7.1 Flashcards

1
Q

what are aspartATE and glutamATE mean?

A

anionic form, DEPROTONATED

the acid form contains the H

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2
Q

“His goes both ways”

A

Lys (K) and Arg (R) are protonated at physiologic pH

His (H) is around the middle; acts as proton acceptor and donor (prevalent in ACTIVE SITES)

Carboxylic is ALWAYS anionic

-NH2 is ALWAYS cationic

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3
Q

is tryptophan (Trp) polar or non-polar?

A

it is NONPOLAR, despite the NH group

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4
Q

Nonpolar amino acids

A

GP
AVILM
FW

Proline (P) is non-polar

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5
Q

Polar amino acids

A

ST NQ

Y with -OH is polar

C is fairly polar

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6
Q

9 essential amino acids

A

K-H-T-V-L-I-F-W-M-P

Lysine
Histidine
Threonine
Valine
Leucine
Isoleucine
Phenylalanine
Tryptophan
Methionine
Proline
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7
Q

can amino acids act as acids or bases?

A

they can BOTH

AMPHOTERIC

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8
Q

N-C(-R)-C-N-C(-R)-C

A

The pattern of N-C-C - N-C-C

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9
Q

protease

A

cuts peptide bond

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10
Q

inside of cells is oxidizing or reducing environment?

A

REDUCING

disulfide bridges found in extracellular polypeptides (antibodies, hormone insulin)

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11
Q

4 ways of denaturing

A
  1. UREA (hydrogen bonds = secondary structure)
  2. extreme pH (think ceviche)
  3. temperature
  4. salt concentration

disruption of protein’s SHAPE, not primary structure

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12
Q

alpha helices (width, direction)

A

5 angstroms in width, each AA rises 1.5 angroms
3.6 amino acids per turn

AAs bond CLOSE TO EACH OTHER

GOOD for transmembrane regions (Hydrophobic interior) since hydrogens are bonded, with hydrophobic R groups

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13
Q

beta sheet

A

residues FAR from each other

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14
Q

tertiary structure

A

Van Der Waals = nonpolar side chains

hydrogen bonds between polar side-chains

disulfide bridges

electrostatic interactions between acidic/basic side chains

hydrophobic goes interior, hydrophilic R-groups exposed to water

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15
Q

quaternary structure

A

SEPARATE polypeptides

VdW, hydrogen bonds, disulfide bonds, electrostatic interactions

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16
Q

cofactor

A

metals, small molecules required for activity of enzymes

when organic, called a co-enzyme, which binds to the substrate during catalyzed reaction (example: coenzyme A)

17
Q

covalent modification

A

kinase phosphorylates serine, threonine, tyrosine covalently (actives/deactivates)

18
Q

zymogen

A

inactive form of a protein

activated by cleavage by a protease

19
Q

regulation of enzymatic activity

A
  1. covalent modification
  2. proteolytic cleavage
  3. association with polypeptides
  4. allosteric regulation
20
Q

allosteric regulation

A

NON-COVALENT, REVERSIBLE

alters conformation of the enzyme AT A DISTANCE

OTHER SITES (cooperativity is active sites)

21
Q

cooperativity

A

sigmoidal

binding of CO2 to hemoglobin STABILIZES TENSE Hb, causes the four binding sites to have lower affinity for oxygen

22
Q

protease

A

DO NOT REQUIRE ATP TO CLEAVE BOND