2: Protein Structure and Function Flashcards

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1
Q

What is the conformation of a protein? What is the usual conformation of a protein? What determines the conformation of a protein? What does this mean for polypeptides with a particular sequence of amino acids?

A
  • its 3-dimensional structure
  • a globular shape

the folding of polypeptides in that protein:

  • sequence of amino acids in a polypeptides determines how the folding is done
  • and so determines the conformation of a protein

conformation will tend to be precisely the same

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2
Q

How is the structure of a protein stabilised?

A

by intramolecular bonds between amino acids in the polypeptides that are brought together by the folding process

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3
Q

What is ‘denaturation’?

A

a process that damages the conformation of protiens

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4
Q

Give 2 causes of denaturation of proteins.

A
  • heat

- pH

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5
Q

How does heat denature proteins?

A
  • causes vibrations within protein molecules = break intramolecular bonds = cause conformation change
  • heat denaturation = almost always irreversible
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6
Q

Give example of heat denaturing proteins.

A
  • demonstrated by heating egg white (contains dissolved albumin proteins)
  • proteins denatured and turn insoluble
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7
Q

How does pH denature proteins?

A
  • every protein has ideal pH at which its conformation is normal
  • if pH = increased (adding alkali) or decreased (adding acid) = conformation may initially stay the same but denaturation will eventually occur when pH has deviated too far from ideal
  • this is because pH change causes intramolecular bonds to break within protein molecule
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8
Q

Give 6 examples of proteins synthesized by living organisms and say what type of protein they are e.g. hormone.

A
  1. rubisco (enzyme)
  2. insulin (hormone)
  3. immunoglobulins (antibodies)
  4. rhodopsin (pigment)
  5. collagen (structural protein)
  6. spider silk (structural protein)
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9
Q

Function of protein: rubisco.

A
  • is an enzyme
  • active site catalyses the photosynthesis reaction that fixes carbon dioxide from the atmosphere
  • provides all carbon needed by living organisms o make sugars and other carbon compounds
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10
Q

Function of protein: insulin.

A
  • is a hormone
  • carried dissolved in the blood and binds specifically and reversibly to insulin receptors in the membranes of body cells, causing cells to absorb glucose and lower the blood glucose concentration
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11
Q

Function of protein: immunoglobulins.

A
  • is an antibody
  • binds to pathogens
  • immune system can produce a huge range of immunoglobulins, each with a different type of binding site, allowing specific immunity against many diseases
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12
Q

Function of protein: rhodopsin.

A
  • is a pigment
  • that makes the rod cells of the retina light-sensitive
  • has non-amino acid part called retinal that absorbs a photon of light -> rod cell sends a nerve impulse to the brain
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13
Q

Function of protein: collagen.

A
  • is a structural protein
  • 3 polypeptides wound together to form a rope-like conformation
  • used in skin to prevent tearing, in bones to prevent fractures and in tendons and ligaments to give tensile strength
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14
Q

Function of protein: spider silk.

A
  • structural protein
  • used to make webs for catching prey and lifelines on which spiders suspend themselves
  • very high tensile strength and becomes stronger when stretched, so resisting breakage
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