Protein Primary Structure Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the structure of an amino acid.

A

A central (alpha) carbon atom covalently linked to:

  • amino group (-NH2)
  • carboxyl group (-COOH)
  • hydrogen atom (-H)
  • distinctive R group
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2
Q

What is the acid-base behaviour of aa determined by?

A

R group

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3
Q

Which parts of amino acids can ionise?

A

The carboxyl group and the amino group:

  • ionisation of amino group from -NH2 to -NH3 = base (proton acceptor)
  • ionisation of carboxyl group from -COOH to -COO- = acid (proton donor)
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4
Q

Why is the acid-base behaviour of aa not determined by ionisation of carboxyl and amino groups? What is it determined by?

A
  • Because amino acids joined together by peptide bonds - form aa residues. Only 1 -NH3+ at N-terminal end, and 1 -COO- at C-terminal end.
  • Chemical properties of R group.
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5
Q

Which properties of aa R groups are used to classify aa?

A
  1. Charge
  2. H bonding ability
  3. Acidic vs basic
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6
Q

What are the 2 main groups of amino acids?

A
  1. Non-polar; hydrophobic

2. Polar; hydrophilic

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7
Q

What is the difference between alkyl/aliphatic and aromatic aa?

A
  • Aliphatic: have C and N in side chain

- Aromatic: benzene ring

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8
Q

What is the difference between neutral, acidic and basic aa?

A
  • Neutral: contain oxygen or sulphur atom - attract electrons to that end of the side chain - localised negative and positive ends to side chain.
  • Acidic: have -COO- as part of side chain (lost proton)
  • Basic: have -NH+ as part of side chain (gained proton)
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9
Q

What does the pK value of side chains tell us?

A

How likely it is to ionise.

  • strong base - high pK
  • strong acid - low pK
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10
Q

How does the solution pH determine R group protonation?

A
  • If solution pH < pK - R group is protonated (base)
  • If solution pH > pK - R group is deprotonated (acid)
  • If solution pH = pK - Neutral aa
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11
Q

How can the ratio of protonated/deprotonated aa side chains be calculated?

A
  • Henderson-Hasselback equation

- pH = pKa + log([A-]/[HA])

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12
Q

What is the isoelectric point (pI) of a protein?

A

PH at which there it has no overall net charge.

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13
Q

What is the pI of basic and acidic proteins and what does this mean in terms of their protonation?

A
  • Basic protein (pI > 7): contain many positively charged (basic) aa. Protein is protonated.
  • Acidic protein (pI < 7): contain many negatively charged (acidic) aa. Protein is deprotonated.
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14
Q

How are 2 aa linked together?

A
  • peptide bonds

- by hydrolysis

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15
Q

What are the properties of peptide bonds?

A
  1. Planar: C alpha, C, O, N and H all lie in the same plane.
  2. Rigid: undergo resonance.
  3. Trans conformation: C alpha on opposite sides of peptide bond due to steric clashes.
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16
Q

What does resonance mean?

A

Movement of electrons from C=O to C-N gives partial C=N characteristics: shorter and less flexible - unable to rotate - contributes to polarity.

17
Q

What are the bonds on either side of the peptide bond called and what is special about them?

A
  • Psi (C alpha - C), Phi (C alpha - N)

- Are free to rotate - angles of bonds determines conformation of peptide backbone and the ‘fold’ of the protein.

18
Q

What are conjugated proteins?

A
  • Contain covalently linked chemical components in addition to aa.
  • E.g. Lipoproteins linked to lipids, haemoproteins linked to haem.