Overview. Secondary Structure. Tertiary Structure

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Overview. Secondary Structure. Tertiary Structure"

Transcription

1 Protein Structure Disclaimer: All information and images were taken from outside sources and the author claims no legal ownership of any material. Sources for images are linked on each slide and the information from each slide is derived from the 4 th edition of the biochemistry text written by Voet, Voet, and Pratt.

2 Overview Secondary Structure Geometry of peptide bonds Alpha helices Beta Sheets Fibrous proteins Non-repetitive Protein Structure Tertiary Structure X-ray crystallography Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Side Chain Polarity Types and IMF s Protein Databases Quaternary Structure Protein Stability Protein Folding Source:

3 Protein Structure Overview There are four levels of structure Primary is the sequence of amino acids Secondary is the manner in which the primary sequence is arranged in 3-D space Tertiary is the 3-D arrangement of the secondary structures Quaternary is the combination of multiple individual polypeptides. Source:

4 Geometry of peptide bonds Amide bonds (also called peptide bonds) have a significant resonance form that gives the carbon nitrogen bond a large amount of double bond character. This gives the amide a planar structure and restricts the overall movement of structure. Most of the amino acids assume a trans conformer due to fewer steric interactions (that would have resulted from the cis conformer) Source:

5 Torsional angles of the peptide bond The backbone or main chain of the protein refers to the atoms that participate in the peptide bonds and the atoms that connect them. The backbone can be drawn as a linked sequence of rigid planar peptide groups. The conformation of the backbone can be described using torsional angles. The angle between the carbonyl carbon and the alpha carbon can be described by the psi value (Ψ) The angle between the alpha carbon and the nitrogen of the next amide bond can be described by the phi value (Φ) The angel between the carbonyl carbon and the nitrogen can be described by the omega value (ω) Images showing the location of psi and phi can be seen on the next slide.

6 Source:

7 Ramachandran Plot Plot that shows the allowed conformations of polypeptides. There are only a few regions of the plot that are sterically allowed conformations. The major exceptions are: proline, which is restricted due to the ring and glycine, whose sidechain is significantly smaller than any other amino acid and so the polypeptide can assume otherwise forbidden conformations. Source:

8 Q: Which secondary structure is indicated by the following psi and phi values? Refer to the image on the slide. 1. psi= -47 phi= psi= +140 phi= psi= +70 phi= psi= -45 phi= +135

9 Alpha helices Structure that has both favorable hydrogen bond patterns and psi and phi values that fall within the fully allowed regions of the Ramachandran plot. Discovered by Linus Pauling in 1951 The helix is right handed and has 3.6 residues per turn. Its pitch (distance risen per each turn) is 5.4 Å. The alpha helix backbone s carbonyls bond with the hydrogen of the amide linkages. The carbonyl bonds to the hydrogen of the amide that is 4 residues after it. These hydrogen bonds are 2.8 Å apart. The side chains point outward and downward from the helix thereby avoiding contact with the backbone and with each other.

10 Source:

11

12 Q: Answer each of the following in regards to alpha helices 1. How many residues are needed to make an alpha helix that is 20 Å long? 2. Assuming average amino acid weight of 110 Daltons, what is the contour length of an alpha helix that weighs 1.4 KiloDaltons 3. If the average cell membrane is 7-10 nm in thickness, how many amino acids are required to form an alpha helix that will span the entire membrane. (give answer in the form of a range and in units of Å)

13 Q: Answer each of the following in regards to alpha helices. 1. What would happen to the helix if the hydrogen bonds occurred between a carbonyl and every 6 th residue instead of every 4 th? 2. What factor can be changed to drastically alter the solubility of alpha helices in a given solvent? 3. How many amino acids are in the helix shown below?

14 Beta Sheets Polypeptide chains next to each other form hydrogen bonds, rather than within the same chain. There are two types: antiparallel and parallel. Antiparallel: the chains run in opposite directions Parallel: chains run in the same direction The ideal formation of hydrogen bonds gives the sheet a slightly pleated appearance instead of being perfect flat. Side chains of the polypeptide extend to opposite sides of the sheet with a two residue repeat that has a distance of 7 Å. Beta sheets usually exhibit a slight right handed twist due to a compromise between optimizing the conformation and keeping the hydrogen bonds. The favored structure is antiparallel over parallel (see hydrogen bonding on next slide to justify)

15 Source:

16

17 Q: Answer the following in regards to beta sheets 1. What causes beta sheets to have a pleated appearance instead of being flat? 2. Why do beta sheets have a slight twist to them? 3. How long is a beta sheet that has 14 residues? 4. How many residues are in a beta sheet that is 28 Å long? 5. How long is a beta sheet that weighs 1.6 kilodaltons, assume the average amino acid weighs 110 Daltons.

18 Q: In the crystal structure shown: identify the beta sheets and alpha helices. Estimate the length of each helix and how many amino acids are in each helix. Could you use an alpha helix to estimate the number of amino acids in the beta sheets? If so, how would you do this? Source:

19 Fibrous proteins Historically, proteins have been classified as either fibrous or globular. Fibrous proteins are typically stiff and elongated whereas globular are compact and highly folded. The two examples that will be covered are keratin and collagen. Keratin is found in higher vertebrates and is found in hair, horns, nails, and feathers. Alpha keratin occurs in mammals and beta keratin occurs in birds and reptiles. Keratins major structural feature is the coiled coil. Collagen occurs in all multicellular animals and is the most abundant vertebrate protein. It is a major component of connective tissues such as bone, teeth, cartilage, tendons, and the matrices of skin and blood vessels. Collagens major structural feature is the triple helix. Source: Voet, Voet and Pratt Biochemistry 4 th edition.

20 Keratin Keratin is similar to an alpha helix except that it has a spacing of 5.1 Å instead of the 5.4 Å expected for an alpha helix. The difference between the two is the result of two alpha keratin polypeptides, each of which forms an alpha helix, twisting around each other to form a left handed coil. The two keratin polypeptides being wrapped around each other is called a coiled coil. The coiled coil is a result of the primary sequence of the polypeptide. The central segment has a 7 amino acid pseudorepeat with nonpolar residues predominating at positions 1 and 4. This results in a hydrophobic strip along one side of the helix that can then interact favorably with the hydrophobic strip of another polypeptide. Source:

21 Keratin The keratin dimers associate to form a profilament, which then associate to form a microfibril. These microfibrils then associate to form macrofibrils. This layering of each component to make the next occurs in many different proteins and the general scheme of this can be seen in the image. Source:

22 Q: Assuming each sequence repeats, which of them could possibly be found in a coiled coil? Explain each case. 1. WRHITSE 2. HYTLVQN 3. IVELACN 4. lrttllv

23 Collagen A single collagen fiber consists of three polypeptide chains. Collagen has a distinct amino acid composition: about 30% is glycine and another 15-30% is proline. Some amino acid derivatives are also found including: 4-hydroxylprolyl (Hyp), 3-hydroxylprolyl, and 5-hydroxylysyl (Hyl) The nonstandard residues are formed after collagen polypeptides are synthesized. The sequence of a typical collagen polypeptide consist of the repeating triplet sequence Gly-X-Y where X is often proline and Y is often Hyp. Hyl sometimes appears at the Y position as well. The proline resides cannot form an alpha helix and instead the collagen polypeptide assumes a left-handed helical conformation with about three residues per turn. Three parallel chains wind around each other with a gentle, right handed, ropelike twist to form the triple helical structure of a collagen molecule. Every third residue passes through the center of the helix, which is so crowded that only glycine can fit.

