Types of proteins Flashcards

1
Q

What are globular proteins?

A

compact, water soluble, roughly spheriica

form when tertiary structures form in such a way that the hydrophobic R-groups on the amino acids are kept away from the aqueous environment

hydrohpillic R-groups are on the outside of the proteins, this means the proteins are soluble in water.

solubility means it is essential in life

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2
Q

What is insulin?

A

It is a globular protein

Hormone involved in the regulation of blood glucose conc.

Hormones transported in the bloodstream so need to be soluble

They need precise shape to fit into specific receptors on cell surface membranes.

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3
Q

What are conjugated proteins?

A

Globular proteins that contain a non-protein component called a prosthetic groups.

different types of prosthetic groups, e.g. glycoproteins

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4
Q

What is haemoglobin

A

oxygen carrying pigment in cells

quaternary protein made from four polypeptides, two alpha and two beta subunits

each subunit contains a prosthetic haem group (Fe2+)

able to combine reversibly withan oxygen molecules

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5
Q

What is catalase?

A

an enzyme

quaternary protein contain four haem prostehtic group

the presecence of iron(II) allow catalase to interact with hydrogen peroxide and speed up its breakdown

hydrogen peroxide is a common byproduct of metabolism but is damaging to cells and cell components if allowed to accumulate

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6
Q

What are fibrous proteins?

A

long, insoluble molecules

due to the high proportion of amino acids with hydrophobic R-groups in their primary structures

they contain a limited range of amino acids, usually with small R-groups

the amino acid sequence in the primary structure is usually quite repetitive

this leads to very organised structures reflected in the roles fibrous proteins often have

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7
Q

What are the properties of fibrous proteins?

A

tend to make strong, long molecules which are not folded into complex 3d globular proteins

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8
Q

What is keratin?

A

group of fibrous proteins present in hair, skin and nails

contains a large propotion of the sulfur-containing amino acid, cysteine

results in many strong disulfide bonds, forming strong inflexible and insoluble materials

the degree of disulfide bonds determines its flexibility

causes the unpleasent smell when burnt

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9
Q

What is elastin?

A

a fibrous proteins found in elastic fibres (along with small protein fibres)

present in the walls of blood vessels and alveoli - they give them their flexibility to expand and retract when needed

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10
Q

What is collagen?

A

another fibrous protein

it is a connective tissue found in skin, tendons, ligaments and the nervous system

there are a number of different forms but are made up of three polypeptides wound together in a long, strong, rope-like structure

has flexibility

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