Protein Quality Control- Lecture 32 Flashcards

1
Q

The final structures of proteins are a consequence of the _____ adopting the _____.

A

primary amino acid sequence

secondary structures

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2
Q

What interactions help to arrange the secondary structures into the most stable form of tertiary structures?

A

H bonds
salt bridges
Van der Waals

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3
Q

Proteins are easily damaged by forces that are _____ or _____.

A

physical (eg. heat)

chemical (eg oxidation)

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4
Q

Damage to proteins can result in ______.

A

degradation, aggregation, or misfolding

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5
Q

What is proteostasis?

A

the process of cellular quality control that continually monitors the proteome for misfolded or aggregated proteins and target them for degradation and disposal

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6
Q

Proteins fold by the principle of _____.

A

self-assembly

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7
Q

Why were the results of Anfisen’s experiment not suitable in physiological settings?

A

higher temperatures and crowding result in aggregations rather than folding

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8
Q

What are the phases of protein folding?

A

Burst (0-5 us)
Intermediate (5-100 us)
Rate limiting step (100 us- several minutes)

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9
Q

What occurs in the bursting step of protein folding?

A

hydrophobic collapse and secondary structure formation

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10
Q

What occurs in the intermediate step of protein folding?

A

tertiary organization (molten globuole)

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11
Q

What occurs in the rate limiting step of protein folding?

A

final few salt bridges and amino acids re-arrange to lowest free energy state

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12
Q

What do molecular chaperone proteins do?

A

bind weakly to hydrophobic amino acids of proteins, prevent proteins from aggregating, promote protein folding
dependent on ATP binding, hydrolysis, and nucleotide exchange
DON’T increase rate of folding, just yield

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13
Q

What are molecular chaperone proteins?

A

proteins that bind to and stabilize an otherwise unstable conformer of another protein and facilitate its correct fate in vivo

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14
Q

What are the families of molecular chaperones?

A

Hsp70, Hsp60 (chaperonin), and Hsp90

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15
Q

Describe the structure of chaperone proteins using bacterial Chaperonin as an example.

A

homo-oligomer of 14 subunits arranged into 2 stacked rings each of 7 subunits structured like a donut with 7-fold axis and a chamber as well as a smaller lid structure

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16
Q

Describe the process of protein folding using chaperone proteins (and the example of Chaperonin).

A

unfolded proteins bind to rim of barrel –> displaced into cavity by lid structure –> protein folds in sequestered and protected space of chamber –> lid dissociates due to changes in conformation of the large subunit as ATP is hydrolyzed –> folded protein released into cytosol

17
Q

Molecular chaperone gene transcription is controlled by _____ which responds to the presence of _____.

A

Hsf (heat shock transcription factor)

unfolded protein or heat shock or other types of proteotoxic stress

18
Q

Describe the pathway of Hsf.

A

stress –> activation of Hsf –> stimulation of expression of molecular chaperones

19
Q

What enzymes are required for the ubiquitin proteasome pathway?

A

E1 (activating enzyme)
E2 (conjugate enzyme)
E3 (ubiquitin ligases)

20
Q

What are the components of a proteasome (26S complex)?

A

central catalytic core (20S) and a regulatory cap (19S)

21
Q

What are the activities of eukaryotic proteasomes?

A

chrmotrypsin-like (cleaves after hydrophobic amino acids)
trypsin-like (cleaves after basic amino acids)
peptidyl-glutamyl peptide hydrolyzing activity (cleaves after acidic amino acids)

22
Q

What do the subunits of the 19S complex do?

A

recognize ubiqitinylated substrates, deubiquitinylate the substrates, and prepare them for proteolysis via protein unfolding if necessary

23
Q

What is the pathway for the attachment of ubiquitin?

A

E1 activates the C-terminal glycine by forming ubiquitin-adenylate and transferring activated ubiquitin to a thiol site in E1 –> E2 enzymes accept ubiquitin from E1 and transfer it to the protein substrate in a reaction requiring E3
this is done until four ubiquitins are present on the substrate

24
Q

___ occur when misfolded proteins overwhelm the ubiquitin /proteasome pathway.

A

Aggregates

25
Q

____ are proteins that form toxic amyloids that are transmissible.

A

Prions