PL 4, 5, 6 Flashcards

1
Q

what is the basic structure of an amino acid

A
  • central carbon
  • COOH
  • H2N
  • H
  • R group
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1
Q

amino acids are bi functional, what are the two functional groups

A
  • H2N amino group
  • COOH carboxylic acid group
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2
Q

what happens when an amino acid is in aqueous solution

A
  • a zwitterion is formed
  • The -COOH donates a proton to the NH2
  • NH2 —> NH3+
  • COOH —> COO-
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3
Q

are amino acids soluble in water? why?

A
  • they are very soluble in water because they are ionic
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4
Q

what is the effect do the following have on amino acids
- acid solutions
- alkaline solutions
- neutral solutions

A

they have very little effect because amino acids act as a buffer
- acid: H3N+- CHR -COOH
- alkaline: H2N- CHR -COO-
- neutral: H3N+- CHR -COO-

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5
Q

what are enantiomers

A
  • mirror images of the isomers of amino acids
  • shown in carbon groups that have four different groups around a central atom - chiral molecules
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6
Q

how are peptides formed (and what are they)

A
  • when an NH2 group reacts with a COOH group in a carboxylic acid and a secondary amide is formed
  • CONH group formed
  • secondary amides
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7
Q

how do you name amino acids

A

the amino acid with the free NH2 group is written first, then the one with the free carboxylic acid group is written

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8
Q

describe the hydrolysis of proteins

A
  • the peptide link is hydrolysed to release the individual amino acids
  • done by boiling with moderately concentrated hydrochloric acids under reflux
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9
Q

define the following:
- primary structure
- secondary structure
- tertiary structure

A
  1. the order of amino acid residues
  2. the coiling parts of the chain int a helix or the formation of a region of sheet
  3. the folding of the secondary structure
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10
Q

describe the secondary structure of a protein

A
  • helices and sheets are held together by hydrogen bods between NH groups on one peptide link (CONH) and the C=O groups on another peptide link
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11
Q

describe the tertiary structure of a protein

A
  • held together by intermolecular bonds, ionic and covalent bonds
  • ID-ID bonds between non polar side chains, tend to be at the centre of protein molecules
  • Hydrogen bonds between polar side chains, and form with water if polar groups are on the outside
  • covalent bonds between -SH groups on neighbouring cysteine residues
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12
Q

which proteins are fibrous and which are globular

A
  • fibrous are muscles and hairs, long and thin and consist of main helices
  • globular proteins control the metabolism, e.g. enzymes and hormones, they have sheets and helices
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13
Q

describe the active site of an enzyme

A
  • they have a precise tertiary structure that results in a cleft in the enzyme surface
  • R groups from amino acid residues bind to substrate molecules and react with them
  • this is where catalysis takes place
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14
Q

describe the bonding that occurs in the active site of an enzyme

A
  • the bonds that bind to the substrate are usually weak so the binding can be readily reversed when the products are form
  • bonds usually consist of hydrogen bonds or interactions between ionic groups
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15
Q

describe when the reaction when it is zero order with respect to the substrate

A
  • if the substrate concentration is high enough where as all the enzymes active sites will be taken up by substrate molecules
  • no more ES complexes can form at the rate which molecules pass through reaction pathway
  • reaction does NOT depend on substrate conc.
  • RDS EP —-> E+P
16
Q

what are competitive inhibitor

A
  • molecules that fit into the active site of an enzyme but cannot be catalysed
  • bind reversibly
17
Q

how does pH affect enzyme performance

A
  • reduces it because active site contains ionisable groups e.g. COOH or NH2
  • affected by change in pH
  • e.g. COOH –> COO-
  • or tertiary structure loses shape and side chains aren’t held close together and enzyme denatures
18
Q

how does temperature affect enzyme performance

A
  • when temp. increases, activity rises because molecules gain enough energy to collide and their combined energy succeeds the activation enthalpy
  • some bonds holding tertiary structure are weak D-D bonds and H bonds, bond sbreak, enzyme denatures