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Chapter 5c: The Structure and Function of Macromolecules (Proteins). Polymers, Monomers, and Lipids. Major constituent of most cells (>50% dry weight) Highly sophisticated molecules (or multi-molecular complexes) Extremely large number of unique proteins exist
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Chapter 5c:The Structure andFunction ofMacromolecules(Proteins)
Major constituent of most cells (>50% dry weight) • Highly sophisticated molecules (or multi-molecular complexes) • Extremely large number of unique proteins exist • They are polymers folded into specific conformations (shapes) • Conformation and functional-group chemistry controls function • Made up of 20 different types of amino-acid monomers • Proteins define what an organism is, what it looks like, how it behaves, etc. (responsible for most phenotype) • You are your proteins! Protein Overview
Globular versus Fibrous Fibrous protein (e.g., collagen) Just know general shapes Globular protein (e.g., hemoglobin)
Enzymatic Catalysis Globular protein
Monomer (amino acid) Structure “R” group
Amino Acid Structure The chemistry of R groups distinguishes amino acids and their properties
Non-Polar R groups Know me!
Five Categories Note 20 (naturally translated) amino acids
No need to know side chain structures The Peptide Backbone = -N-C-C-N-C-C-N- Polypeptide = linear chain of amino acids linked by peptide bonds
Explanation of double-bond character (resonance) Limited Rotation Be able to know which is the peptide bond
Backbone Rigidity Because of Resonance the backbone of polypeptides has greater rigidity than otherwise might be expected Polypeptide backbones are more than just wet noodles!
Conformation = Shape Function Protein Depiction (4 ways) The surface chemistry of a protein is determined by the chemistry of exposed amino-acid R groups The interior of proteins is held together by R-group-to-R-group and backbone-to-backbone interactions
ATP Synthase This is what you use to make the bulk of your ATP
Protein Primary Structure 1’ structure = ordered sequence of amino acids
Protein Primary Structure Note the Polarity of the sequence (amino carboxy) Note also the disulfide linkages (cys-cys S-S bonds; actually considered a component of tertiary structure)
Protein Secondary Structure Be able to recognize & name these Held together by interactions (H-bonds) between peptide backbones
Tertiary structure is controlled by the interactions between non-adjacent amino acid R groups (note bond types) Protein Tertiary Structure
Quaternary structure is the interaction between adjacent polypeptides that make up a single protein Protein Quaternary Structure Note that the polypeptides reside in discrete subunits rather than being tangled together like spaghetti
“’Polypeptide’ is not quite synonymous with ‘protein.’ The relationship is somewhat analogous to that between a long strand of yarn and a sweater of a particular size and shape that one can knit from the yarn. A functional protein is not just a polypeptide chain, but one or more polypeptides precisely twisted, folded, and coiled into a molecule of unique shape. It is the amino-acid sequence of a polypeptide that determines what three-dimensional conformation the protein will take.” (p. 70, Campbell et al., 1999) (see p. 81 of 2005 edition) Protein Structure Overview
Protein Denaturation Destruction of Conformation = Loss of Function Some simple proteins can spontaneously renature
“A protein’s specific conformation determines how it works. In almost every case, the function of a protein depends on its ability to recognize and bind to some other molecule.” p. 81, Campbell & Reece (2005) Protein Folding
Chaparonins They segregate protein folding from “bad influences” in the cell Chaparonins Assist in Protein Folding