1.3 Peptide Bond Formation and Hydrolysis [HY] Flashcards
What’re peptides made of?
amino acid subunits, sometimes called residues (COOH, NH2)
How many AA residues do di and tripeptides have?
2 & 3
Oligopeptide
used for relatively small peptides, up to about 20 residues
Polypeptides
longer chains
How are residues in peptides joined?
- 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−.
What kind of rxn is peptide bond formation?
- 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)
What resonance is present in peptide bonds?
the C−N bond in the amide has partial double bond character and is therefore very restricted
N-terminus
the free amino end when a peptide bond forms
C-terminus
the free carboxyl end is the carboxy terminus
How are peptides drawn and read?
- Left to right
- N to C terminus
How’re proteins digested?
we need to break them down into their component amino acids
How is hydrolysis catalyzed?
by hydrolytic enzymes such as trypsin and chymotrypsin
How does trypsin cleave?
- at the carboxyl end of AA’s R, and K
How does chymotrypsin cleave?
- at the carboxyl end of F, T and W
How do enzymes catalyze hydrolysis?
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