24 Collagen The three polypeptide chains are staggered so that Gly, X and Y residues occur at every level along the triple helix. The peptide groups are oriented so that the hydrogen of the amide bond of the glycine reside makes a strong hydrogen bond with the carbonyl oxygen of the X residue on the neighboring chain. The entire protein gets its rigidity from the proline and proline derivatives. (Proline is a relatively bulky and inflexible residue) Collagen is covalently cross linked. These cross links are not disulfide bonds but instead are formed between Lysine and Histidine residues. The amount of cross linking in collagen increase with the age of the organism.

25 Non-repetitive Protein Structure Majority of proteins are globular and contain several types of regular secondary structures. non-repetitive structures are no less ordered than are helices or beta sheets; they are simply irregular and hence more difficult to describe Random coil: totally disordered and rapidly fluctuating conformations taken on by a denatured protein. Denatured proteins are fully unfolded and native proteins are folded proteins. Beta bulges are created from an extra residue that doesn t hydrogen bond to neighbors like it should. Alpha helices can be destabilized by sequential repeats of residues with bulky side chains Proline can create a kink in alpha helices or beta sheets. Helix capping is when a residue such as Asn or Gln folds back to form hydrogen bonds with one of the four terminal residues of an alpha helix

26 Q: Draw each of the following amino acids: 4-Hydroxylprolyl, 3-Hydroxylprolyl and 5-hydroxylysyl. Q: Why can t collagen strands be broken down by BME? Q: Briefly explain how collagen strands are cross-linked (see page 141 of Voet, Voet, and Pratt textbook 4 th edition) Q: Which of the following sequences is most likely to be found in an alpha helix? Least likely? Why? AEMFHAVQ TSPPMLIQ AVCYYYGL

27 Tertiary Structure The determination of atomic positions is done with X-ray crystallography and NMR spectroscopy. Tertiary structure consists of secondary elements that combine to form motifs and domains. The polarity of side chains can heavily dictate the overall shape of the protein. Motifs are super-secondary structures. Structure is more conserved than sequence. There are a multitude of databases that store protein structural information and is called structural bioinformatics.

28 X-ray Crystallography Technique that directly images molecules. According to optical principles: the uncertainty in locating an object is approximately equal to the wavelength of radiation used to observe it. Covalent bond distances are about 1.5 Å and the wavelength of visible light is 4000 Å whereas X-rays are about 1.5 Å. So x-rays are needed to study molecules. A crystal of the compound of interest is exposed to x-rays and the diffraction pattern gives information regarding its structure. Since x-rays interact almost exclusively with electrons, the patterns are really electron densities. Precession diagram of a lysozyme crystal. One can easily distinguish a four-fold symmetry axis perpendicular to the diagram. According to the relationships between direct and reciprocal lattices, if the axes of the unit cell are large (as in this case), the separation between reciprocal points is small See source Source:

29 X-ray Crystallography Proteins differ from smaller molecules because they are often highly hydrated and are typically 40-60% water by volume in crystal form. Because of the large amount of hydration, protein crystals are often jellylike. These crystals have a limit of resolution that ranges from Å. Source:

30 X-ray Crystallography The question arises if the structure of a protein in crystal is the same as in solution. Some evidence has been presented to justify that the structures are the same. 1. The protein is essentially in solution because of the large hydration factor. 2. Other techniques have given identical information. NMR structures are determined in solution and this data correlates well with x-ray crystallography data. 3. Many enzymes are active in their crystal state. Since enzymes require a very specific conformation to work the crystalline enzymes must have structures nearly identical to those in solution.

31 Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) NMR is based on the principle that atomic nuclei resonates in an applied magnetic field in a way that is sensitive to its electronic environment and its interactions with nearby nuclei. Since even small proteins have 100 s of protons, the 2-D spectrum is used to help determine which protons are close to each other in 3-D space. The size of the molecule currently limits if NMR can be used. The current limit is approximately 100 kd but this may eventually increase. Protein structures are often simplified to help reduce clutter in the image. This is done by using ribbons to represent alpha helices and beta sheets and to use thin lines tracing the alpha carbons through space. Source:

32 Q: Why is it important to have multiple techniques to determine protein structure? Q: What are some of the limitations of x-ray crystallography? Q: What are some of the limitations of NMR? Q: Why are images of proteins often simplified?

33 Side Chain Polarity In globular proteins, side chains are distributed based on their polarity. For instance, nonpolar residues are often found in the interior of globular proteins away from the aqueous environment. Charged residues are most likely to be found on the surface of a protein in order to form hydrogen bonds with the aqueous solvent. This is because placing an ion inside an essentially anhydrous environment is energetically unfavorable. Polar but uncharged residues are found on both the surface and interior of the protein. When in the interior, these residues are often hydrogen bonded to other groups. Water is often excluded from the inside of proteins and when it is found inside it often acts to bridge two residues that need to hydrogen bond.

34 Q: cell membranes have a nonpolar, hydrophobic interior with aqueous environments on each side of the double membrane. Given the following hypothetical polypeptide sequence, which portions would you predict would be inside the membrane and which should be outside the membrane? AVLILAAVTREDCINQWFPILEDCSYTEEDLILILAVWFPFPHDMED Q: if the same sequence in the question above was a globular protein, which portions would likely be on the interior and which portions would likely be on the surface? Explain.

35 Types of Tertiary Structure βαβ motif: very common form. An α helix connects two parallel β sheets. β hairpin: antiparallel β strands connected by relatively tight reverse turns. αα motif: two successive antiparallel α helices stack against each other with their axes inclined. Similar to keratin structure expect the helices are antiparallel instead of parallel. Greek key motif: a β hairpin is folded over to form a 4 stranded antiparallel β sheet. Many proteins can be classified based on the amount of α helices or β sheets they contain. If a protein is mostly α helices its classified as an α protein and if its mostly β sheets its classified as a β protein and if its an even mix of the two its an α/β protein.

