Chapter 16: Amino Acids and Proteins Flashcards Preview

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Flashcards in Chapter 16: Amino Acids and Proteins Deck (134)
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1
Q

____ in the body are polymers made from 20 different amino acids.

A

proteins

2
Q

Proteins in the body are _______ made from 20 different amino acids

A

polymers

3
Q

Proteins form structural components such as:

A

Cartilage, muscles, hair, and nails

4
Q

“form structural components such as cartilage, muscles, hair, and nails” this describes what?

A

Protein

5
Q

What is the function of protein?

A

function as enzymes to regulate biological reactions such as digestion and cellular metabolism

6
Q

Proteins function as ______ to regulate biological reactions such as digestion and cellular metabolism

A

enzymes

7
Q

Proteins such as _______ and _______ transport oxygen in the blood

A

hemoglobin and myoglobin

8
Q

“provide structural components” which class of protein does this describe?

A

Structural

9
Q

“Makes muscles move” which class of protein does this describe?

A

Contractile

10
Q

“Store nutrients” which class of protein does this describe?

A

storage

11
Q

“Regulate body metabolism and the nervous system” which class of protein does this describe?

A

Hormone

12
Q

” Catalyze biochemical reactions in the cells” which class of protein does this describe?

A

Enzyme

13
Q

“Recognize and destroy foreign substances” which class of protein does this describe?

A

Protection

14
Q

What is the function of the protein class structural?

A

Provide structural components

15
Q

What is the function of the protein class contractile?

A

Make muscles move

16
Q

What is the function of the protein class transport?

A

Carry essential substances throughout the body

17
Q

What is the function of the protein class storage?

A

Store nutrients

18
Q

What is the function of the protein class hormone?

A

Regulate body metabolism and the nervous system

19
Q

What is the function of the protein class enzyme?

A

Catalyze biochemical reactions in the cells

20
Q

What is the function of the protein class protection?

A

Recognize and destroy foreign substances

21
Q

“carry essential substances throughout the body” which class of protein does this describe?

A

Transport

22
Q

“Collagen is in the tendons and cartilage, and keratin is in hair, nails, skin, and wool.” Which protein class does this refer to?

A

Structural

23
Q

“Myosin and actin contract muscle fibers” Which protein class does this refer to?

A

Contractile

24
Q

“Hemoglobin transports oxygen. Lipoproteins transport lipids” Which protein class does this refer to?

A

Transport

25
Q

“Casein stores protein in milk. Ferritin stores iron in the spleen and liver. Which protein class does this refer to?

A

Storage

26
Q

“insulan regulates blood glucose level. Growth hormone regulates body growth.” Which protein class does this refer to?

A

Hormone

27
Q

“Sucrase catalyzes the hydrolysis of sucrose. Trypsin catalyzes the hydrolysis of proteins” Which protein class does this refer to?

A

Enzyme

28
Q

“immunoglobins stimulate immune responses” which protein class does this refer to?

A

Protection

29
Q

Amino acids are the “___________”

A

building blocks of protein

30
Q

Do amino acids have a central carbon called the a-carbon bonded to two functional groups, an ammonium (-NH3+) and a carbonyl group (OH-C=O)?

A

No, amino acids have an ammonium, yes, but not a carbonyl. It’s a carboxylate (-COO-)

31
Q

The central carbon atom in amino acids is bonded to a _____ atom and the R group or side chain in addition to the ________ and ______ groups

A

hydrogen (H) and in addition to the ammonium and carboxylate groups

32
Q

What does the central carbon atom in an amino acid need to have to be considered an amino acid?

A

The central atom needs to be bonded to a hydrogen atom, and R or side group, and the ammonium group with the carboxylate group. Ammonium is the -NH3+ group and the carboxylate is the C=O–O- group, (-coo-)

33
Q

Hydrophobic is _______ and hydrophilic is ______

A

nonpolar; polar

34
Q

True or false, a hydrophobic amino acid is polar.q

A

False, phobic amino acids are non polar. Phobia of water.

