BB3 Tertiary Quaternary Structure Flashcards

0
Q

Examples of proteins w/ single polypeptide chain

A
  • myoglobin

* concanavalin A

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1
Q

Tertiary Structure of a protein

A

the spatial arrangement of amino acids usually far apart from each other in the linear sequence

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2
Q

Native Structure of a Protein

A

a 3-D structure of a protein when in a physiological environment

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3
Q

RNase A

A
  • 124 amino acids
  • 4 disulfide bonds
  • hydrolyzes RNA
  • digestive enzyme
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4
Q

Hydrolysis

A

cleavage of chemical bonds by addition of water

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5
Q

Orthologs

A
  • identical structures across different species

* similar secondary structure

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6
Q

Paralogs

A
  • similar structural appearance, but carries out different function
  • same species
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7
Q

Proteins lose their structure (denature) in

A
  • Urea 8M

* Guanidine Hydrochloride 6M

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8
Q

Unfolded protein

A

random coil

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9
Q

Urea and guanidine hydrochloride disrupt…

A

noncovalent bonds

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10
Q

Reducing agent which breaks disulfide bonds

A

beta-mercapto ethanol

donates electrons

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11
Q

Conclusion of Anfinsen’s Experiment #1

A
  • the amino acid sequence of RNase A provides the info needed to specify its native structure
  • the primary structure of a protein dictates its tertiary structure
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12
Q

Conclusion of Anfinsen’s Experiment #2

A
  • the thermodynamically most stable structures of RNase A is its native structure
  • true for all proteins
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13
Q

Quaternary Structure of a protein

A

the spatial arrangement in a protein made up from more than one polypeptide chain

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14
Q

Each chain of a protein is a …

A

subunit

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15
Q

Hemoglobin’s quaternary structure

A

• 4 separate polypeptide chains – 2 alpha subunits, 2 beta subunits

16
Q

Reasons for quaternary structure

A

smaller quantities of genetic material to create larger proteins and structures

17
Q

Quaternary structure is excellent for

A

regulating protein function (allosteric effect)

18
Q

Allosteric effect

A

change in one subunit induces a change in another

19
Q

Protein conformation

A

The 3D arrangement of a proteins atoms in its structure
•independent of number of chains in the protein
•not always in native conformation

20
Q

Principal factor governing folding

A
  • burying of hydrophobic side chains

* forms protein core

21
Q

Levinthal’s Paradox

A
  • proteins don’t fold via a random pathway
  • fold to native structures via formation of a stable partially correct secondary structure features as intermediate stages in folding
22
Q

Anfinsen - Experiment 1

A

• dissolve RNase A in betamercaptoethanol and 8M Urea (denature) = loses enzyme activity
• remove BOTH betamercaptoethanol and 8M Urea by dialysis
• oxidize cysteine = reform disulfide bond
== regains all activity

23
Q

Anfinsen - Experiment 2

A
  • denature RNase A
  • remove ONLY betamercaptoethanol
  • retain 8M urea
  • regains 1% activity bc only 1 correct arrangement of disulfides in 105
  • add trace amounts of betamercaptoethanol = disulfide bonds rearrange = regains enzymatic activity
  • thermodynamics drives protein to its native structure