A-mean-O Acids
Kitty-Catalysts (meow)
Cofactors & Hackers
Electric Boogaloo
Test/Study Strategy
100

Provide the Structure @ pH=7, Name, and 3 Letter Code for... W

Trp, Tryptophan 

100

a Hydratase is what class of enzyme?

Lyase NOT Hydrolase!

100

I have: 5 NADH, 11 FADH2, 3 GTP, 7 NAD+, 4 FAD++.

How many ATP equivalents is this?

32 ATP

100

Is the following polypeptide isoelectric at pH = 7?

CHEMISTRY

Yes

No if you put a charge on histidine (which is fine)

100

What is something other than studying you can do to help yourself be prepared for the test.

Examples:

exercise

eat a good breakfast

get a lot of sleep the night before

stay hydrated

200

Provide the 1 letter codes, the names, and the structure of the following @ pH=7:

Ala-Lys-Tyr

AKY

Alanine-Lysine-Tyrosine

200

What class of enzyme would be responsible for turning an alcohol to an aldehyde and back again?

oxidoreductase

200

cAMP is a messenger molecule which is crucial to controlling cell replication. What cofactor is often couple to other reactions with cAMP if most enzyme involving cAMP are kinases? 

GTP

200

Is the isoelectric point of the following polypeptide above or below or about 7: VILLAIN

its at about 7

200

Which is typically the easier type of test question:

Recognition - ie multiple choice
Recall - ie draw the following

Which one should you study more to be more prepared?


Study to recall more! If you can produce information from memory then you already have recognition covered too!

Examples of recall studying are:

- drawing/
- teaching someone else
- writing out an explanation
- creating your own problems

Examples of recognition studying are:

- flashcards that show you the picture first
- reading and copying
- sequencing

300

Provide the names, 3 letter codes, and draw the structure of the following at pH=12:

FAIL

Phenylalanine-alanine-isoleucine-leucine

Phe-Ala-Iso-Leu

300

What is the substrate of bisphosphoglycerate-mutase.

Bonus 100 pts if you can tell me what it does to the substrate or the class of enzyme.

Substrate is bisphosphoglycerate.

Mutases are isomerases, so this enzyme isomerizes bisphosphoglycerate.

300

Consider Linoleic acid. Imagine that instead of using Pt/Pd/Ni, I used an enzyme to saturate it. What cofactor would likely need to be present and how many of it would be needed to fully saturate it?

2 FADH2

300

I want to make the following peptide isoelectric: DADDY. 

pKa of aspartate = 4
pKa of glutamate = 4.5
pKa of lysine = 11
pKa of arginine = 12
pKa of histidine = 6
pKa of cysteine = 8
pKa of proline = 10
pKa of asparagine = 8.75

I currently have in distilled water. What chemical should I add to make it isoelectric? H2SO4 or NaOH

H2SO4. 

@ pH 7 (distilled water) this polypeptide has a net charge of -3. So I need to add + which means add H which means lower pH so I need to add an acid.

300

What type of the problems should you try to tackle early on a test if you're worried you won't finish the whole test in time?

The ones that are worth the most points

400

Provide the names, 3 letter codes, and draw the structure of the following at pH=1:

SHREK

Serine-Histidine-Arginine-Glutamate-Lysine

Ser-His-Arg-Glu-Lys


400

Which of the following doesn't belong:

synthetase
kinase
hydratase

Hydratase (doesn't involve ATP)

400

Methotrexate is a cancer drug which prevents the regeneration of dihydrofolate from folic acid.

I have beaker with a solution of the enzyme dihydrofolate reductase and methotrexate and folic acid. I measure the amount of dihydrofolate as I add more folic acid. In the beginning there is no dihydrofolate but as I add folic acid I find more and more dihydrofolate.

Who is the substrate, who is the inhibitor and what kind of inhibitor is it?

Methotrexate is the competitive inhibitor and folic acid is the substrate.

400

Draw the following polypeptide at its isolelectric point and give a pH where this might occur: FREE

pKa of aspartate = 4
pKa of glutamate = 4.5
pKa of lysine = 11
pKa of arginine = 12
pKa of histidine = 6
pKa of cysteine = 8
pKa of proline = 10

pH 3 could be isoelectic for this polypeptide

400

You are faced with a test question and it is SOOOOO long! You are getting overwhelmed. You skip it but you come back and it's still freaking you out. What is a strategy to help you handle it?

Some examples:

- take some deep slow breaths

- find the actual question or direction (ie draw this, name this, what is the...) and circle it. 

- circle all the single words you do recognize and think about what kinds of problems have used those words in the past

500

Draw the structure of the following at pH=3: (draw each as a separate (poly)peptide)

pKa of aspartate = 4
pKa of glutamate = 4.5
pKa of lysine = 11
pKa of arginine = 12
pKa of histidine = 6
pKa of cysteine = 8
pKa of proline = 10

LIVING IN A PRAYER

Check with Erika

500

The following multistep reaction occurs, what sequence of enzymes would catalyze the process. (Hint there are 4)

I start with a secondary alcohol, which then becomes a ketone. That ketone is then moved to the end of the molecule becoming an aldehyde. That aldehyde becomes a carboxylic acid, which then has an ethyl group added to it to create an ester without the use of ATP.

sec.alcohol to ketone: oxidoreductase
ketone to aldehyde: isomerase
aldehyde to carboxylic acid: oxidoreductase (again)
carboxylic acid to ester: transferase

500

Nitric oxide binds cytochrome-C-oxidase which is the last enzyme in the electron transport chain. The body produces nitric oxide to control blood pressure through a multistep cascade by limiting metabolism and forcing blood vessels to relax. Cyanide, a famous poison, also interacts with cytochrome C oxidase resulting in death. In a few sentences explain why these two chemicals have such drastically different results even though they impact the same enzyme.

Nitric oxide is a reversible inhibitor which allows the body to resume metabolism as needed. Cyanide is reversible, metabolism ends permanently which results in death.

500

What is the isoelectric point of the following polypeptide: SKIP 

pKa of aspartate = 4
pKa of glutamate = 4.5
pKa of lysine = 11
pKa of arginine = 12
pKa of histidine = 6
pKa of cysteine = 8
pKa of proline = 10

10 (average 11 and 9)

500

You are feeling an absurd amount of stress leading up to your test. Name 3 things you can do to handle the stress besides study or go to OH etc. Something not chem related.

Examples:

- call a loved one
- eat/drink something you enjoy
- meditate (ie with the headspace app)
- exercise/workout
- listen to some music
- take regular study breaks
- verbally correct negative self talk (ie I'm never gonna get this gets rewritten as I don't understand this right now but that doesn't mean I won't understand it later)

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