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amino acids
molecules that contain carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and sometimes sulfur
L
stereochemistry for the alpha carbon of all amino acids in eukaryotes
cysteine
all chiral amino acids excpet ____ have (S) configuration
glycine
all amino acids are chiral except
alpha helices
clockwise coils around a central axis
beta pleated sheets
rippled strands that can be parallel or antiparallel
proline
can interrupt secondary structure because of its rigid cyclic structure
amphoteric
amino acids can act as a base or an acid
pKa
pH t which half of the species is deprotonated
low
____ pH results in amino acid that is fully protonated
pI
pH when amino acid is a neutral zwitterion
high
____ pH results in amino acid is fully deprotonated
isoelectric point
the pH at which an amino acid is in zwitterion form; the charges cancel out and make a neutra molecule
pKa
midpoint of titration is when pH = ____
pI
equivalence point of titration is when pH = ____
disulfied bonds
occur when two cysteine molecules are oxidized and create a covalent bond between their thiol groups. this forms cystine
conjugated proteins
proteins with covalently attached molecules
prosthetic group
the attached molecule in a conjugated protein. can be a metal ion, vitamin, lipid, carbohydrate, or nucleic acid.
denaturation
the loss of 3D structure, caused by heat or solute concentration
dipeptide
2 amino acids (2 residues)
tripeptide
3 residues (3 a.a.'s)
oligopeptide
less than 20 residues
polpeptides
greater than 20 residues
dehydration reaction
forming a peptide bond is a __________________. The nucleophilic amino group of one amino acid attachs the electrophilic carbonyl group of another amino acid.
amide bonds
the C-N bond of a peptide bond. rigd due to resonance
hydrolysis reaction
breaking a peptide bond is a ______ reaction
peptide bonds
primary structure of amino acids are stabilized by _______
n c
aa sequence is written ____ to ____ terminus
hydrogen bonding
secondary structure of proteins is stabilized by _____ between amino groups and nonadjacent carboxyl groups
enzymes
biological catalysts that are unchanged by the reactions they catalyze and are reusable. Enzymes do not alter the G or H, nor the final equilibrium position. They only change the rate of reaction by altering the mechanism. Catalyze both the forward and reverse reactions
exergonic reactions
release energy; delta G is negative
endergonic reactions
require energy, delta G is positive
oxidoreductases
enzymes that catalyze REDOX reactions that involve the transfer of e-'s
transferases
move a functional group from one molecule to another
hydrolases
catalyze cleavage with the addition of H2O
lyases
catalyze cleavage without the addition of H2O and without the transfer of e-'s. The reverse reaction (synthesis) is often more important biologically
isomerases
catalyze the interconversion of isomers, including both constitutional isomers and stereoisomers
ligases
join two large biomolecules, often of the same type
lipases
catalyze the hydrolysis of fats. Dietary fats are broken down into fatty acids and glycerol or other alcohols
kinases
add a phosphate group. a type of transferase
phosphatase
remove a phosphate group; a type of transferase
phosphorylases
introduces a phosphate group into an organic molecule, notably glucose
saturation kinetics
as substrate concentration increases, reaction rate increases until max value is reached
michaelis menten
hyperbolic curve describing relationship between vmax and km
lineweaver burke
line graph; Double reciprocal of Michaelis-Menten
km
the [S] at which an enzyme runs at half of its vmax. a smaller value indicates a more efficient enzyme
vmax
maximum rate at which an enzyme can catalyze a reaction. this is when all enzyme active sites are saturated with substrate
Michaelis Menten equation
v = (vmax [S])/(Km + [S])
cooperative enzymes
display a sigmoidal curve because of the change in activity with substrate binding
active site
the site of catalysis
lock and key theory
the enzyme and substrate are exactly complementary and fit together like a key into a lock
induced fit theory
the enzyme and substrate undergo conformational changes to interact fully
cofactors
metal cation that is required by some enzymes
coenzyme
organic molecule that is required by some enzymes
feedback inhibition
when an enzyme is inhibited by high levels of a product from later in the same pathway
reversible inhibition
the ability to replace the inhibitor with a compound of greater affinity or to remove it using mild laboratory treatment
competitive inhibition
when the inhibitor is similar to the substrate and binds at the active site, blocking the substrate from binding. can be overcome by adding more substrate
competitive inhibition
vmax is unchanged, km increases
uncompetitive inhibition
when the inhibitor binds only with the enzyme-substrate complex.
