PH1123 - question time Flashcards
what is a peptide ?
A small protein containing 50 or less amino acid residues
Briefly describe the nomenclature of peptides.
Peptides should be named, using three letter or single letter amino acid abbreviations starting
from the N-terminal residue and listing sequentially to the C-terminal. Abbreviations separated by
dashes.
Describe the process of protection - activation - coupling - deprotection for the synthesis of peptides.
Therefore the sequence required is to:
protect the amino group in the N-terminal amino acid and the carboxyl group in the C-terminal amino acid
couple the two amino acids by forming the new amide bond
deprotect the termini of the new peptide (as and if required)
By repeating the process, polypeptides can be grown one amino acid residue at a time, or by building pieces and then joining those together.
Lys-Ala-Val-Ala-Leu-Ser-Ile-Leu-Val-Asp
a) Name the N-terminal amino acid.
b) Name the C-terminal amino acid.
c) State the side chain property of each amino acid in the peptide.
. a. Lysine
b. Aspartic acid
c. Lys – basic; Ala, Val, Leu and Ile – hydrophobic; Ser – polar; Asp –Acidic.
Lys-Ala-Val-Ala-Leu-Ser-Ile-Leu-Val-Asp
How you would expect this peptide to fold in an aqueous solution?
Briefly, in an aqueous environment, hydrophobic residues e.g. Ala, Val etc
would be folded away from water into the interior of the protein.
Hydrophilic residues, e.g. Ser, would face the solvent. Charged side chains
would form an interaction where possible, e.g. as shown.
Lys-Ala-Val-Ala-Leu-Ser-Ile-Leu-Val-Asp
Would you predict this peptide to be water soluble? Briefly explain your answer.
No correct answer, marks awarded for a sensible answer.
E.g, Will have some water solubility,
although mostly non-polar amino acids there are three polar aa’s, two of which form a salt. OR –
will not be soluble in water as 7 non-polar aa’s versus 3 polar.
Describe the structure of a globular protein.
. Compact (tightly folded), roughly spherical, structurally complex, comprised of many elements
of secondary structure, e.g. alpha helix, beta sheet, often clearly defined active site / cleft, internal
bonding to maintain structure, e.g. disulfide bridges etc etc.
Give an example of a globular protein.
Any enzyme, 100’s of examples, e.g. trypsin etc etc
Describe the general properties of a globular protein.
Hydrophobic interior, hydrophilic exterior, water soluble, often function as catalysts etc etc.
Describe how the three dimensional structure of a globular protein is maintained.
Discuss, give examples and expand upon – ionic interactions, hydrogen bonding, hydrophobic
interactions, covalent crosslinks etc etc.
is the alpha helix a double helix ?
The alpha helix is a single peptide backbone coiled around itself and stabilised by
intra-strand H-bonds. [By contrast, DNA is an example of a double helix – two chains stabilised by
inter-strand H-bonds]
The peptide bond usually adopts a trans conformation(true or false)
c. TRUE. Cis-amide bonds force unfavourable steric interactions between aa side chains and are not
commonly found in proteins
Which are more stable ? beta sheets or anti parallel beta sheets ?
Anti-parallel beta sheets are more stable – the network of inter-strand H-bonds are better
aligned and more stable in the anti-parallel type.
define Native conformation
Proteins do not exist as a linear conformation of amino acids (the primary sequence) they fold
very specifically into a specific conformation called the native conformations. This is generally the
biologically active form of the protein
Describe the alpha helix of a protein
. Alpha helix important form of secondary protein structure. Single polypeptide strand coiled in a
tight helix excluding water from the centre. + + Describe properties and H-bonding network etc.
Some proteins composed exclusively of a-helix, usually as coils of coils, e.g. keratin, collagen. Also
common in membrane spanning receptors