35
Q

How can you tell if an amino acid is non polar or polar?

A

You have to look at the side chains. Side chains with an NH2 (or polar and ionic) group will be polar, and Side chains with hydrocarbon atoms will be non polar.

36
Q

An amino acid has a side chain of CH3-CH-CH3. is this AA polar or non polar?

A

Non polar

37
Q

An amino acid has a side chain of O=C-CH2-NH2. Is this AA polar or non polar?

A

Polar

38
Q

An amino acid is non polar with a side chain of all hydrocarbons. An Amino acid is also non polar when the R group is H, ____, or _____

A
Alkyl(CH3-CH-CH2 for example, or CH3-S-CH2)
or aromatic(benzene ring)
39
Q

An amino acid is polar when the R group is a ______, ______, or an amide

A

Hydroxyl(OH), thiol(SH, or an amide(NH2)

40
Q

When is an amino acid acidic?

A

when the R group is a carboxylate (O=C-O=)

41
Q

When is an amino acid basic?

A

When the R group is an amine(Ch2-NH2), which ionizes to give an ammonium ion.

42
Q

An amino has to have a carbon attached to an -NH3+, an O=C-O-, and an H group. Only the fourth component can differ for every amino acid, and that is the ____ group

A

R group.

43
Q

How do you name long ass amino acids?

A

A three letter or one letter abbreviation derives from its name

44
Q

What is a peptide bond?

A

It is an amide bond that forms when the carboxylate group of one amino acid reacts with the ammonium group of the next amino acid

45
Q

A _____ ____ bond is an amide bond that forms when the O=C-O- group of one amino acid reacts with the -NH3+ group of the next amino acid

A

Peptide bond

46
Q

Two or more amino acids bonded becomes a ______

A

peptide

47
Q

Two amino acids are called a ______

A

dipeptide

48
Q

Three amino acids are called a______

A

tripeptide

49
Q

Four amino acids are called a ______

A

tetrapeptide

50
Q

How many essential amino acids are there?

A

9

51
Q

Can essential amino acids be synthesized in the body?

A

No

52
Q

How do you obtain the essential amino acids necessary for the body?

A

Through protein in your diet

53
Q

How many amino acids can be synthesized in the body?

A

11 out of 20 (the other 9 are essential)

54
Q

Why do vegetarians need to be careful with their diet?

A

Complete proteins are found in eggs, milk, meat, and fish, so vegetarians need to make up for the proteins missing in meat and fish by finding them in other food sources. Incomplete proteins are found in other plant sources so a vegetarian may need need to eat 4 or 5 different plant sources to make up for all the complete protein found in just meat alone.

55
Q

A protein is a polypeptide of ___ or more amino acids

A

50

56
Q

The _____ structure of a protein is the particular sequence of amino acids held together by peptide bonds

A

primary

57
Q

Does Insulin have a primary or secondary structure?

A

Primary

58
Q

____ was the first protein to have its primary structure determined

A

insulin

59
Q

The alpha helix of a secondary protein structure has a coiled shape. How?

A

Hydrogen bonds between the oxygen of the C=O and the hydrogen of the N-H in the next turn.

60
Q

What shape forms when there are hydrogen bonds between the oxygen of the C=O and the hydrogen of the N-H group?

A

A-helix

61
Q

In the secondary structure of a ____-____ _____, hydrogen bonds form between the carbonyl oxygen atoms and hydrogen atoms in the amide groups bending the polypeptide chain into a sheet

A

beta-pleated sheath

62
Q

In the secondary structure of a ____ _____, three polypeptide chains are woven together

A

triple helix

63
Q

In the secondary structure of a triple helix, ______ bonds hold the chains together, giving the polypeptide the added strength typical of structural protein

A

hydrogen

64
Q

The _____ _____ of a protein is an overall three dimensional shape caused by interactions of different parts of the chain

A

tertiary structure

65
Q

The _____ _____ of a protein is determined by cross links, the attractions and repulsions between the ___ groups of the amino acids in a peptide chain

A

tertiary structure; R groups

66
Q

Interactions between amino acid R groups fold a protein into a specific three-dimensional shape called it’s _____ _____

A

tertiary structure

67
Q

Hydrophobic interactions between two non polar amino acids is important in forming which structure level of a protein?

