Biochem 501

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K

Lysine

M

Methionine

Titration curve of amino acids

pK1 -> pI -> pK2 (Amino+, Zwitterion, Carboxyl-)

Arpartate properties

(-) charge 2.77

Glutamate properties

(-) charge 3.22

Central dogma of biology

...

N

Asparagine

List all no polar amino acids

Gap V lim Glycine Alanine Proline Valine Leucine Isoleucine Methionine

S

Serine

Arginine properties

+ charge 10.76

Histidine properties

+ charge 7.59

Lysine properties

+ charge 9.74

5 Distinguishing Features of Living Organisms

-High degree of chemical complexity and microscopic organization -Systems for extracting, transforming, and using energy from the environment -Precise self-replication and self-assembly -Mechanisms for sensing and responding to alterations in surroundings -Defined functions for all components and regulated interactions between them. -A history of evolutionary change.

Diastereomer

...

Draw a-D-Glucose

...

Enantiomer

...

How are H bonds oriented?

...

Molecular Configuration

...

Negative delta G?

...

Polypeptide naming

...

Positive delta G?

...

Stereoisomer

...

H2O Bond Angle

104.5

How many H bonds per H2O in ice?

4

Oligopeptide

4-9 AAs bonded together

Uncommon Amino Acids

4-hydroxyproline 5-hydroxylysine 6-N-methyllysine y-Carboxyglutamate desmosine Selenocysteine ornithine citrulline

pKa of acetic acid

4.76

Polypeptide

A peptide containing 10 or more AAs

Beer's Law

Absorbance, A, is directly proportional to the concentration of the absorbing solute. A = EBC

A

Alanine

Nonpolar Aliphatic R Groups

Alanine Ala A Valine Val V Leucine Leu L Isoleucine Ile I Glycine Gly G Proline Pro P Methionine Met M

R

Arginine

Tyrosine Properties

Aromatic 5.66

Tryptophan Properties

Aromatic 5.89

Phenylalanine Properties

Aromatic. 5.48

Size-Exclusion Chromatography

Also called gel filtration. Separates proteins according to size. Large proteins emerge sooner than smaller ones!

Negatively Charged R Groups

Aspartate Asp D Glutamate Glu E

D

Aspartic Acid

Protein Hydrolysis

Breaking of peptide (amide) bonds to give smaller peptides & individual amino acids

Amphoteric

Can act as either an acid or a base.

The bacterium E. coli requires simple organic molecules for growth and energy - it is therefore a:

Chemoheterotroph

Glyoxysome

Contain digestive enzymes to free up food

C

Cysteine

Cytoplasm vs Cytosol

Cytoplasm means the inside of the cell; Cytosol is the liquid

E

Glutamic Acid Glu

Z

Glutamic Acid Glx

Q

Glutamine Gln

Free Energy

Delta G. Tells whether a reaction can happen spontaneously

Humans maintain a nearly constant level of hemoglobin by continually synthesizing and degrading it. This is an example of...

Dynamic steady state

Column Chromatography

Most powerful method for fractionating proteins Takes advantage of differences in protein charge, size, binding affinity and other properties.

G

Glycine

Enthalpy

H. Reflects the number and kinds of bonds.

Ion-Exchange Chromatography

Exploits differences in sign and magnitude of the net electric charge of proteins at a given pH. The column matrix is a synthetic polymer with cation exchangers and anion exchangers. Separatoin can be optimized by gradually changing the pH or salt concentration of the mobile phase to create a pH or salt gradient.

H

Histidine

Which is the only AA with pKa near neutral?

Histidine. It can be positively charged or uncharged at pH 7.0.

Oligomeric

If at least two chains are identical: the protein is said to be Oligomeric, and the identical units (one or more chains) are called Proteomers.

I

Isoleucine

L

Leucine

Proteins with chemicals that aren't AA's

Lipoproteins Glycoproteins Phosphoproteins Hemoproteins Flavoproteins Metalloproteins

Positively Charged R Groups

Lysine Lys K Histidine His H Arginine Arg R

Cytoskeleton

Made of Actin Filaments, microtubules, and intermediate filaments.

Types of residues

Methyl Phosphoryl Acetyl Adenylyl ADP-ribosyl

D, L system

Specifies the absolute configurations of amino acids. All amino acids are L-.

Gram Negative vs Positive membrane

Negative: Outer membrane, thin peptidoglycan layer Positive: No outer membrane, thicker peptidoglycan layer

Methionine

Nonpolar aliphatic 5.74

Glycine Properties

Nonpolar, Aliphatic. pI = 5.97

Alanine Properties

Nonpolar, Aliphatic. pI = 6.01

Leucine Properties

Nonpolar, aliphatic pI 5.98

Isoleucine

Nonpolar, aliphatic 6.02

Valine Properties

Nonpolar, aliphatic. pI = 5.97

Proline Properties

Nonpolar, aliphatic. pI = 6.48

P1A: In a bacterial cell, the DNA is in the...

Nucleoid

F

Phenylalanine

Aromatic R Groups

Phenylalanine Phe F Tyrosine Tyr Y Tryptophan Trp W

Hexokinase

Phosphorylates hexoses. (a)-D-Glucose-6-Phosphate is the most important product - from glucokinase

Cysteine Properties

Polar Uncharged 5.07

Serine properties

Polar Uncharged 5.68

Threonine properties

Polar Uncharged 5.87

Asparagine properties

Polar uncharged 5.41

Glutamine properties

Polar uncharged 5.65

P

Proline

RS system

Right is clockwise S is counterclockwise Assign priority around the chiral center

Entropy

S. Randomness of a system.

Draw serylglycyltyrosylalanylleucine.

Ser-Gly-Tyr-Ala-Leu SGYAL

Polar Uncharged R Groups

Serine Ser S Threonine The T Cysteine Cys C Asparagine Asn N Glutamine Gln Q

Protein containing only amino acid residues

Simple Proteins

What contributes to the overall acid-base properties of polypeptides?

The R groups

Delta G definition

The chemical potential that is minimized when a system reaches equilibrium at constant pressure and temperature

Affinity chromatography

The column has molecules that bind tightly to your protein. Then your protein binds, everything else gets washed out. Next flush with ligand solution

Molecular Confirmation

The spatial arrangement of substituent groups that are free to assume different positions in space because of freedom of bond rotation (single bonds)

T

Threonine

W

Tryptophan

Y

Tyrosine

V

Valine

Multisubunit proteins

a protein consisting of more than one polypeptide chain associated noncovalently. If at least PP chains are identical the protein is Oligomeric; each identical unit is a Protomer. Hemoglobin has four polypeptide subunits: two identical a chains and two identical B chains.

Amino Acid Residue

an amino acid in a polypeptide that is not the N or C terminal AA. This refers to every amino acid in a polypeptide chain.

B

asparagine

Auto vs Heterotroph

autotrophs obtain all their carbon straight from CO2 or their etc. from methane; heterotrophs have to oxidize food

Endomembrane system

segregates specific metabolic processes and provides surfaces on which certain enzyme-catalyzed reactions occur.

Peptide Bond

two amino acids covalently joined through a substituted amide linkage. Formed by dehydration: remove ~OH from carboxyl group and ~H from the amino group. This is a condensation reaction. Equilibrium favors the amino acids over the dipeptide. Carboxyl group must be chemically modified or activated so the hydroxyl can be eliminated more easily.


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