Protein Structure 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the 2 main types of protein secondary structure?

A
  • Alpha helix

- Beta sheet (of beta strands)

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2
Q

Describe the structure of alpha helices.

A
  • Right handed, 3.6 aa/turn, 0.54 nm pitch.

- Stabilised by H bonds between N-H and C=O every 4 aa residues away.

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3
Q

Which aa promote or inhibit the formation of alpha-helices?

A
  • Small hydrophobic residues such as alanine or leucine = strong helix formers.
  • Proline = helix breaker as rotation around N-C alpha bond not possible.
  • Glycine = helix breaker as tiny R group supports other conformations.
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4
Q

Describe the structure of beta-sheets.

A
  • Fully extended conformation, 0.35 nm between aa
  • R groups alternate between opposite sides of chain.
  • Stabilised by multiple inner H bonds.
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5
Q

What is the difference between parallel and anti-parallel beta-sheets?

A
  • Parallel: beta-strands in same directions

- Antiparallel: beta-strands in opposite directions

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6
Q

Give examples of proteins that are mainly formed of alpha-helices or beta-sheets.

A
  • Ferritin (iron storage) is largely alpha-helix.

- Fatty acid binding protein is largely beta-sheet.

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7
Q

What are the 2 main forms of tertiary structure? Give example of each.

A
  • Fibrous (e.g. Collagen)

- Globular (e.g. Carbonic anhydrase)

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8
Q

Compare the properties of fibrous and globular proteins.

A

Fibrous:

  • Long strands or sheets
  • Single type of repeating secondary structure
  • Role: support, shape, protection

Globular:

  • Compact shape
  • Several types of secondary structure
  • Role: catalysis, regulation
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9
Q

What is the aa sequence in collagen?

A

Gly-X-Y

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10
Q

What is the different between motifs and domains in tertiary structure?

A
  • Motifs: folding patterns containing 1 or more elements of 2ndary structure, e.g. Beta-alpha-beta loop, beta-barrel.
  • Domains: part of a polypeptide chain that folds into a distinct shape. Often has a specific functional role, e.g. Calcium-binding domains of troponin C.
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11
Q

Describe the tertiary structure of water-soluble proteins.

A

Fold so that:

  • hydrophobic side chains are buried
  • polar, charged chains are on the surface

E.g. Myoglobin

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12
Q

Describe the tertiary structure of membrane proteins.

A

Often show ‘inside-out’ distribution of aa:

  • water-filled hydrophilic channel at centre
  • largely hydrophobic exterior.

E.g. Porins

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13
Q

Describe the quaternary structure of haemoglobin and ribosomes.

A
  • Haemoglobin: 2 alpha subunits, 2 beta subunits

- Ribosome: 55 protein subunits, 3 RNA molecules

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