A

Tertiary

68
Q

Hydrophilic interactions between the external aqueous environment and the R groups of polar amino acids is important in forming which structure level of a protein?

A

Tertiary interactions

69
Q

____ _____, ionic bonds between ionized R groups of basic and acidic amino acids is important in the formation of tertiary structures

A

salt bridges

70
Q

____ _____ between H of a polar R group and the O or N of another amino acid plays an important part in in creating the tertiary structure of a protein

A

hydrogen bonds

71
Q

____ ____ —S—S— between the —SH groups of cysteine amino acids is important in the creation of tertiary structure proteins

A

disulfide bonds

72
Q

“Polypeptide chains held side by side by H bonds” this indicates which type of protein structure? (primary/alpha helix/beta-pleated sheet/triple helix)

A

Beta pleated

73
Q

“Sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain” this indicates which type of protein structure? (primary/alpha helix/beta-pleated sheet/triple helix)

A

Primary

74
Q

“Corkscrew shape with H bonds between amino acids” this indicates which type of protein structure? (primary/alpha helix/beta-pleated sheet/triple helix)

A

Alpha helix

75
Q

“Three peptide chains woven like a rope” this indicates which type of protein structure? (primary/alpha helix/beta-pleated sheet/triple helix)

A

Triple helix

76
Q

The ______ _____ of a protein is the combination of two ore more protein units

A

quaternary structure

77
Q

The _____ ____ of a protein consists of four polypeptide chains as subunits in ______

A

quaternary structure; hemoglobin

78
Q

The _____ ____ of a protein is stabilized by the same interactions found in tertiary structures

A

quaternary structure

79
Q

In the ribbon structure of ______, the Q structure is made up of how many polypeptide subunits?

A

Hemoglobin; four (

80
Q

What is the function of the heme groups in hemoglobin?

A

To bind oxygen

81
Q

_______ involves the disruptions of bonds in the secondary, tertiary, and quaternary protein structures

A

Denaturation

82
Q

Denaturation by ____ and ______ compounds causes H bonds to break apart which disrupts hydrophobic interactions?

A

Heat and organic compounds

83
Q

Denaturation by ____ and _____ causes H bonds to break between polar R groups and disrupt ionic bonds

A

acids and bases

84
Q

Denaturation by heavy metal ions react with __-__ bonds to form solids

A

S-S

85
Q

Denaturation by _____, such as whipping, that stretches peptide chains until bond breaks

A

agitation

86
Q

Denaturation of ____ occurs when an egg is cooked

A

protein

87
Q

What are enzymes?

A

Proteins that act as biological catalysts

88
Q

Proteins that act as biological catalysts are called what?

A

Enzymes

89
Q

What is the small region on an enzyme called that is responsible for binding a substrate and catalyzing a specific reaction for that substrate

A

Active site

90
Q

What is an active site?

A

A small region that binds a substrate and catalyzes a specific reaction for that substrate

91
Q

_____ catalyze nearly all the chemical reactions taking place in the cells of the body

A

enzymes

92
Q

Do enzymes increase or decrease the rate of reaction by lowering the energy of activation for the reaction?

A

Increase, which really honestly sounds ass backwards but okay

93
Q

The name of an enzyme is derived by…

A

replacing the end of the name of the reaction with the suffix -ase

94
Q

Sometimes the name of an enzyme identifies the _____ substance

A

reacting (sucrase catalyzes the reaction of sucrose)

95
Q

Sometimes the name of an enzyme describes the compound or reaction that is ______

A

catalyzed (ex: oxidase catalyzes an oxidation reaction)

96
Q

Sometimes the name of an enzyme is simply a _____ name

A

common. (particularly digestion enzymes i.e pepsin and trypsin)

97
Q

What does the active site of an enzyme contain that binds the substrate?

