proteins that are synthesized in their inactive form and are later cleaved to their active state.

A
Trypsin, chymotrypsin
Insulin
Compliment enzymes
Clotting enzymes
Trxn factors
Programmed Cell Death proteins
16
Q

How is insulin activated?

A

Preproinsulin is initially synthesized and through a series of cleavage and “maturation” steps it ends up as 2 peptide chains (chain A and B) connected via disulfide bridges.

17
Q

Primary protein structure is held together by _________ bonds. Higher order protein structures are held together by ______ bonds.

A

Covalent

Noncovalent

18
Q

What is the unique secondary protein structure present in collagens?

A

Left-handed triple helix.

19
Q

What is the main non-covalent bond that shapes the alpha helix?

A

H-bond between C=O on one aa and the N-H of the aa. 4 steps down the chain.

aa i and aa i+4

20
Q

Where are the R-groups in the alpha helix?

A

R-groups point out from the helix structure.

21
Q

What class of amino acids are typically found within the alpha helix?

A

Small hydrophobic residues. (eg. Ala, Leu)

22
Q

Which two amino acids are the “helix breakers” and why?

A

Pro and Gly

Proline has a ring side chain bonded to the backbone N. Cannot form the hydrogen bonds found in the center of the helix.

Glycine is very very small and is an energy penalty to force it into an alpha helix (or beta sheet).

23
Q

The residues that point outwards on the alpha helix are in a good position to interact with what other biological molecule?

A

DNA

24
Q

What is the main non-covalent bond found in a Beta-Sheet?

A

Hydrogen bonds between C=O in one amino acid and the N-H group on a neighboring polypeptide chain.

25
Q

What are the two main classes of Beta sheets?

A

parallel and antiparallel

antiparallel: one chain N–>C, neighboring chain C—>N
parallel: both N—-> C

Both have a pleated sheet-like structure

26
Q

Where are the side chains positioned in the Beta sheet?

A

Side chains alternate pointing up and down from the main axis of the sheet.

27
Q

Give some examples of proteins composed mostly of beta sheets.

A

Fibrion - silk, spider webs

Immunoglobulin (Ig, antibody)
Fibroblast growth factor
Pepsin
HIV protease

28
Q

Describe the secondary/tertiary structure of an immunoglobin domain

A

Two beta sheets. One with 3 antiparallel beta strands, the other with 4 antiparallel beta strands.
Sheets connected by disulfide bonds.
Beta strands connected by loops and turns (where the recognition site is !)

29
Q

_______ measures the absorption (R/L polarized light) of a protein’s secondary structures.

How is this useful?

A

Circular Dichroism (CD)

Knowing the absorbances of a particular sec. structure and measuring the absorb. of a protein gives you a quantitative look at its secondary structures.

30
Q

Describe the structure of a Beta Turn

A

180 degree turn between beta strands over 4 aa’s

Stabilized by H-bond between C=O of first aa and N-H of 4th aa.

31
Q

What two amino acids are common in beta turns?

A

Pro in position 2

Glycine in position 3

32
Q

Most peptides bonds are cis or trans?

How is proline unique in this regard?

A

Most are trans

Proline can be cis (6% of the time roughly)