Biomolecules - Proteins Flashcards
What are “Essential Amino acids”?
A.A that must be obtained from the diet. They are amino acids that our body cannot synthesize at the “required amount”.
What are “Nonessential Amino Acids”?
A.A that the body can synthesize from other sources.
What is the Amino acid that is specifically essential only for children?
Arginine
What are “Conditionally Essential Amino acids”?
They are amino acids that the body cannot synthesize some a.a in sufficient quantities during certain stages/conditions.
Examples of when an amino acid might become “conditionally essential”.
e.g pregnancy, adolescent growth, or recovery from trauma
Main three component of the structure of Amino Acids.
Each a.a has:
- a carboxyl group
- a primary amino group (proline 2ry )
- a distinctive side chain “R group”
Describe the state of Amino acids during physiological pH conditions.
At physiological pH, the carboxyl group is negatively charged (COO-) & the amino group (NH3+) is protonated
What are the properties of Amino Acids?
- The α-carbon of a.a is a chiral carbon
- Optically active carbon atom except for Glycine.
- They have the mirror image form: D & L isomerism Known as enantiomers
what is a D isomer of an Amino acid?
Where do we typically find this configuration?
If the amino group is present on the right side of the asymmetric (α-carbon ) is known as D isomer
In some antibiotics/ bacterial cell walls.
What is the amino acid configuration in humans?
The L configuration
Amino acids can be configured in 7 ways. what are they?
- Aliphatic Side chains
- Hydroxyl-containing side chains
- Side chains containing basic groups
- Aromatic side chains
- Sufluric side chains
- side chains with acidic groups
- Imino acids
how can the R groups of amino acids be classified?
- Non-polar R groups
- Polar R groups
- Negatively charged R groups
- Positively charged R groups.
What happens to amino acids with hydroxyl side chains during post-translational modifications?
They could be phosphorylated by enzymes.
Explain how proline is a unique amino acid in terms of its role in protein biosynthesis.
Proline’s imino group allows it to form a cyclic structure with the amino acid backbone, creating a rigid kink in the protein chain that is important for stabilizing protein structures and enabling protein-protein interactions.
can affect; stability; structure and cell signalling activities.
What is the “Isoelectric point (pI)”?
the pH at which a particular molecule or surface carries no net electrical charge.
What are the applications of isoelectric point?
- Separation of protein
- Solubilizing protein
- Isoelectric focusing
- Predict R group
What happens to a molecule’s solubility during the isoelectric point?
At the pI, the molecule has minimum solubility.
Describe isoelectric focusing.
- Isoelectric focusing separates proteins based on their pI.
- The technique uses a gel with a pH gradient, from acidic at one end to basic at the other.
- An electric field is applied, causing proteins to migrate to the region of the gel that matches their pI. Once they reach their isoelectric point, they become immobilized and can be easily separated from other proteins in the mixture.
How can isoelectric focusing be applied to amino acids?
To predict their behaviour at different pH levels
examining the pKa values of the various R-groups in an amino acid sequence, one can predict the overall charge of the protein at different pH values.
What are the features of a peptide bond?
- Partial double bond structure
- Rigid
- Exists in trans configuration
- Uncharged but polar
- Unavailable for chemical reaction except hydrogen bonds