36 Q: classify each of the motifs below using the terminology presented on the previous slide. (Hint: there are two examples of each) Source: all images on this slide were taken from Google Images

37 Protein Databases PDB: (Protein Data Bank) contains nearly 80,000 macromolecular structures and information associated with the structure. A variety of viewing platforms can be used to view the structures compiled in the database. Computational tools allow the classification and comparison of protein strucutes. Some of these are outlined below CATH: Class Architecture Topology and Homologous super family- Categorizes proteins based on the four characteristics listed. CE: Combinatorial Extension- finds all proteins in the PDB that can be structurally aligned with the query structure. Pfam: Protein Families- database of nearly 11,000 of multiple sequence alignments of protein domains. Used to view occurrence of protein domains across species. SCOP: Structural Classification Of Proteins- classifies based on class, fold, superfamily, family, protein and species. VAST: Vector Alignment Search Tool- gives a list of proteins that structurally resemble the query protein.

38 Quaternary Structure Quaternary structure is the association of multiple polypeptides to form an active protein. Not all proteins have a quaternary structure, it a protein is only composed of one strand of amino acids than it won t have a quaternary structure. Larger proteins are often composed of multiple subunits because its easier to repair one subunit instead of repairing the entire protein. Proteins with more than one subunit are called oligomers. Identical subunits are called protomers. Protein subunits usually associate non-covalently through hydrophobic interactions or ionic interactions. Sometimes protein subunits may be held together by disulfide bonds. Proteins can have rotational symmetry but not inversion or mirror symmetry.

39 Protein Stability Native proteins are only marginally stable under physiological conditions and the energy required to denature a protein is approximately 0.4 kj per mol per amino acid. So a 100 amino acid protein is only about 40 kj per mol more stable in its native state than in its denatured state. Protein structures are governed primarily by hydrophobic effects. The hydrophobic effect causes nonpolar substances to minimize their contacts with water. The aggregation of nonpolar side chains in the center of a globular protein is an entropically driven process. The combined hydrophobic and hydrophilic tendencies of individual amino acid residues in proteins can be expressed as hydropathies. The greater the hydropathy the more likely it is to be on the interior of a protein and vice versa. Overall contribution of hydrogen bonds to protein stability is negligible since these can formed in either the native or denatured state.

40 Protein Stability The hydropathic index seen to the right shows the amino acid number and its relative solubility in organic versus aqueous solvents. The more negative value indicates a more polar residue and the more positive values indicate the more nonpolar residues. Source:

41 Protein Stability While hydrogen bonds don t contribute that much to overall stability they do slightly control tertiary structure because while a few conformations may be possible in regards to hydrophobic interactions, only one of these may allow the formation of hydrogen bonds. Ions pairs have little contribution to native protein stability because the free energy usually fails to compensate for the loss of entropy of the side chains. Disulfide bonds function to lock in a certain conformation and aren t necessarily essential stabilizing forces. Proteins with disulfide bonds in the cytoplasm are rare because the cytoplasm is a reducing environment.

42 Protein Stability: Zinc Fingers Zinc fingers are often found as nucleic acid binding proteins and are structures that contain residues arranged around one or two Zinc ions that are tetrahedrally coordinated by the side chains of Cys, His, and occasionally Asp or Glu. These proteins are too small to be stable without the zinc ion Zinc is the ideal metal for this because its filled d electron shell permits it to interact strongly with a variety of ligands. Zinc also only has one oxidation state and so it cant undergo oxidation-reduction reactions. Source:

43 Protein Stability: Denaturing and Renaturing Proteins can be denatured by a number of methods, each with its pros and cons. Heating: causes conformation sensitive properties to change abruptly over a narrow range. These properties include optical rotation, viscosity and UV absorption. The unfolding is called melting and when heated this occurs cooperatively (simultaneously) across the entire polypeptide. Changing ph: changes charge distribution and hydrogen bonding Detergents: associate with nonpolar residues and reduce the interactions between residues that contribute to stability of the native conformation. Chaotropic agents: include compounds like guanidinium ion and urea. In the range of 5-10 M these compounds increase the solubility of nonpolar compounds in water. The mechanism of action is not well understood. In 1957 Christian Anfinsen showed that ribonuclease A (RNase A) could be denatured and then renatured, resulting in a protein with almost 100% enzymatic activity. This indicated that proteins renature spontaneously.

44 Protein Renaturation Christian Anfinsen s experiment with Ribonuclease A. Conclusions: proteins must renature spontaneously and proteins primary structure dictates its tertiary structure. Source:

45 Protein Folding Assume a protein randomly folds until it reaches the correct conformation. Assume that an n residue protein s 2 n torsion angles have three stable conformations. Then there are 10 n conformations available to the protein (large underestimate due to ignoring side chains). If the protein could explore a new conformation every s (a fraction of a second, a very small number) than the time required for a protein to explore all possible conformations is 10 n / For a 100 residue protein that is 1087 seconds which is longer than the age of the universe (4.3x10 17 s). In fact protein folding is not random and follows a directed pathway. Proteins fold in less than a few seconds to their native conformation.

46 Protein Folding Source:

47 References 1. Voet, D. Voet, J.G. Pratt, C.W. Fundamentals of Biochemistry: Life at the Molecular Level. 4 th edition. Wiley and Sons

Fundamentals of Biochemistry

Fundamentals of Biochemistry Donald Voet Judith G. Voet Charlotte W. Pratt Fundamentals of Biochemistry Second Edition Chapter 6: Proteins: Three-Dimensional Structure Copyright 2006 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. 1958, John Kendrew Any

More information

Proteins the primary biological macromolecules of living organisms

Proteins the primary biological macromolecules of living organisms Proteins the primary biological macromolecules of living organisms Protein structure and folding Primary Secondary Tertiary Quaternary structure of proteins Structure of Proteins Protein molecules adopt

More information

Structure formation and association of biomolecules. Prof. Dr. Martin Zacharias Lehrstuhl für Molekulardynamik (T38) Technische Universität München

Structure formation and association of biomolecules. Prof. Dr. Martin Zacharias Lehrstuhl für Molekulardynamik (T38) Technische Universität München Structure formation and association of biomolecules Prof. Dr. Martin Zacharias Lehrstuhl für Molekulardynamik (T38) Technische Universität München Motivation Many biomolecules are chemically synthesized

More information

Protein Folding Problem I400: Introduction to Bioinformatics

Protein Folding Problem I400: Introduction to Bioinformatics Protein Folding Problem I400: Introduction to Bioinformatics November 29, 2004 Protein biomolecule, macromolecule more than 50% of the dry weight of cells is proteins polymer of amino acids connected into

More information

Proteins Higher Order Structures

Proteins Higher Order Structures Proteins Higher Order Structures Dr. Mohammad Alsenaidy Department of Pharmaceutics College of Pharmacy King Saud University Office: AA 101 msenaidy@ksu.edu.sa Previously on PHT 426!! Protein Structures

