Chapter 4: Protein Three-Dimensional Structure.

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heme

Capacity of myoglobin to bind oxygen depends on the presence of _____

Unit of mass very nearly equal to that of hydrogen atom. ( Therefore: 5500 g mol-1 = 5500 daltons)

Dalton.

Most common cross-links, formed by the oxidation of a pair of cystine residues, resulting in a residue called Cystine.

Di-sulfide bonds

* Primary. * Secondary. * Tertiary. * Quaternary. *

Different structures of a protein.

secondary structure

Either an alpha helix or beta pleated sheet.

Peptides made of small numbers of amino acids

Oligopeptides.

beta pleated sheet

One form of the secondary structure of proteins in which the polypeptide chain folds back and forth, or where two regions of the chain lie parallel to each other and are held together by hydrogen bonds.

Formed by linking the α-carboxyl group of one amino acid to the α-amino of another amino acid.

Linear Polymers.

Regular repeating part, Rich in hydrogen-bonding. Each Residue contains carbonyl group (C=O), which is a good Hyfrogen-bond donor

Main Chain or Backbone.

110 daltons

Mean Molecular weight of an amino acid residue.

Bond formed between two molecules when the carboxyl group of one molecule reacts with the amino group of the other molecule, releasing a molecule of water (H2O).

Peptide Bond.

A series of amino acids joined by peptide bonds. It has directionality. (Its ends are different: in one side α-amino, and a α-carboxyl on the other. For Convenience α-amino is taken to be the beginning. SEE PAGE 46)

Polypeptide Chain.

Another name for the sequence of amino acids. It determines the final 3 dimensional structure of a protein.

Primary Structure.

A large group of nitrogenous compounds of high molecular weight that are essential constituents of all living organisms. They consist of one or more chains of amino acids linked by peptide bonds and are folded into a specific three-dimensional shape maintained by further chemical bonding

Protein

metamorphic protein

Proteins that exist in an ensemble of structures of approximately equal energy that are in equilibrium

When many proteins require more than one chain to function.

Quaternary Structure.

Each amino acid in a Polypeptide.

Residue.

Freedom of rotation created by the bonds between the amono group and the α-carbon and between the α-carbon and the carbonyl group.

Rotation that allows proteins to fold in many different ways.

The 3 dimensional Structure of Proteins. Result from a regular pattern of hydrogen bonds between the Nitrogen-Hydrogen (NH) and Carbon-Oxygen (CO) of the amino acids.

Secondary Structure.

folding funnel

Shows 3D version of 2D energy states. Lowest energy is stable protein. Rough funnel is less cooperative.

Ramachandran plot

Shows favorable phi-psi angle combinations. 3 main "wells" for α-helices, ß-sheets, and left-handed α-helices.

supersecondary structures/motifs

Specific combination of alpha helices and B sheets Tell structural information

disulfide bond

Strong chemical side bond that joins the sulfur atoms of two neighboring cysteine amino acids to create one cystine, which joins together two polypeptide strands like rungs on a ladder.

* The peptide Structure is essentially planar. (trans and Cis only.Almost all peptide bonds in proteins are trans due to sterics ) * Peptide bond has considerable double-bond character. * Peptide bond is unchanged.

Structure characteristics of Polypeptides.

Highest level of structure that an individual polypeptide can attain. It happens when the 3 dimensional structure becomes more complex when the R group of amino acids far apart in the primary structure.

Tertiary Structure.

primary structure

The first level of protein structure; the specific sequence of amino acids making up a polypeptide chain.

quaternary structure

The fourth level of protein structure; the shape resulting from the association of two or more polypeptide subunits.

tertiary structure

The third level of protein structure; the overall, three-dimensional shape of a polypeptide due to interactions of the R groups of the amino acids making up the chain.

proline glycine

___ in position 2 or ___ in position 3 are common in beta turns

ferritin

___, an iron storage protein is built from a bundle of alpha helices

backbone and variable side chains

a polypeptide chain consists of 2 things:

directionality

a polypeptide chain has

glycine

acts as a helix breaker because the tiny R group supports other conformations.

