W1 - Amino acids Flashcards

1
Q

How many aa are there?

A

20

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2
Q

What is special about the carbon centre of an aa?

A

It is chiral

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3
Q

At neutral pH, what are the amino acids called?

A

Zwitterions

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4
Q

When the pH is low, what happens to the aa?

A

Amine groups become protonated, creating a positive charge

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5
Q

When the pH is high, what happens to the aa?

A

The carboxyl group(s) become deprotonated, creating a negative charge

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6
Q

What is the most common form of aa found in proteins?

A

L-isomer

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6
Q

Which way does L/D isomers spin plane polarised light?

A

L - left (anticlockwise), D - right (clockwise)

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6
Q

What determines the properties of the aa?

A

The chemical nature of the R groups

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7
Q

What is the smallest aa and what does it’s side chain consist of?

A

Glycine, H only

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8
Q

What two things can D isomers not do?

A

Can’t be digested or interact with tRNA

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9
Q

How many amino acids are hydrophobic?

A

10

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10
Q

What is the relation between size and hydrophobicity in G, A, V, L, I and M

A

As size increases, hydrophobicity increases

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11
Q

What is the characteristic of GAVLIM hydrophobic aa side chains?

A

They are aliphatic

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12
Q

Where are the hydrophobic R groups typically found and what is the exception?

A

Inside proteins, exception = external surface of integral/transmembrane proteins (channel)

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13
Q

What can give an aa hydrophilic properties?

A

If it is charged/polar or both

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14
Q

What groups in side chains can give hydrophilicity?

A

-OH and -NH-

15
Q

Which amino acid is an important buffer in blood?

A

Histidine

16
Q

What other characteristics do acidic and basic aa have? (@ physiological pH)

A

Acidic are negatively charged and polar, basic are positively charged and polar

17
Q

What are the uncharged derivatives of aspartate and glutamate?

A

Asparagine + Glutamine

18
Q

What makes asparagine and glutamine uncharged compared to aspartate/glutamate?

A

The O- is replaced by a neutral NH2

19
Q

Why is proline unique?

A

The R group is bound to both the chiral C centre and the NH2+

20
Q

Where is proline usually found?

A

In bends in proteins

21
Q

Are SH (thiol) and OH (hydroxyl) unreactive or reactive?

A

Reactive

22
Q

Where is histidine often found and why?

A

Active sites of enzymes because it can bind and release protons

23
Q

What are the three aromatic amino acids?

A

Phenylalanine, tryptophan, tyrosine

24
Q

How many +vely/-vely charged aa are there?

A

3 +ve, 2-ve

25
Q

How many uncharged hydrophilic aa are there?

A

5

26
Q

How many hydrophobic aa are there?

A

10