More information

Protein Structure. Protein Structure Tertiary & Quaternary

Protein Structure. Protein Structure Tertiary & Quaternary Lecture 4 Protein Structure Protein Structure Tertiary & Quaternary Dr. Sameh Sarray Hlaoui Primary structure: The linear sequence of amino acids held together by peptide bonds. Secondary structure: The

More information

CS273: Algorithms for Structure Handout # 5 and Motion in Biology Stanford University Tuesday, 13 April 2004

CS273: Algorithms for Structure Handout # 5 and Motion in Biology Stanford University Tuesday, 13 April 2004 CS273: Algorithms for Structure Handout # 5 and Motion in Biology Stanford University Tuesday, 13 April 2004 Lecture #5: 13 April 2004 Topics: Sequence motif identification Scribe: Samantha Chui 1 Introduction

More information

Hmwk # 8 : DNA-Binding Proteins : Part II

Hmwk # 8 : DNA-Binding Proteins : Part II The purpose of this exercise is : Hmwk # 8 : DNA-Binding Proteins : Part II 1). to examine the case of a tandem head-to-tail homodimer binding to DNA 2). to view a Zn finger motif 3). to consider the case

More information

2) Which functional group is least important in biochemistry? A) amine B) ester C) hydroxyl D) aromatic E) amide

2) Which functional group is least important in biochemistry? A) amine B) ester C) hydroxyl D) aromatic E) amide 1) All of the following can be classified as biomolecules except A) lipids. B) proteins. C) carbohydrates. D) nucleic acids. E) All of the above are biomolecules. 2) Which functional group is least important

More information

BIOLOGY 200 Molecular Biology Students registered for the 9:30AM lecture should NOT attend the 4:30PM lecture.

BIOLOGY 200 Molecular Biology Students registered for the 9:30AM lecture should NOT attend the 4:30PM lecture. BIOLOGY 200 Molecular Biology Students registered for the 9:30AM lecture should NOT attend the 4:30PM lecture. Midterm date change! The midterm will be held on October 19th (likely 6-8PM). Contact Kathy

More information

Collagen. 7.88J Protein Folding. Prof. David Gossard October 20, 2003

Collagen. 7.88J Protein Folding. Prof. David Gossard October 20, 2003 Collagen 7.88J Protein Folding Prof. David Gossard October 20, 2003 PDB Acknowledgements The Protein Data Bank (PDB - http://www.pdb.org/) is the single worldwide repository for the processing and distribution

More information

Proteins: Wide range of func2ons. Polypep2des. Amino Acid Monomers

Proteins: Wide range of func2ons. Polypep2des. Amino Acid Monomers Proteins: Wide range of func2ons Proteins coded in DNA account for more than 50% of the dry mass of most cells Protein func9ons structural support storage transport cellular communica9ons movement defense

More information

Protein Structure/Function Relationships

Protein Structure/Function Relationships Protein Structure/Function Relationships W. M. Grogan, Ph.D. OBJECTIVES 1. Describe and cite examples of fibrous and globular proteins. 2. Describe typical tertiary structural motifs found in proteins.

More information

Diversity of proteins

Diversity of proteins BCMB 3100: Partial notes Chapter 4 (Part 1) Diversity of proteins 3D structure of proteins Fibrous vs globular proteins Conformation vs configuration 1, 2, 3 and 4 structure Peptide groups in polypeptide

More information

Diversity of proteins

Diversity of proteins BCMB 3100: Partial notes Chapter 4 (Part 1) Diversity of proteins 3D structure of proteins Fibrous vs globular proteins Conformation vs configuration 1, 2, 3 and 4 structure Peptide groups in polypeptide

More information

CSE : Computational Issues in Molecular Biology. Lecture 19. Spring 2004

CSE : Computational Issues in Molecular Biology. Lecture 19. Spring 2004 CSE 397-497: Computational Issues in Molecular Biology Lecture 19 Spring 2004-1- Protein structure Primary structure of protein is determined by number and order of amino acids within polypeptide chain.

More information

Lecture 9 (10/2/17) Lecture 9 (10/2/17)

Lecture 9 (10/2/17) Lecture 9 (10/2/17) Lecture 9 (10/2/17) Reading: Ch4; 119-122, 125-126, 131-133 (a-helix) Ch4; 123-124, 130-131, 133, 137-138 (b-sheets) Problems: Ch4 (text); 2, 3, 4, 8, 13, 14 NEXT Reading: Ch4; 125, 138-141, 141-142 Problems:

More information

BIRKBECK COLLEGE (University of London)

BIRKBECK COLLEGE (University of London) BIRKBECK COLLEGE (University of London) SCHOOL OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES M.Sc. EXAMINATION FOR INTERNAL STUDENTS ON: Postgraduate Certificate in Principles of Protein Structure MSc Structural Molecular Biology

More information

Biochemistry Prof. S. DasGupta Department of Chemistry Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur. Lecture - 5 Protein Structure - III

Biochemistry Prof. S. DasGupta Department of Chemistry Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur. Lecture - 5 Protein Structure - III Biochemistry Prof. S. DasGupta Department of Chemistry Indian Institute of Technology Kharagpur Lecture - 5 Protein Structure - III This is lecture number three on protein structure. (Refer Slide Time:

More information

Translation. Protein Synthesis

Translation. Protein Synthesis Protein Structure Translation Protein Synthesis Size and Shape Comparison of Proteins Levels of Protein Structure 1 o 2 o 3 o 4 o Amino Acids Peptide Bonds Proteins are formed by creating peptide bonds

More information

BMB/Bi/Ch 170 Fall 2017 Problem Set 1: Proteins I

BMB/Bi/Ch 170 Fall 2017 Problem Set 1: Proteins I BMB/Bi/Ch 170 Fall 2017 Problem Set 1: Proteins I Please use ray-tracing feature for all the images you are submitting. Use either the Ray button on the right side of the command window in PyMOL or variations

More information

Protein Structure Databases, cont. 11/09/05

Protein Structure Databases, cont. 11/09/05 11/9/05 Protein Structure Databases (continued) Prediction & Modeling Bioinformatics Seminars Nov 10 Thurs 3:40 Com S Seminar in 223 Atanasoff Computational Epidemiology Armin R. Mikler, Univ. North Texas

More information

Packing of Secondary Structures

Packing of Secondary Structures 7.88 Lecture Notes - 5 7.24/7.88J/5.48J The Protein Folding and Human Disease Packing of Secondary Structures Packing of Helices against sheets Packing of sheets against sheets Parallel Orthogonal Table:

More information

(Refer Slide Time: 00:15)

(Refer Slide Time: 00:15) (Refer Slide Time: 00:15) Proteins and Gel-Based Proteomics Professor Sanjeeva Srivastava Department of Biosciences and Bioengineering Indian Institute of Technology, Bombay Mod 02 Lecture Number 3 Let