A

The amino acid R groups

98
Q

The active site _____ _____ when the reaction is complete

A

releases products

99
Q

The E-S complex stands for:

A

Enzyme-Catalyzed reaction

100
Q

What happens first in an E-S reaction?

A

A substrate attaches to the active site

101
Q

What happens second in an E-S reaction?

A

An enzyme-substrate complex forms

102
Q

What happens in the 3rd step of an E-S reaction after the complex forms?

A

The reaction occurs and the products are released.

103
Q

Is an enzyme used over and over again or is it done after a reaction and the products are released?

A

An enzyme is used over and over again.

104
Q

Binding of a substrate occurs when it reacts with the ____ ____ within the active site

A

amino acids

105
Q

Which enzyme model has active sites with rigid, non flexible shapes?

A

Lock-and-Key

106
Q

Which enzyme model pertains to enzymes that bind only substrates that EXACTLY fit the active site like a “lock”

A

lock and key

107
Q

Which enzyme model’s substrate is the key to unlocking the reaction?

A

Lock and key

108
Q

The problem with the lock and key model was what?

A

It did not include the flexibility of the tertiary shape of an enzyme and the way the active site can adjust to the shape of a substrate

109
Q

Is the induced fit model the exact opposite of the lock and key model?

A

yes

110
Q

Which enzyme model pertains to enzymes that are flexible and adjust to the shape of the active site in order to bind the substrate?

A

induced-fit model

111
Q

Which enzyme model pertains to enzymes where the range of substrate specificity increases?

A

Induced-fit

112
Q

Which enzyme model pertains to enzymes that allow shape changes which improve catalysis during reaction?

A

Induced-fit

113
Q

In the ____-___ model, substrate and enzyme work together to acquire a geometrical arrangement that lowers the activation energy of the reaction

A

induced-fit

114
Q

______ are different forms of an enzyme that catalyze the same reaction in different cells or tissues of the body

A

isoenzymes

115
Q

______ consist of quaternary structures with slight variations in the amino acids in the polypeptide subunits

A

Isoenzymes

116
Q

Name the factors that affect the activity of an enzyme

A

Temperature, pH, and substrate concentration

117
Q

Enzymes are most active at optimum temperature which is ____ celsius

A

37

118
Q

At which temperature higher than the optimum temperature do enzymes begin to lose activity due to denaturation?

A

50 celsius

119
Q

What is the optimum pH of enzyme activity?

A

7.4

120
Q

Low and high pH’s do what to enzyme activity?

A

lower the activity

121
Q

When the pH is too high or too low, which decreases enzyme activity, which protein structure is disrupted?

A

Tertiary

122
Q

_________ are molecules that cause a loss of catalytic activity

A

Inhibitors

123
Q

_______ prevent substrates from fitting into the active sites

A

inhibitors

124
Q

“has a structure similar to that of the substrate” which inhibition is this?

A

Competitive

125
Q

“competes with the substrate for the active site” which inhibition is this?

A

competitive

126
Q

“Has its effect reversed by increasing the substrate concentration” which inhibition is this?

A

competitive

127
Q

“Has a structure that is much different than that of the substrate” which inhibition is this?

A

Noncomp.

128
Q

“Binds to an enzyme at a site other than the active site and distorts the shape of the enzyme by altering the shape of the active site” Name the inhibition

A

Noncompetitive

129
Q

“prevents the binding of the substrate” Name the inhibition.

A

non competitive

130
Q

“cannot have its effect reversed by adding more substrate” Name the inhibition

A

non comp

131
Q

“Is a molecule that causes the enzyme to lose all activity” Name the inhibition

A

irreversible

132
Q

“is often a toxic substance that destroys enzymes” Name the inhibition

A

irrev.

133
Q

“Usually forms a covalent bond with an amino acid side chain, preventing catalytic activity” name the inhibition

A

irrev.

134
Q

“May be a nerve gas, an insecticide, or an antibiotic” Name the inhibition

A

irrev.