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Published byPierre-Yves Laurin Modified over 5 years ago
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Proteins C, H, N, O, S 50% of the Dry Weight of Living Organisms
Function: 1. Structure Hair, Fingernails, Cell membranes 2. Transport Hemoglobin & Cell membranes 3. Regulatory Protein Hormones 4. Catalysis Enzymes 5. Locomotion Muscles
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Monomer General Structure
Monomer = Amino Acids
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Generalized Amino Acid Structure
“Remainder Group” “Amine Group” “Acid Group”
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“Dipeptide” = 2 amino acids
R R In synthesis, one molecule loses an H+, one molecule loses an OH-. “Dipeptide” = 2 amino acids R R Peptide Bond
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Peptide Bonds are POLAR, COVALENT Bonds
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Proteins 22 different amino acids used to make all proteins
Each has a unique “R” group! 9 of these not made by body must come from diet Amino acids contain only C, H, N, O, S
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What colour is the R group?
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Levels of Organization
Primary 1○ Amino acids linked together Peptide bonds join Forms POLYPEPTIDE chain
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Secondary 2○ b/c peptide bonds are polar, H-Bonding routinely occurs between amino acids. Often, this will cause the chain coil up into a shape called an alpha helix. Layers called “ß-pleated sheets” can also form. Folded sheet OR Helical appearance
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Tertiary 3○ different types of bonding (covalent, ionic, hydrogen) between -R groups makes the alpha helix bend and turn forms "globs" final 3-D shape is very exact and precise E.g. Enzymes
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Quaternary 4○ More than one polypeptide arranged to take on unique structure E.g. Insulin / Hemoglobin
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Denaturation of Proteins
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Denaturation of Proteins
Change in pH High heat Heavy metals High salt concentration Interfere with bonding of 2o & 3o structures Destroys shape of the protein
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