uncompetitive inhibition
vmax and km both decrease
noncompetitive inhibition
when the inhibitor binds with equal affinity to the enzymes and the enzyme-substrate complex.
noncompetitive inhibition
Vmax decreases, Km stays the same
mixed inhibition
when the inhibitor binds with unequal affinity to the enzyme and the enzyme-complex. vmax decreases, km is increased or decreased depending on if the inhibitor has a higher affinity for the enzyme or enzyme-substrate complex
irreversible inhibition
alters the enzyme in such a way that the active site is unavailable for a prolonged duration or permanently
suicide inhibitor
a substrate analogue that binds irreversibly to the active site via a covalent bond
allosteric effector
binds at the allosteric site and induces a change in the conformation of the enzyme so the substrate can no longer bind to the active site. Displays cooperativity, so it does not obey michaelis-mentin kinetics
positive effectors
effectors that exert a positive effect; increase activity
negative effectors
Effectors that inhibit enzyme activity
homotropic effector
an allosteric regulator that is also the substrate. ex: o2 is a _________ regulator of hemoglobin
heterotropic effector
an allosteric regulator molecule that is different from the substrate
phosphorylation
covalent modification with phosphate
catabolism
phosphorylated = active
anabolism
phosphorylated=inactive
glycosylation
covalent modification with a carbohydrate
zymogens
precursors to an enzyme. secreted in an inactive form and are activated by cleavage.
structural proteins
compose the cytoskeleton, anchoring proteins, and much of the extracellular matrix. Most common examples are collagen, elastin, keratin, actin, and tubulin. They are generally fibrous in nature
motor proteins
have one or more heads capable of force generation through a conformational change. They have catalytic activity, acting as ATPases to power movement. Common applications include muscle contraction, vesicle movement within cells, and cell motility. Examples include myosin, kinesin, and dynein
binding proteins
bind a specific substrate, either to sequester it in the body or hold its concentration at a steady state
cell adhesion molecules
allow cells to bind to other cells or surfaces
cadherins
calcium dependent glycoproteins that hold similar cells together
integrins
have 2 membrane-spanning chains and permit cells to adhere to proteins in the extracellular matrix
selectins
allow cells to adhere to carbohydrates on the surfaces of other cells and are most commonly used in the immune system
antibodies
immunoglobulins, Ig. used by the immune system to target a specific antigen, which may be a protein on the surface of a pathogen or toxin. The variable region is responsible for antigen binding
electrophoresis
uses a gel matrix to observe the migration of proteins in response to an electric field
native PAGE
maintains the proteins shape, but results are difficult to compare because the mass/charge ratio differs for each protein
SDS page
denatures the proteins and masks the native charge so the comparison of size is more accurate, but functional protein cannot be recaptured from the gel
isoelectric focusing
separates proteins by their isoelectric point (pI); the protein migrates toward an electrode until it reaches a region of the gel where pH = pI of the protein
chromatography
separates mixtures on the basis of their affinity for a stationary phase or a mobile phase.
column chromatography
uses beads of a polar compound (stationary phase) with a nonpolar solvent (mobile phase)
ion exchange chromatography
uses a charged column and a variably saline eluent
size exclusion chromatography
relies on porous beads. large molecules elute first because they are not trapped inside the small pores
affinity chromatography
uses a bound receptor or ligand and an eluent with free ligand or a receptor for the protein of interest
ion channels
can be used for regulating ion flow into or out of a cell.
ungated ion channels
always open
voltage gated channels
open within a range of membrane potentials
ligand gated channels
open in the presence of a specific binding substance, usually a hormone or neurotransmitter
enzyme linked receptors
participate in cell signaling through extracellular ligand binding and initiation of 2nd messenger cascades
G protein coupled receptors
has a membrane-bound protein called the g-protein (alpha, beta, gamma subunits). The 1st messenger ligand initiates the 2nd messenger and the cascade response
structure
primarily determined through x-ray crystallography after the protein is isolated, although NMR can also be used
amino acid sequence
determined using the Edman Degradation