More information

All Rights Reserved. U.S. Patents 6,471,520B1; 5,498,190; 5,916, North Market Street, Suite CC130A, Milwaukee, WI 53202

All Rights Reserved. U.S. Patents 6,471,520B1; 5,498,190; 5,916, North Market Street, Suite CC130A, Milwaukee, WI 53202 Secondary Structure In the previous protein folding activity, you created a hypothetical 15-amino acid protein and learned that basic principles of chemistry determine how each protein spontaneously folds

More information

Steroids. Steroids. Proteins: Wide range of func6ons. lipids characterized by a carbon skeleton consis3ng of four fused rings

Steroids. Steroids. Proteins: Wide range of func6ons. lipids characterized by a carbon skeleton consis3ng of four fused rings Steroids Steroids lipids characterized by a carbon skeleton consis3ng of four fused rings 3 six sided, and 1 five sided Cholesterol important steroid precursor component in animal cell membranes Although

More information

Structural Bioinformatics (C3210) DNA and RNA Structure

Structural Bioinformatics (C3210) DNA and RNA Structure Structural Bioinformatics (C3210) DNA and RNA Structure Importance of DNA/RNA 3D Structure Nucleic acids are essential materials found in all living organisms. Their main function is to maintain and transmit

More information

Programme Good morning and summary of last week Levels of Protein Structure - I Levels of Protein Structure - II

Programme Good morning and summary of last week Levels of Protein Structure - I Levels of Protein Structure - II Programme 8.00-8.10 Good morning and summary of last week 8.10-8.30 Levels of Protein Structure - I 8.30-9.00 Levels of Protein Structure - II 9.00-9.15 Break 9.15-11.15 Exercise: Building a protein model

More information

Introduction to Proteins

Introduction to Proteins Introduction to Proteins Lecture 4 Module I: Molecular Structure & Metabolism Molecular Cell Biology Core Course (GSND5200) Matthew Neiditch - Room E450U ICPH matthew.neiditch@umdnj.edu What is a protein?

More information

Visualizing proteins with PyMol

Visualizing proteins with PyMol Visualizing proteins with PyMol Structural Bioinformatics GENOME 541 Spring 2018 Lecture 1: Protein Structure Frank DiMaio (dimaio@uw.edu) Obtaining PyMOL We will use an educational build of PyMOL that

More information

Problem: The GC base pairs are more stable than AT base pairs. Why? 5. Triple-stranded DNA was first observed in 1957. Scientists later discovered that the formation of triplestranded DNA involves a type

More information

Molecular Structures

Molecular Structures Molecular Structures 1 Molecular structures 2 Why is it important? Answers to scientific questions such as: What does the structure of protein X look like? Can we predict the binding of molecule X to Y?

More information

Amino Acids and Proteins

Amino Acids and Proteins Various Functions of Proteins SB203 Amino Acids and Proteins Jirundon Yuvaniyama, Ph.D. Department of Biochemistry Faculty of Science Mahidol University Enzymes Transport proteins utrient and storage proteins

More information

STRUCTURE, DYNAMICS AND INTERACTIONS OF PROTEINS BY NMR SPECTROSCOPY

STRUCTURE, DYNAMICS AND INTERACTIONS OF PROTEINS BY NMR SPECTROSCOPY STRUCTURE, DYNAMICS AND INTERACTIONS OF PROTEINS BY NMR SPECTROSCOPY Constantin T. Craescu INSERM & Institut Curie - Recherche Orsay, France A SHORT INTRODUCTION TO PROTEIN STRUCTURE Chemical composition

More information

AP Biology Book Notes Chapter 3 v Nucleic acids Ø Polymers specialized for the storage transmission and use of genetic information Ø Two types DNA

AP Biology Book Notes Chapter 3 v Nucleic acids Ø Polymers specialized for the storage transmission and use of genetic information Ø Two types DNA AP Biology Book Notes Chapter 3 v Nucleic acids Ø Polymers specialized for the storage transmission and use of genetic information Ø Two types DNA Encodes hereditary information Used to specify the amino

More information

Nucleic Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes

Nucleic Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes 3 Nucleic Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes Chapter 3 Nucleic Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes Key Concepts 3.1 Nucleic Acids Are Informational Macromolecules 3.2 Proteins Are Polymers with Important Structural

More information

BCH222 - Greek Key β Barrels

BCH222 - Greek Key β Barrels BCH222 - Greek Key β Barrels Reading C.I. Branden and J. Tooze (1999) Introduction to Protein Structure, Second Edition, pp. 77-78 & 335-336 (look at the color figures) J.S. Richardson (1981) "The Anatomy

More information

Proteins Amides from Amino Acids

Proteins Amides from Amino Acids Chapter 26 and Chapter 28 Proteins Amides from Amino Acids Amino acids contain a basic amino group and an acidic carboxyl group Joined as amides between the ¾NH 2 of one amino acid and the ¾CO 2 H to the

More information

Molecular Structures

Molecular Structures Molecular Structures 1 Molecular structures 2 Why is it important? Answers to scientific questions such as: What does the structure of protein X look like? Can we predict the binding of molecule X to Y?

More information

Hmwk 6. Nucleic Acids

Hmwk 6. Nucleic Acids The purpose of this homework exercise is Hmwk 6. Nucleic Acids 1). to recognize fundamental features of B-form DNA and A-form RNA 2). to view the folded structure of trna B-FORM DNA In aqueous solutions,

More information

Bioinformatics & Protein Structural Analysis. Bioinformatics & Protein Structural Analysis. Learning Objective. Proteomics

Bioinformatics & Protein Structural Analysis. Bioinformatics & Protein Structural Analysis. Learning Objective. Proteomics The molecular structures of proteins are complex and can be defined at various levels. These structures can also be predicted from their amino-acid sequences. Protein structure prediction is one of the

More information

Molecular Modeling Lecture 8. Local structure Database search Multiple alignment Automated homology modeling

Molecular Modeling Lecture 8. Local structure Database search Multiple alignment Automated homology modeling Molecular Modeling 2018 -- Lecture 8 Local structure Database search Multiple alignment Automated homology modeling An exception to the no-insertions-in-helix rule Actual structures (myosin)! prolines

More information

KEMM15 Lecture note in structural bioinformatics: A practical guide. S Al-Karadaghi, Biochemistry & Structural Biology, Lund University

KEMM15 Lecture note in structural bioinformatics: A practical guide. S Al-Karadaghi, Biochemistry & Structural Biology, Lund University KEMM15 Lecture note in structural bioinformatics: A practical guide S Al-Karadaghi, Biochemistry & Structural Biology, Lund University 1 BASICS OF PROTEIN STRUCTURE 3 SOME DEFINITIONS 3 THE 20 AMINO ACIDS

