Proteins
Proteins
Proteins
Nucleic Acids
Nucleic Acids
100
What is the monomer of proteins?

Amino acids

100

What determines the categorization of amino acids?

R group = side chain

100

Dehydration reactions ______ water and _____ polymers

Hydrolysis reactions _____ water and ______ polymers

Dehydration reactions release water and make polymers

Hydrolysis reactions use water and break polymers

100

What is the monomer of nucleic acids?

Nucleotides

100

What are the components of a basic nucleotide?

Draw a basic nucleotide on the board

Pentose sugar = 5 carbon sugar ring

Phosphate group at the 5' carbon

Nitrogenous base at the 1' carbon

200

A dehydration reaction, aka polymerization, of two amino acids results in a __________ bond.

Peptide = covalent

200

What is the difference between the N terminus and the C terminus? How does this differ from the amine group and the carboxyl group?

The N terminus and C terminus applies only to polypeptides, where the exposed amine group is called the N terminus and the exposed carboxyl group is the C terminus

Amine group and carboxyl group are used to describe an amino acid

200

What determines protein function?

The shape of the protein

The sequence of amino acids and their subsequent R groups

200

What is the main difference in the pentose sugar of DNA and RNA? 

DNA has a deoxyribose sugar which lacks an oxygen on the 2' carbon

RNA has a ribose sugar has an oxygen on the 2' carbon

200

Describe a purine and a pyrimidine. Which purines/pyrimidines occur in DNA, RNA, or both?

Purines are larger with 2 rings while pyrimidines are smaller with 1 ring.

Adenine and guanine are purines that exist in both DNA and RNA

Cysteine, thymine, and uracil are pyrimidines where thymine is found in DNA and uracil is found in RNA

300

How does protein polymerization occur?

The amine group (NH3+) of one amino acid and the carboxyl group (COO-) of different amino acid interact to release water while forming a peptide bond

300

How many amino acids are there? What are the categories that they can be sorted into?

There are a total of 20 amino acids

There are 3 categories of amino acids:

Nonpolar

Polar and uncharged

Polar and charged

300

How does a protein gain its shape?

Spontaneously when immersed in water

With the use of chaperonins (proteins that help proteins fold)

300

What is complementary base pairing? Why is it important?

Given that DNA strands are antiparallel, the nitrogenous bases need to be complementary to each other in order to properly interact

Purine A can only bond with pyrimidines T and U

Purine G can only bond with pyrimidine C

300

What is Chargaff's rule?

Provide an example on the board

States that the number of purines (A and G) must equal the number of pyrimidines (T, C, and U)

400

What are the levels of protein? Which are 2D and which are 3D?

Primary structure is a 2D linear structure (just a chain of amino acids)

Secondary structure is 2D structure and can either be an alpha helix or a beta pleated sheet

Tertiary structure is a 3D structure and is the most common form of proteins

Quaternary structure is a 3D structure comprised of 2 or more polypeptides

400

What are the interactions in primary and secondary structures? Describe the interactions.

Primary structures are stabilized by peptide bonds which are covalent bonds

Secondary structures are stabilized by hydrogen bonds between amino acids and the backbone; it is the polar chargers of the amino acids that are involved in the hydrogen bonding

400

Denaturation is caused by what two factors? What is the resulting structure of denaturation?

High temperatures and low (acidic) pH

Denaturation results in the reversion back to the primary structure (chain of amino acids)

400

Describe the process of polymerization of nucleotides

This is a dehydration reaction which joins two monomers while releasing water

The connection results in a covalent bond known as a phosphodiester bond that is between the phosphate group of one and carbon 3 (OH) of the other

This is how the backbone is made (sugar-phosphate backbone)

There is a polarity (direction) of 5' and 3', the 3' is where a nucleotide can be attached

400

Where do components attach to on the pentose sugar?

The nitrogenous base attaches to carbon 1

The phosphate group attaches to carbon 4

When another nucleotide is bound to the other, the phosphate group of one attaches to carbon 3 of another 

500

Tertiary and quaternary structures are stabilized by what types of interactions? Describe them.

Van der Waals - tiny interactions bc atoms close to each other

Hydrogen bonding - bonds between R groups of amino acids

Hydrophobic effect - between nonpolar R groups and is typically on the inner side of the protein

Disulfide bonds - a covalent bond between two sulfurs

Ionic bonds - between two polar and charged amino acid R groups

500

What is the amino acid involved in disulfide bonding in tertiary and quaternary structures?

Cysteine 

500

Recall some of the functions of proteins

Movement intracellularly (cytoskeleton) and extracellularly (cell accessories like flagellum)

Catalysts/enzymes

Defense as antibodies

Cell to cell communication

Membrane proteins 

500

What are the levels of DNA and, if applicable, how are they stabilized?

Nucleotides - stabilized by covalent bonds

Single Stranded DNA (ssDNA) - sequence of nucleotides and are stabilized by phosphodiester bonds

Double helix (dsDNA) - stabilized by hydrogen bonds between complementary nitrogenous bases

Chromosomes - DNA + histone proteins

Genome - all the genetic information of a species (nucleic, mitochondrial, chloroplasts)

500

What are the levels of RNA? What are the 3 types of RNA and their functions?

Nucleotides -> single strand -> hairpin -> 3D

Hairpin - when a ssRNA folds in on itself and stabilized by H bonds

3D - stabilized by H bonds

Decoding:

rRNA - found in ribosomes and assembles proteins

tRNA - delivers amino acids for protein synthesis

mRNA - copies the genes of DNA to give instructions for protein synthesis

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