Proteins (2/2) Flashcards
What is the structure of protein?
amino acids, dipeptide, oligopeptide, and polypeptide
What are the levels of protein structure?
primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary
What are the essential amino acids?
isoleucine, leucine, lysine, methionine, phenylalanine, threonine, tryptophan, valine, histidine
What are the nonessential amino acids?
alanine, arginine, asparagine, aspartic acid, cysteine, glutamic acid, glutamine, glycine, proline, serine, tyrosine
What is another name for essential amino acids?
indispensable
What is another name for nonessential amino acids?
dispensible
What are the functions of proteins?
growth & maintenance of tissues, essential metabolic compounds, transport of nutrients, regulation of water balance, maintenance of pH, defense & detoxification, energy (4 kcal/g)
What are examples of proteins?
enzymes, hormones, hemoglobin/myoglobin, apoproteins, transferrin/ferritin, antibodies, thrombin/fibrinogen/fibrin, and collagen
What are complete proteins?
contains all essential aa in sufficient quantities to support growth and is the first limiting amino acid
What is protein quality?
the spectrum of amino acids in food
Which is better, protein quality or quantity?
quality
What must proteins be broken down into to be absorbed?
amino acids, dipeptides, and tripeptides
What does protein digestion vary with?
the protein source
How does protein digestion occur in the stomach?
HCL denatures protein increasing access by enzymes and by pepsins which is secreted as pepsinogen and released controlled by gastrin (chewing)
What is the pH optimum for digestion of proteins in the stomach?
1.6-3.2
How does protein digestion occur in the small intestine?
partially digested food in duodenum causes release of cholecystokinin which stimulates secretion of proteolytic enzymes from the pancreas. smaller peptides digested further by enzymes secreted by intestinal mucosa
What are the endopeptidases?
trypsin, chymotrypsins, and elastase
What are the exopeptidases?
carboxypeptidase and aminopeptidase
What pancreatic enzyme works with enteropeptidase to form trypsin?
trypsinogen
What pancreatic enzyme works with trypsin to form chymotrypsins?
chymotrypsinogens
What pancreatic enzyme works with trypsin to form elastase?
proelastase
What pancreatic enzyme works with trypsin to form carboxypeptidase?
procarboxypeptidase
What are the intestinal proenzymes?
aminopeptidase and dipeptidase
Where are some di- and tripeptides transported?
into intestinal mucosal cells and hydrolyzed to amino acids
How are amino acids absorbed?
by active transport
Where do amino acids go once they enter the portal blood?
to the liver and other tissues
What does protein synthesis require?
adequate amounts of ALL amino acids