More information

Chapter 1 -- Life. Chapter 2 -- Atoms, Molecules and Bonds. Chapter 3 -- Water

Chapter 1 -- Life. Chapter 2 -- Atoms, Molecules and Bonds. Chapter 3 -- Water Chapter 1 -- Life In the beginning... Molecular evolution Heirarchy and organization levels of organization Form follows function Language in science Cell and Molecular Biology -- Biology 20A Chapter Outlines

More information

Amino Acids. Amino Acid Structure

Amino Acids. Amino Acid Structure Amino Acids Pratt & Cornely Chapter 4 Alpha carbon Sidechain Proteins peptides Amino Acid Structure 1 L amino acids Glycine R/S vs D/L L isoleucine racemization Stereochemisty Common Amino Acids 2 Which

More information

Protein Folding and Misfolding

Protein Folding and Misfolding Folding of proteins into their native conformations occurs spontaneously under physiological conditions and is dictated by the primary structure of the protein. Learning Objective After interacting with

More information

DNA and RNA are both made of nucleotides. Proteins are made of amino acids. Transcription can be reversed but translation cannot.

DNA and RNA are both made of nucleotides. Proteins are made of amino acids. Transcription can be reversed but translation cannot. INFORMATION TRANSFER Information in cells Properties of information Information must be able to be stored, accessed, retrieved, transferred, read and used. Information is about order, it is basically the

More information

Protein structure. Wednesday, October 4, 2006

Protein structure. Wednesday, October 4, 2006 Protein structure Wednesday, October 4, 2006 Introduction to Bioinformatics Johns Hopkins School of Public Health 260.602.01 J. Pevsner pevsner@jhmi.edu Copyright notice Many of the images in this powerpoint

More information

Bi 8 Lecture 7. Ellen Rothenberg 26 January Reading: Ch. 3, pp ; panel 3-1

Bi 8 Lecture 7. Ellen Rothenberg 26 January Reading: Ch. 3, pp ; panel 3-1 Bi 8 Lecture 7 PROTEIN STRUCTURE, Functional analysis, and evolution Ellen Rothenberg 26 January 2016 Reading: Ch. 3, pp. 109-134; panel 3-1 (end with free amine) aromatic, hydrophobic small, hydrophilic

More information

If you wish to have extra practice with swiss pdb viewer or to familiarize yourself with how to use the program here is a tutorial:

If you wish to have extra practice with swiss pdb viewer or to familiarize yourself with how to use the program here is a tutorial: Name (s): Swiss PDB viewer assignment chapter 4. If you wish to have extra practice with swiss pdb viewer or to familiarize yourself with how to use the program here is a tutorial: http://spdbv.vital-it.ch/themolecularlevel/spvtut/index.html

More information

Chemistry 1050 Exam 4 Study Guide

Chemistry 1050 Exam 4 Study Guide Chapter 19 Chemistry 1050 Exam 4 Study Guide 19.1 and 19.2 Know there are 20 common amino acids that can polymerize into proteins. Know why amino acids are called alpha amino acids. Identify the charges

More information

Chemistry 1120 Exam 3 Study Guide

Chemistry 1120 Exam 3 Study Guide Chemistry 1120 Exam 3 Study Guide Chapter 9 9.1 and 9.2 Know there are 20 common amino acids that can polymerize into proteins. Know why amino acids are called alpha amino acids. Identify the charges of

More information

Gene and DNA structure. Dr Saeb Aliwaini

Gene and DNA structure. Dr Saeb Aliwaini Gene and DNA structure Dr Saeb Aliwaini 2016 DNA during cell cycle Cell cycle for different cell types Molecular Biology - "Study of the synthesis, structure, and function of macromolecules (DNA, RNA,

More information

CFSSP: Chou and Fasman Secondary Structure Prediction server

CFSSP: Chou and Fasman Secondary Structure Prediction server Wide Spectrum, Vol. 1, No. 9, (2013) pp 15-19 CFSSP: Chou and Fasman Secondary Structure Prediction server T. Ashok Kumar Department of Bioinformatics, Noorul Islam College of Arts and Science, Kumaracoil

More information

Chapter 5: Nucleic Acids, etc.

Chapter 5: Nucleic Acids, etc. Chapter 5: Nucleic Acids, etc. Voet & Voet: Sections 1 & 3 Pages 82-84 & 88-93 Any introductory Biochemistry textbook will have an introductory chapter on nucleic acids Slide 1 Nucleotides and Derivatives

More information

Protein Structure/Function

Protein Structure/Function Protein Structure/Function C483 Spring 2013 1. Proteins segments which fold first can promote the folding of other sections of the protein into the native conformation by a process known as A) renaturation.

More information

BIO 311C Spring Lecture 16 Monday 1 March

BIO 311C Spring Lecture 16 Monday 1 March BIO 311C Spring 2010 Lecture 16 Monday 1 March Review Primary Structure of a portion of a polypeptide chain backbone of Polypeptide chain R-groups of amino acids Native conformation of a dimeric protein,

More information

STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY. α/β structures Closed barrels Open twisted sheets Horseshoe folds

STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY. α/β structures Closed barrels Open twisted sheets Horseshoe folds STRUCTURAL BIOLOGY α/β structures Closed barrels Open twisted sheets Horseshoe folds The α/β domains Most frequent domain structures are α/β domains: A central parallel or mixed β sheet Surrounded by α

More information

Fundamentals of Protein Structure

Fundamentals of Protein Structure Outline Fundamentals of Protein Structure Yu (Julie) Chen and Thomas Funkhouser Princeton University CS597A, Fall 2005 Protein structure Primary Secondary Tertiary Quaternary Forces and factors Levels

More information

BASIC MOLECULAR GENETIC MECHANISMS Introduction:

BASIC MOLECULAR GENETIC MECHANISMS Introduction: BASIC MOLECULAR GENETIC MECHANISMS Introduction: nucleic acids. (1) contain the information for determining the amino acid sequence & the structure and function of proteins (1) part of the cellular structures:

More information

Textbook Reading Guidelines

Textbook Reading Guidelines Understanding Bioinformatics by Marketa Zvelebil and Jeremy Baum Last updated: May 1, 2009 Textbook Reading Guidelines Preface: Read the whole preface, and especially: For the students with Life Science

More information

The Three-Dimensional Structure of Proteins

The Three-Dimensional Structure of Proteins chapter The Three-Dimensional Structure of Proteins 6 The covalent backbone of a typical protein contains hundreds of individual bonds. Because free rotation is possible around many of these bonds, the

More information

Cell-Extracellular Matrix Interactions

Cell-Extracellular Matrix Interactions Cell-Extracellular Matrix Interactions Extracellular Matrix (ECM) Organised network outside of the cell s plasma membrane Between cells Composition varies throughout the ECM Continuous sheet of ECM = Basement

