03 Protein Structure
03 Protein Structure
03 Protein Structure
Ser Tyr Ala Phe Val Cys Tyr Asp Cys Gly
Secondary Structure
b. What groups on the amino acids are always involved in these bonds?
12. Draw a rectangle around two different R groups on the amino acids in the secondary structure in Model 2.
13. Is there any interaction between R groups in the secondary structure in Model 2?
14. Secondary protein structure can take the form of an alpha()-helix or a beta()-pleated sheet, as illustrated below.
a. Which drawing represents an -helix, Molecule 1 or Molecule 2? Explain your reasoning.
15. With your group, write a grammatically correct sentence that summarizes how the secondary protein structure is formed from the primary
structure.
Quaternary Structure
16. Examine the tertiary structure in Model 3 and note the interactions that hold this level of structure in place.
a. Four types of bonds or interactions are shown. Label them with the following terms.
Disulfide bridge
Hydrogen bond
Hydrophobic interactions
Ionic bond
b. Describe the part of the amino acid that participates in these interactions.
c. How does your answer in part b differ from the bonds that stabilize the secondary structure?
17. What type of functional groups or atoms would need to be present in the R-groups for hydrogen bonding to occur between two amino
acids in a protein chain?
18. What type of functional groups or atoms would need to be present in the R-groups for hydrophobic interactions to occur between two
amino acids in a protein chain?
19. How many polypeptide chains are shown in the tertiary protein structure in Model 3?
20. Many proteins, but not all, have a fourth level of structure termed quaternary structure.
a. How many polypeptide chains are shown in the quaternary structure of the protein in Model 3?
b. What types of bonds and interactions hold the quaternary structure in place?
21. With your group, using grammatically correct sentences, define the following.
a. Tertiary protein structure.
22. Imagine a protein chain that includes the following amino acids among several others.
a. Which of the amino acids could form a hydrogen bond with another amino acid in the chain to stabilize the secondary structure of a pleated sheet?
b. Which of the amino acids could form disulfide bonds with another amino acid in the chain to stabilize the tertiary structure of the protein?
c. Which of the amino acids could participate in hydrophobic interactions with another amino acid in the chain to stabilize the tertiary
structure of the protein?
d. What types of bonds or interactions could asparagine form with another amino acid in the chain in order to form a quaternary structure
with another protein chain?
23. Fill in the following chart using what youve learned from Models 13.
Structure
Bond(s) or interactions holding the structure
Short description
together
Primary
Number of polypeptide
chains involved
1
Secondary
Tertiary
Quaternary
2 or more
Read This!
Heating and changing pH levels are two ways to disrupt the shape of a protein. High temperatures or pH levels that vary from the natural
environment of the protein will break hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, disulfide bridges, and hydrophobic interactions. Covalent bonds will
usually remain undisturbed. This process of destroying the shape of a protein is called denaturing.
24. Which of the four levels of protein structure is maintained after denaturing? Explain your answer.
25. Proteins carry out a variety of functions, and their function is critically dependent upon their structure and shape. Enzymes are proteins.
What would happen to the structure and function of an enzyme that was exposed to heat or a drastic change in pH?
26. When people get their hair chemically straightened, one chemical is put on the hair to break the disulfide bonds that give the hair strands
their shape (curled) and a second chemical is used to reform the disulfide bonds to hold the hair in a new position (straight).
a. What level(s) of protein structure is/are affected by these processes?
b. Why doesnt the hair stay straight forever after this treatment?
Extension Questions
27. If a mutation in the DNA of an organism results in the replacement of an amino acid containing a polar R-group with another amino acid
containing a nonpolar R-group, how might the structure of the protein be affected? Address the impact on all levels of the protein structure
in your answer.
28. Egg whites are primarily composed of the protein albumin. One familiar example of the denaturing of proteins is the difference between
the albumin structure in a raw egg versus a cooked egg. Using what you know about the levels of structure in proteins, propose an
explanation of changes in albumin (and other proteins) that occur during cooking.
29. Predict what would happen to the egg white if a raw egg were placed in vinegar. Explain your thinking.