trans

almost all peptide bonds in proteins are ___

direction

amino acid sequences have ___

peptide bonds

amino acids are linked by ___ ___

myoglobin

an extremely compact molecule

phi angle

angle around the alpha carbon-amide nitrogen bond

psi angle

angle around the alpha carbon-carbonyl carbon bond

beta turn

another common type of secondary structure is

domain

compact globular units

two cysteine

disulfide bonds form by the oxidation of

no

do all polypeptide sequences adopt alpha helices

right-handed

essentially all alpa helices found in proteins are

structural support

fibrous proteins provide what for cells and tissues

beta sheets

formed by adjacent beta strands

3

how many bonds separate sequential alpha carbons in a polypeptide chain

steric repulsion

hydrogen bonds within each peptide chain are absent of helices, instead the helices are stabilized by ___ ___ of the pyrrolidine ring of the proline residues

6

in a pair of linked amino acids, ___ atoms lie in a plane

opposite

in antiparallel beta sheets, the H-bonded strands run in the ___ direction

four

in beta turns, The 180° turn is accomplished over ___ amino acids

fully extended

in contrast to alpha helices, the polypeptide in a beta strand if ___ ___

same

in parallel beta sheets, the H-bonded strands run in the ___ direction

disulfide bonding

in some proteins, the polypeptide chain can be cross-linked by disulfide bonds

uncharged

is the peptide bond charged or uncharged?

beta turns

occur frequently whenever strands in b sheets change the direction

amide bond

peptide bond

reverse turns and loops

polypeptide chains can change direction by making

prion

protein particles that cause disease

genes

proteins have unique amino acid sequences specified by

intrinsically unstructured protein

proteins that in whole or in part lack discrete three-dimensional structure under physiological conditions

alanine leucine

small hydrophobic residues such as ___ and ___ are strong helix formers

beta pleated sheets

stabilized by hydrogen bonds between adjacent segments that may not be nearby

alpha helix

stabilized by hydrogen bonds between nearby residues

molten globule

structure characterized by dynamic hydrophobic interactions

3D structure

the amino acid sequence of a protein determines its

intermediates

the essence of protein folding is the tendency to retain partly correct ___

steric exclusion

the fact that two atoms cannot be in the same place at the same time, restricts the number of possible peptide conformations and is thus a powerful organizing principle

dehydration synthesis

the forming of two molecules while water is being removed as well

many different ways

the freedom of rotation about two bonds of each amino acid allows proteins to fold in

thermodynamically

the native structure for 3D structure is the ____ most stable structure

glycine

the only residue that can fit in an interior position is

canonical structures

the peptide bond is a resonance hybrid of 2 ___ ___

planar

the peptide bond is essentially ___

double-bond

the peptide bond of the primary structure has a partial ___-___ character

buried surface

the polypeptide chain folds so that its hydrophobic side chains are ___ and it polar, charged chains are on the ___

alpha carbons

the polypeptide is made up of a series of planes linked to

amino carboxyl

the primary structure is always written from the ___ terminal to the ___ terminal, left to right

Aino acid residues

the primary structure is the

fibroin

the protein of silk, is produced by insects and spiders. It consists of layers of antiparallel beta-sheets

assembled subunits are

the quaternary structure

rigid planar prohibited

the resonance causes the peptide bond to be quite ___ and nearly ___; rotation about the bond is ___

cystine

the resulting unit of two linked cysteines is called

hydrogen bonds

the secondary structure arises from the ___ bonds formed between atoms of the backbone.

alpha helix

the secondary structure is the

subunit

the section of a DNA molecule that contains a sugar, phosphate, and a base

polypeptide chain

the tertiary structure is

steric

there are ___ clashes between R groups in the cis configuration

C---N

what bond cannot rotate

N---C(alpha) C(alpha)---C

what two bonds can rotate

trans cis

what two configurations are possible for a planar peptide bond

regular local

when the secondary structure arises it is called a ___ ___ spatial arrangement of the polypeptide backbone

proline

•acts as a helix breaker because the rotation around the N-Ca (φ-angle) bond is impossible

beta strand

A polypeptide chain that is almost fully extended rather than being tightly coiled as in the alpha helix

Most natural polypeptide chains containing between 50 and 2000 amino acids residues.

A protein.

alpha helix

A spiral shape constituting one form of the secondary structure of proteins, arising from a specific hydrogen-bonding structure.

Range from 50 to 300.

Amino acids in a protein.

PAGE 49

LEFT AT

Largest Protein Known, with almost 27000 amono acids.

Titin.

alpha helix beta pleated sheet

What are the two most common types of secondary protein structure?


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