More information

Sequence Analysis '17 -- lecture Secondary structure 3. Sequence similarity and homology 2. Secondary structure prediction

Sequence Analysis '17 -- lecture Secondary structure 3. Sequence similarity and homology 2. Secondary structure prediction Sequence Analysis '17 -- lecture 16 1. Secondary structure 3. Sequence similarity and homology 2. Secondary structure prediction Alpha helix Right-handed helix. H-bond is from the oxygen at i to the nitrogen

More information

UV Fluorescence Polarization as a Means to Investigate Protein Conformational and Mass Change

UV Fluorescence Polarization as a Means to Investigate Protein Conformational and Mass Change A p p l i c a t i o n N o t e UV Fluorescence Polarization as a Means to Investigate Protein Conformational and Mass Change Using Intrinsic Tryptophan Fluorescence in Conjunction with UV-capable Polarizers

More information

PROTEINS & NUCLEIC ACIDS

PROTEINS & NUCLEIC ACIDS Chapter 3 Part 2 The Molecules of Cells PROTEINS & NUCLEIC ACIDS Lecture by Dr. Fernando Prince 3.11 Nucleic Acids are the blueprints of life Proteins are the machines of life We have already learned that

More information

MBMB451A Section1 Fall 2008 KEY These questions may have more than one correct answer

MBMB451A Section1 Fall 2008 KEY These questions may have more than one correct answer MBMB451A Section1 Fall 2008 KEY These questions may have more than one correct answer 1. In a double stranded molecule of DNA, the ratio of purines : pyrimidines is (a) variable (b) determined by the base

More information

Four Levels of Protein Structure

Four Levels of Protein Structure Primary structure (1 ) Four Levels of Protein Structure sequence of amino acids Secondary structure (2 ) ini8al folding alpha(α) helices or beta(β) sheets in the polypep8de chain Ter8ary structure (3 )

More information

Bioinformatics. ONE Introduction to Biology. Sami Khuri Department of Computer Science San José State University Biology/CS 123A Fall 2012

Bioinformatics. ONE Introduction to Biology. Sami Khuri Department of Computer Science San José State University Biology/CS 123A Fall 2012 Bioinformatics ONE Introduction to Biology Sami Khuri Department of Computer Science San José State University Biology/CS 123A Fall 2012 Biology Review DNA RNA Proteins Central Dogma Transcription Translation

More information

Virtual bond representation

Virtual bond representation Today s subjects: Virtual bond representation Coordination number Contact maps Sidechain packing: is it an instrumental way of selecting and consolidating a fold? ASA of proteins Interatomic distances

More information

Zool 3200: Cell Biology Exam 3 3/6/15

Zool 3200: Cell Biology Exam 3 3/6/15 Name: Trask Zool 3200: Cell Biology Exam 3 3/6/15 Answer each of the following questions in the space provided; circle the correct answer or answers for each multiple choice question and circle either

More information

Solutions to Problem Set 1

Solutions to Problem Set 1 MIT Department of Biology 7.014 Introductory Biology, Spring 004 Question 1 Solutions to 7.014 Problem Set 1 a) Describe the conditions of the atmosphere on prebiotic earth and how these conditions differ

More information

Chapter 3 Nucleic Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes

Chapter 3 Nucleic Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes 3 Nucleic Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes Chapter 3 Nucleic Acids, Proteins, and Enzymes Key Concepts 3.1 Nucleic Acids Are Informational Macromolecules 3.2 Proteins Are Polymers with Important Structural

More information

Dr. R. Sankar, BSE 631 (2018)

Dr. R. Sankar, BSE 631 (2018) Pauling, Corey and Branson Diffraction of DNA http://www.nature.com/scitable/topicpage/dna-is-a-structure-that-encodes-biological-6493050 In short, stereochemistry is important in determining which helices

More information

BETA STRAND Prof. Alejandro Hochkoeppler Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Biotechnology University of Bologna

BETA STRAND Prof. Alejandro Hochkoeppler Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Biotechnology University of Bologna Prof. Alejandro Hochkoeppler Department of Pharmaceutical Sciences and Biotechnology University of Bologna E-mail: a.hochkoeppler@unibo.it C-ter NH and CO groups: right, left, right (plane of the slide)

More information

Dina Al-Tamimi. Faisal Nimri. Ma amoun Ahram. 1 P a g e

Dina Al-Tamimi. Faisal Nimri. Ma amoun Ahram. 1 P a g e 1 Dina Al-Tamimi Faisal Nimri Ma amoun Ahram 1 P a g e **Difference between Molecular Biology and Genetics: Molecular Biology: is a fancy term of biochemistry. It is the science that deals with DNA, RNA

More information

6-Foot Mini Toober Activity

6-Foot Mini Toober Activity Big Idea The interaction between the substrate and enzyme is highly specific. Even a slight change in shape of either the substrate or the enzyme may alter the efficient and selective ability of the enzyme

More information

Sheet #7 Dr. Mamoun Ahram 10/07/2014

Sheet #7 Dr. Mamoun Ahram 10/07/2014 1 Recap: Globular Proteins - There are two types of proteins according to their structure: a. Fibrous proteins. b. Globular proteins: are globe-like (spherical) with three-dimensional compact structures

More information

From mechanism to medicne

From mechanism to medicne From mechanism to medicne a look at proteins and drug design Chem 342 δ δ δ+ M 2009 δ+ δ+ δ M Drug Design - an Iterative Approach @ DSU Structural Analysis of Receptor Structural Analysis of Ligand-Receptor

More information

C. Tight Turns. = -30, φ 3. = 0, and type II approximately = 120, φ 3. = -60, ψ 2. = -90, ψ 3. = +90, ψ 3

C. Tight Turns. = -30, φ 3. = 0, and type II approximately = 120, φ 3. = -60, ψ 2. = -90, ψ 3. = +90, ψ 3 Tight turns (also known as reverse turns, β turns, β bends, hairpin bends, 310 bends, kinks, widgets, etc.) are the first and most prevalent type of nonrepetitive structure that has been recognized. While

More information

Structural Bioinformatics (C3210) Conformational Analysis Protein Folding Protein Structure Prediction

Structural Bioinformatics (C3210) Conformational Analysis Protein Folding Protein Structure Prediction Structural Bioinformatics (C3210) Conformational Analysis Protein Folding Protein Structure Prediction Conformational Analysis 2 Conformational Analysis Properties of molecules depend on their three-dimensional

More information

Reading for lecture 2

Reading for lecture 2 Reading for lecture 2 1. Structure of DNA and RNA 2. Information storage by DNA 3. The Central Dogma Voet and Voet, Chapters 28 (29,30) Alberts et al, Chapters 5 (3) 1 5 4 1 3 2 3 3 Structure of DNA and

More information

Lecture 1 - Introduction to Structural Bioinformatics

Lecture 1 - Introduction to Structural Bioinformatics Lecture 1 - Introduction to Structural Bioinformatics Motivation and Basics of Protein Structure Prof. Haim J. Wolfson 1 Most of the Protein Structure slides courtesy of Hadar Benyaminy. Prof. Haim J.

