1.3 Peptide Bond Formation and Hydrolysis [HY] Flashcards

1
Q

What’re peptides made of?

A

amino acid subunits, sometimes called residues (COOH, NH2)

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2
Q

How many AA residues do di and tripeptides have?

A

2 & 3

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3
Q

Oligopeptide

A

used for relatively small peptides, up to about 20 residues

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4
Q

Polypeptides

A

longer chains

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5
Q

How are residues in peptides joined?

A
  • through peptide bonds, a
    specialized form of an amide bond, which form between the −COO− group of one amino acid and the NH+3 group of another amino acid This forms the functional group −C(O)NH−.
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6
Q

What kind of rxn is peptide bond formation?

A
  • Condensation or dehydration
  • Removes H20
  • also be viewed as an acyl substitution reaction, which can occur with all
    carboxylic acid derivatives. (nucleophile displaces acyl derivative LG)
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7
Q

What resonance is present in peptide bonds?

A

the C−N bond in the amide has partial double bond character and is therefore very restricted

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8
Q

N-terminus

A

the free amino end when a peptide bond forms

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9
Q

C-terminus

A

the free carboxyl end is the carboxy terminus

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10
Q

How are peptides drawn and read?

A
  • Left to right
  • N to C terminus
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11
Q

How’re proteins digested?

A

we need to break them down into their component amino acids

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12
Q

How is hydrolysis catalyzed?

A

by hydrolytic enzymes such as trypsin and chymotrypsin

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13
Q

How does trypsin cleave?

A
  • at the carboxyl end of AA’s R, and K
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14
Q

How does chymotrypsin cleave?

A
  • at the carboxyl end of F, T and W
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15
Q

How do enzymes catalyze hydrolysis?

A

they break apart the amide bond by adding a hydrogen atom to the amide nitrogen and an OH group to the carbonyl carbon
* Amide to NH3 & OH to H2O

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