BIOLOGY CHAPTER 3
Which of the following statements about the formation of polypeptides from amino acids is true?
A bond forms between the carboxyl functional group of one amino acid and the amino functional group of the other amino acid.
In proteins, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary levels of structure depend on primary structure. Which of the following most accurately lists elements of any protein's primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structure, in that order?
Amino acid sequence, hydrogen bonding between backbone groups, overall shape of a single polypeptide, and combinations of tertiary structures
Which of the following is not attached to the central carbon atom in an amino acid?
An oxygen
structural
Arrow A is indicating a(n) _____ protein.
receptor
Arrow D is indicating a _____ protein.
At which bond would water need to be added to achieve hydrolysis of the peptide, back to its component amino acids?
C the 3rd bond
Which part of an amino acid is always acidic?
Carboxyl functional group
Biological activity DIRECTLY involve proteins?
Changing the shape of a cell. Defending cells against viruses. Breaking food polymers into smaller molecules. Sensing light.
You have just sequenced a new protein found in mice and observe that sulfur-containing cysteine residues occur at regular intervals. What is the significance of this finding?
Cysteine residues are involved in disulfide bridges that help form tertiary structure.
What enzymes help separate the 2 strands of nucleotides on DNA? What bonds do they break?
Helicase and hydrogen bonds
Nonpolar amino acid residues are typically found in the interior of globular proteins like trypsin. Which chemical force is most directly responsible?
Hydrophobic interactions
At about pH 7 in most cells, what happens to the amino R-group on an amino acid?
It acts as a base and gains a proton, giving it a positive charge.
Which monomers make up RNA?
Nucleotides
Name the 3 parts of a DNA nucleotide
Phosphate sugar and nitrogen base
Which of the following statements about protein primary structure is true?
Primary structure is produced by the unique sequence of amino acids in a protein.
Which polymers are composed of amino acids?
Proteins
Which characteristics make proteins the most versatile macromolecules in cells in terms of functional capabilities?
Proteins have diverse structures, diverse chemical properties, and flexible shapes.
Most protein enzymes catalyze only one specific chemical reaction effectively. What feature of protein structure is most directly responsible for this specificity?
The specific geometry and types of amino acids in the active site
transport
This animation illustrates the functioning of a _____ protein.
True or false? Enzymes in the digestive tract catalyze hydrolysis reactions.
True
How did Rosalind Franklin contribute to determining the structure of DNA?
Used x-ray detraction to determine the shape
More than one shape is possible for a protein and different shapes function differently or not at all
What features of protein folding and function are revealed by calmodulin and prions?
polymerization
a chemical process that combines several monomers to form a polymer or polymeric compound
monomers
a chemical subunit that serves as a building block of a polymer.
dipeptide
a molecule consisting of two amino acids
macromolecule
a very large organic molecule composed of many smaller molecules
name 2 purines
adenine and guanine
Proteins are polymers of _____.
amino acids
Which class(es) of amino acids possess side chains that would be unable to form hydrogen bonds with water?
amino acids with nonpolar side chains
By convention, biologists write the sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide in which direction?
amino- to carboxy-terminus
What two functional groups are present on every amino acid?
an amino group and a carboxyl group
Proteins help cells with which task(s)?
catalysis signaling transport
Proteins in biological systems _____.
catalyze reactions
secondary structure
coiling chain an alpha helix or beta pleated sheet due to Hydrogen bonding
During protein synthesis, the peptide bond between amino acids is formed by the process of _____.
condensation
oligopeptide
consists of up to 20 amino acids
Secondary structure
describes the alpha-helices and beta-sheets that are formed by hydrogen bonding between backbone atoms located near each other in the polypeptide chain
catalysis
enzymes speed up chemical reactions
The secondary structure of proteins results because of _____ bonding between atoms in the protein's backbone.
hydrogen
The secondary structure of a protein results from _____.
hydrogen bonds
quaternary structure
if protein is composed of more than one polypeptide
Defensive proteins are manufactured by the _____ system.
immune
Where is the information that directs different polypeptides to fold into different shapes?
in the primary structure
Tertiary structure
is achieved when a protein folds into a compact, three-dimensional shape stabilized by interactions between side-chain R groups of amino acids
Quaternary structure
is the result of two or more protein subunits assembling to form a larger, biologically active protein complex
Primary structure
is the sequence of amino acids in a protein
polypeptide
long chain of amino acids that makes proteins
What causes mad cow disease and other such spongiform encephalopathies?
misfolded proteins known as prions
polymers
molecules that are chains of repeating units; proteins and DNA are examples.
What are the subunits called that make up DNA?
nucleotides
Which of these does NOT contain a structural protein?
ovalbumin
What type of bond joins the monomers in a protein's primary structure?
peptide
In a polypeptide, what bonds are responsible for the primary structure?
peptide bonds
Tertiary structure is NOT directly dependent on _____.
peptide bonds
What makes up the backbone of the DNA molecule?
phosphates and sugars (hold together by strong covalent bonds)
When polymerization of a protein is complete, but a protein is still completely linear, what is the highest level of structure in the protein?
primary
What level of protein structure describes an amino acid sequence such as Ala-Gly-Ser-Val-Glu-Glu-Glu-Ala-His...?
primary structure
You are studying a protein that is shaped like a doughnut. The shape is a function of which level(s) of protein structure?
primary, secondary, and tertiary
What is the difference between a purine and a pyrimidine?
purine has 2 rings. pyrimidine has 1
At what level of protein structure do the α and β protein subunits come together to catalyze the hydrolysis reaction?
quaternary structure
tertiary structure
refers to the overall 3D structure of a protein and how it folds; H bonds, ionic bonds, polar interactions, non polar interactions, disulfide bridge
The alpha-helix is a component of __________ protein structure.
secondary
At what level of protein structure do the chains of amino acids fold into an α-helical structure?
secondary structure
What makes up the sides of a DNA molecule?
sugars and phosphates
At what level of protein structure do β-sheets of amino acids and α-helices, located at a distance from each other along the length of a polypeptide chain, come together to form a globular protein?
tertiary structure
primary structure
the first level of protein structure; the specific sequence of amino acids making up a polypeptide chain by covalent
What makes up the steps of a DNA molecule?
the nitrogen bases
What distinguishes these molecules?
the number of carbon atoms in the side chains functional groups found in the side chains
Which of the following parts of an amino acid vary among different amino acids?
the side chain, or R group
name 2 pyrimidines
thymine and cytosine
The tertiary structure of a protein is the _____.
unique three-dimensional shape of the fully folded polypeptide