More information

Protein and RNA Review

Protein and RNA Review Protein and RNA Review Protein and RNA Review 1 Proteins: Introduction Proteins are the versatile building blocks and active molecules that form the basis of living systems. Function follows structure

More information

Giri Narasimhan. CAP 5510: Introduction to Bioinformatics. ECS 254; Phone: x3748

Giri Narasimhan. CAP 5510: Introduction to Bioinformatics. ECS 254; Phone: x3748 CAP 5510: Introduction to Bioinformatics Giri Narasimhan ECS 254; Phone: x3748 giri@cis.fiu.edu www.cis.fiu.edu/~giri/teach/bioinfs07.html 2/19/07 CAP5510 1 HMM for Sequence Alignment 2/19/07 CAP5510 2

More information

Basic concepts of molecular biology

Basic concepts of molecular biology Basic concepts of molecular biology Gabriella Trucco Email: gabriella.trucco@unimi.it What is life made of? 1665: Robert Hooke discovered that organisms are composed of individual compartments called cells

More information

BCH302 [Practical] 1

BCH302 [Practical] 1 BCH302 [Practical] 1 2 DNA is made of 2 polynucleotide chains which run in opposite direction antiparallel. DNA has a double helical structure. Each polynucleotide chain of DNA consists of monomer units

More information

Learning to Use PyMOL (includes instructions for PS #2)

Learning to Use PyMOL (includes instructions for PS #2) Learning to Use PyMOL (includes instructions for PS #2) To begin, download the saved PyMOL session file, 4kyz.pse from the Chem 391 Assignments web page: http://people.reed.edu/~glasfeld/chem391/assign.html

More information

Nanobiotechnology. Place: IOP 1 st Meeting Room Time: 9:30-12:00. Reference: Review Papers. Grade: 50% midterm, 50% final.

Nanobiotechnology. Place: IOP 1 st Meeting Room Time: 9:30-12:00. Reference: Review Papers. Grade: 50% midterm, 50% final. Nanobiotechnology Place: IOP 1 st Meeting Room Time: 9:30-12:00 Reference: Review Papers Grade: 50% midterm, 50% final Midterm: 5/15 History Atom Earth, Air, Water Fire SEM: 20-40 nm Silver 66.2% Gold

More information

1.1 Chemical structure and conformational flexibility of single-stranded DNA

1.1 Chemical structure and conformational flexibility of single-stranded DNA 1 DNA structures 1.1 Chemical structure and conformational flexibility of single-stranded DNA Single-stranded DNA (ssdna) is the building base for the double helix and other DNA structures. All these structures

More information

DNA Structures. Biochemistry 201 Molecular Biology January 5, 2000 Doug Brutlag. The Structural Conformations of DNA

DNA Structures. Biochemistry 201 Molecular Biology January 5, 2000 Doug Brutlag. The Structural Conformations of DNA DNA Structures Biochemistry 201 Molecular Biology January 5, 2000 Doug Brutlag The Structural Conformations of DNA 1. The principle message of this lecture is that the structure of DNA is much more flexible

More information

Globins. The Backbone structure of Myoglobin 2. The Heme complex in myoglobin. Lecture 10/01/2009. Role of the Globin.

Globins. The Backbone structure of Myoglobin 2. The Heme complex in myoglobin. Lecture 10/01/2009. Role of the Globin. Globins Lecture 10/01/009 The Backbone structure of Myoglobin Myoglobin: 44 x 44 x 5 Å single subunit 153 amino acid residues 11 residues are in an a helix. Helices are named A, B, C, F. The heme pocket

More information

Not The Real Exam Just for Fun! Chemistry 391 Fall 2018

Not The Real Exam Just for Fun! Chemistry 391 Fall 2018 Not The Real Exam Just for Fun! Chemistry 391 Fall 2018 Do not open the exam until ready to begin! Rules of the Game: This is a take-home Exam. The exam is due on Thursday, October 11 th at 9 AM. Otherwise,

More information

MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB. MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB

MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB. MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB MCB 110:Biochemistry of the Central Dogma of MB Part 1. DNA replication, repair and genomics (Prof. Alber) Part 2. RNA & protein synthesis. Prof. Zhou Part 3. Membranes, protein secretion, trafficking

More information

Biochem Fall Sample Exam I Protein Structure. Vasopressin: CYFQNCPRG Oxytocin: CYIQNCPLG

Biochem Fall Sample Exam I Protein Structure. Vasopressin: CYFQNCPRG Oxytocin: CYIQNCPLG Biochem Fall 2011 1. Primary Structure and amino acid chemistry Sample Exam I Protein Structure The peptide hormones vasopressin (ADH) and oxytocin each contain only nine amino acids. Vasopressin is an

More information

7.014 Quiz I Solutions

7.014 Quiz I Solutions 7.014 Quiz I Solutions Class Average = 64.7 Median = 66 Grade Range % A 79-100 22 B 60-78 37 C 50 59 24 D 38 49 15 F 0 37 2 Question 1 (32 points) You are a biology specialist on a space exploration team.

More information

AMINO ACIDS, POLYPEPTIDES AND PROTEINS

AMINO ACIDS, POLYPEPTIDES AND PROTEINS AMINO ACIDS, POLYPEPTIDES AND PROTEINS As mentioned above, some of the simplest and most stable forms of nucleic acid to be produced were the transfer RNA molecules - probably at random at first but later

More information

YOUR NAME: KEY. PLEASE PRINT your name (IN INDELIBLE INK) on the line above (& on the top right hand corner of every page).

YOUR NAME: KEY. PLEASE PRINT your name (IN INDELIBLE INK) on the line above (& on the top right hand corner of every page). UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, BERKELEY CHEM C130/MCB C100A MIDTERM EXAMINATION #1 SEPTEMBER 22, 2016 INSTRUCTORS: John Kuriyan and David Savage THE TIME LIMIT FOR THIS EXAMINATION: 1 HOUR 50 MINUTES SIGNATURE:

More information

Specificity: Induced Fit

Specificity: Induced Fit Specificity: Induced Fit Conformational changes may occur upon ligand binding (Daniel Koshland in 1958) This adaptation is called the induced fit Induced fit allows for tighter binding of the ligand Induced

More information

Biochemistry Proteins

Biochemistry Proteins MIT Department of Biology 7.014 Introductory Biology, Spring 2005 Recitation Section 3 February 9-10, 2005 A. CBS proteins, 3D representation Biochemistry Proteins The protein we will consider today and

More information