Title: Proteins from Amino Acids
1Proteins from Amino Acids
- Two amino acids joined together make a dipeptide,
as more and more join together by peptide bonds,
a polypeptide is formed
The amino acids in a polypeptide chain are
sometimes referred to as residues because part of
the molecule is lost in the condensation reaction
that produces the peptide bond
2Protein Synthesis
- Polypeptides are made (synthesised) inside cells
on the ribosomes. - Messenger RNA (mRNA) puts the amino acids in the
right order to make a specific polypeptide chain
3Protein Synthesis
- As the mRNA passes through the ribosome, the
amino acids are joined one at a time by a
condensation reaction forming a peptide bond - Eventually a longer and longer chain of amino
acids is formed - The mRNA determines the sequence of amino acids
and therefore the type of protein
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5Forming Different Proteins
We will look at a peptide chain that is 3 amino
acids long. The R group of an amino acid may be
any one of the 20 available. To calculate the
total number of different possibilities, we need
to multiply the total number of possibilities at
each point. In this case 20 x 20 x 20
8000 This means that 8000 different sequences of
four amino acids are possible- 8000 different
proteins can be made. Given that most proteins
are 100 amino acids long, in theory the number of
different possible proteins is extremely large
6Protein Structure Task
- We can look at proteins in various levels of
detail. The first is their primary structure,
this is followed by the secondary, tertiary and
quaternary structures - Task Using Cambridge Biology p110- 113, and a
two page spread in your book, summarise the 4
levels of protein structure (including the
bonding involved)
7Primary Structure
- The sequence of amino acids that forms the protein
8Secondary Structure
- The chain of amino acids coils or folds to form
an alpha helix or a beta pleated sheet - Hydrogen bonds hold the coils in place weakly,
but as so many are formed they give stability to
the protein molecule
9Tertiary Structure
- When the coils and pleats themselves coil or fold
- Held together by
- Disulphide bonds a covalent bond between 2
sulphur atoms - Ionic bonds the R groups are sometimes charged
(ve or ve) so they attract each other - Hydrogen bonds ve hydrogen atoms and ve oxygen
atoms attract - Hydrophobic and hydrophilic interactions
hydrophobic amino acids will be drawn into the
centre of the molecule, and hydrophilic amino
acids will be found on the outside.
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12Heating Proteins
- Heating a protein increases the kinetic energy in
the molecule - This causes the molecule to vibrate, breaking the
bonds