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- 1. What are the effects of a) amino acid composition and sequence and b) intramolecular and intermolecular forces of attraction to protein folding? 2. What molecular property of amino acids can be used to justity the concept that the "molecular part of the protein can exhibit the same property as the molecular 'whole' (protein molecule?). Provide a comprehensive discussion using one molecular property. 3. Discuss two metabolic disorders which are caused by protein misfolding. Explain the metabolic consequence of the disorder. 4. If a non-science person asks you what protein folding is and how the concept is related to metabolic disorders, how are you going to explain the concept? (please summarize the concepts used, thank you!)4) For various amino acid pairs (for example: F to A, E to R, D to N, V to L, S to W), ask yourself: a) Based on what you know about the chemical properties of the side chains, what effect would you expect on the stability of the protein if you mutated one residue of the pair into the other in the interior of the protein? What forces might have an impact on this change (ie: what types of interactions would you expect that amino acid to be involved in?) How would your answer change if the amino acid were located on the surface of the protein? b) c)4. You're working on a structure of a protein and its folding. You think that the interaction between Asp123 and Arg29 is important in determining the structure of the protein. a) What type of amino acid is Asp (acidic, basic, hydrophobic, or polar)? b) What type of amino acid is Arg (acidic, basic, hydrophobic, or polar)? c) What is the strongest interaction that can form between Asp123 and Arg29? You create a mutant Arg29> Lys d) What type of amino acid is Lys (acidic, basic, hydrophobic, or polar)? e) Would you expect this substitution mutation to cause major folding problems? Why or why not? You create mutant Arg29> Glu you discover that this mutant is unable to fold properly, so the protein is nonfunctional. f What type of amino acid is Glu (acidic, basic, hydrophobic, or polar)? g) How does this amino acid substitution cause the protein to fold incorrectly? You find another mutant that also as the same Arg29> Glu mutation. However, this mutant protein įs able to fold normally.…
- 1) What are the four levels of protein folding. How do you distinguish those different levels? What can denature a protein? 2) What are detergents and why are they useful? How do they basically work? 3) What is meant by amphipathic? What is an example of this?Patients suffering from sickle cell anemia have a mutation in the gene that codes for one of the hemoglobin chains, in which a single glutamate is replaced by a valine. Propose an explanation for why this substitution has such a striking effect on protein structure and function with explanation. Suggest two other amino acids that would be less likely to cause such serious impairment of hemoglobin function if each was substituted for glutamate. Briefly explain your answer.3b) Both a-helical 2° structure and b-pleated sheet 2° structure result from the same type of interaction; briefly explain in your own words why you might observe an a-helix in one region of a protein and a b-pleated sheet in another region of the same protein.
- 1.Here is an oligomeric protein, which has two binding sites:1)Write the formulas of side chains of amino acids which are located in binding sites and suggest two ligands,which can be bound with this protein. 2) Name the types of bonds which will be formed between the ligands and amino acids of binding sites.3)Give the definition of quaternary structure. What do you know about the properties of proteins with the quaternary structure?3a) The 3° structure of a protein refers to the protein's overall, 3-dimensional shape in space. This will incorporate any 2° structure the protein has, but is predominantly the result of side-group interactions. Name the type of interaction, if any, that you would expect to see under physiological conditions (an aqueous solution at pH 7.0-7.5) between the following pairs of amino acid side groups. Serine and asparagine: Methionine and lysine: Glutamate and aspartic acid: Alanine and phenylalanine:A protein hypothetically consists of two polypeptide chains with the given sequences in the picture. Based on the said sequences, a. Do you think it is possible that interchain disulfide bonds is present in the protein? Explain. b. Do you think it is possible that intrachain disulfide bonds is present in the protein? Explain.
- A peptide with the sequence isoleucine1-aspartate2-valine3-lysine4-proline5-glutamate6 is located at the surface of a protein. Which residues are likely oriented toward the interior of the protein and what is the most likely secondary structure that this peptide is in? a.) Residue numbers 2, 4, 6; alpha helix b.) Residue numbers 1, 3, 5; alpha helix c.) Residue numbers 1, 3, 5; beta sheet d.) Residue numbers 2, 4, 6; beta sheeta) Where is the N-terminus of this peptide? Left Middle Right b) What type of secondary structure is the majority of this structure? loops alpha helix Beta sheet unstructured c) The X's indicate the alpha carbons of residues 10, 13, and 17 (labeled in the sequence above). Where would you expect this part of the structure to be found in the tertiary structure of the protein? Briefly explain your reasoning. d) The dashed line in black is indicating an interaction that is present within this structure. Draw this interaction, including all the atoms necessary for this interaction to occur. Label any partial charges present in your drawing. please upload the drawing.11. Below is a folding energy funnel describing folding energy landscape of a protein. The width of the funnel indicates the entropy of the protein, and the height corresponds to the free energy. A) If A is the native fold structure, which state is a molten globule? How does this state differ from A in term of structures. B) Does this protein have multiple folding pathways or just one? C) which state has the lowest free energy? D) According to the width of the funnel, the native state B of the protein has the lowest entropy. If the protein fold A spontaneously to this state, does it violate the 2nd law of thermodynamics? Why or why not? (Hint: in the folding funnel, only the entropy of the protein alone is considered). E) Does the native state also have the lowest enthalpy. What makes the enthalpy decrease as the protein folds? 12. List four methods by which a protein can be denatured and briefly describe how these methods act to disrupt protein structure.