Lecture 14 Flashcards

1
Q

Common Features of globular proteins

A
  • Charged polar residues (Arg, His, Lys, Asp, Glu) are usually found on the surface of a protein where they favor solubility by forming hydrogen bonds to water
  • Uncharged polar residues (Ser, Thr, Asp, Gln, Tyr, Trp) Tend to be on the surface of a protein but also occur on the interior forming hydrogen bonds with other groups
  • Non-polar residues (val, Leu, Ile, Met, Phe) prefer the interior of a protein where they avoid contact with the aqueous solvent
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2
Q

Salt Bridges

A
  • occur when folding
  • particularly favorable interaction that combines a hydrogen bond and an electrostatic attraction
  • hydrogen bond acceptor is usually one of the carboxylate residues (glu or asp). The most common donors are the protonated side chains of lys, arg, and his
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3
Q

thiols oxidize to what?

A

Thiols are oxidized under mild conditions to give disulfides; the reverse reaction works as well
2R-SH—>R-S-S-R

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4
Q

why are disulfides important?

A

Disulfides are important because nearby cys residues can form disulfides that cross-link the polypeptide chain

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5
Q

epidermal growth factor

A

Small signaling protein that has 3 disulfide linkages

-The protein binds to a receptor on the surface of the cell to “turn on” cell growth

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6
Q

Thermodynamics of protein folding

A

1) Entropy of folding
- Protein becomes ordered in the folding process
2) Hydrophobic effect
- entropy affect favors folding (ordered water molecules)
3) Enthalpy of folding
- internal H-bonds
- dispersion forces
- salt bridges
- disulfide linkages

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7
Q

Entropy of solvation

A

Folding tends to place the hydrophobic residues inside the protein, away from aqueous solvent
-hydrophobic residue on the surface of a protein must be enclosed by an ordered case of water molecules; folding releases the ordered water molecules and increases the entropy of the system

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8
Q

multiple subunits

A
  • With single polypeptide chains, organization stops at the tertiary structure
  • If there are multiple polypeptides, there are subunits and are arranged in the quaternary structure
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9
Q

Subunit symmetry

A

Simplest quaternary structures place 2 or 3 subunits in a symmetrical arrangement

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10
Q

homotypic protein

A

all subunits are the same

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11
Q

heterotypic protein

A

subunits are not all the same

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12
Q

Catalyst

A

Substance that increases the rate of a chemical reaction, even though the catalyst is not part of the stoichiometry of the reaction, nor is it changed or consumed by the reaction

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13
Q

common catalysts

A

acid catalysts, base catalysts, nucleophilic catalyst, metal ion catalysts can increase the rate as much as 10^4
-in biological systems virtually all are catalyzed by enzymes; can be up to 10^18 as fast

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14
Q

Acid Catalyst

A

Increases the rate of the reaction by protonating a reactant

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15
Q

Specific Acid Catalysis

A

Proton transfer is complete before the start of the rate determining step

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16
Q

Transesterification

A

converts one ester into another