Term
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Definition
has no periodicity
unlike DNA, does not recur at regular intervals |
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Term
protein sequence dependency |
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Definition
dependent on sequence, unlike DNA
seq of aas determines three dimensional structure |
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Term
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Definition
results in fully denatured protein regaining its enzymatic activity
in vivo, usually aided by molecular chaperones |
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Term
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Definition
type of nuclease that catalyzes RNA into smaller components
e.g. RNAseH removes RNA primer in DNA synthesis |
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Term
DNAK
(assisted by DNAJ and GrpE) |
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Definition
molecular chaperones in E. Coli
aid in folding or new proteins, rescue of misfolded proteins, translocation of proteins across membranes; assembly /dissassembly of protein complexes; control of regulatory proteins' activity
require ATP |
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Term
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Definition
part of molecular chaperone family
aid in folding of proteins
requires ATP
to function properly GroEL requires lid like co-chaperone GroES |
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Term
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Definition
charge of amino acids
dipolar ion
ion carying both positive and negative charge |
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Term
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Definition
both positive and negative
predom form at physiological pH
amino: positive--BASE
carboxyl: negative--ACID |
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Term
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Definition
mirror images cannot be superimposed
chiral objects |
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Term
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Definition
subdivision in chemistry involves spatial arrangement of atoms within molecules |
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Term
stereochemistry of amino acids
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Definition
α-C of all amino acids except glycine
is a chiral center
thus, each amino acids exists in two forms, "D" and "L"
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Term
what do all polypeptides synthesized by ribosomes have in common? |
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Definition
they are made exclusively of "L" amino acids |
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Term
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Definition
for glycine R group is an H
therefore it is non chiral
plane of symmetry exists |
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Term
D-Ala and D-Glu amino acids found where? |
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Definition
rare bacterial cell walls |
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Term
another use for D-amino acids |
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Definition
1. can be used in certain peptide antibiotics such as bacitracin
2. D-serine neurotransmitter in brain? |
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Term
notation for distinguishing diff stereoisomers |
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Definition
four diff substituents of an aa are assigned priority according to atomic number
if progression from highest to lowest goes counterclockwise, L
if progression from highest to lowest goes clockwise, D |
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Term
four categories of side chains
and how many a.a. of ea.
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Definition
neutral-non polar (9)
neutral-polar (6)
acidic (2)
basic (3)
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Term
neutral-non polar amino acid side chains
how many a.a.
princ type of interaction |
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Definition
there are 9 of them
principle type of interaction: hydrophobic
consist of hydrocarbons
can be aliphatic or aromatic
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Term
neutral-polar amino acid side chains
three diff groups |
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Definition
there are six of them
those with hydroxyl group,thiol group, amide group
principle type of interaction: H bonds |
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Term
acidic amino acid side chains |
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Definition
there are 2 of them
principle type of interaction: ionic and H bonds |
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Term
basic amino acid side chains |
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Definition
there are 3 of them
principle type of interaction: ionic and H bonds |
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Term
type of interaction that all categories of amino acid side chains make |
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
aliphatic: hydrocarbon chains
aromatic: two ends are connected |
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Term
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Definition
Pro, P
non-polar hydrophobic
aliphatic
but differs in that hydrocarbon chain bonds to both alpha helix and nitrogen of aa
rigid structure
cannot form into alpha helix because amide H cannot act as donor helix breaking residue |
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Term
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Definition
Cys, S
polar amino acid side chain
with thiol group
like serine but with thiol (sulfhydryl) in place of hydroxyl
thiol is much more reactive than hydroxyl |
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Term
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Definition
two thiol groups can form disulfide bonds
which play important role in stabilizing proteins |
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Term
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Definition
Phenyl ring in place of one of the Hs of Alanine
Phe, F |
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Term
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Definition
Trp, W
like phenylalanine but with indole group instead of phenyl ring
indole group comprised of two fused rings + NH group
NH makes it a little less hydrophobic than phenylalanine |
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Term
amino acids with neutral-polar (hydroxyl group) side chains |
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Definition
Tyrosine (Tyr, Y)
Serine (Ser, S)
Threonine (Thr, T) |
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Term
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Definition
amine: doesn't have a carbonyl group attached to N--amino acids are amines
formular written NHR
if carbonyl comes btw NH and R it's an amide
amide: does have a carbonyl attached to N
e.g. when peptide bond forms btw carboxyl and amine groups of two amino acids, resulting molecule is an amide |
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Term
amino acids with neutral polar (amide group) side chains |
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Definition
Asparagine (Asn, N)
Glutamine (Gln, Q)
uncharged derivites of Aspartate and Glutamate
they contain carboxamide instead of carboxylic acid |
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Term
Amino acids with acidic side chains |
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Definition
negatively charged at phys pH
Aspartate (Asp, D)
Glutamate (Glu, E) |
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Term
Amino acids with basic side chains |
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Definition
positively charged at Phys pH
Lysine (Lys, K)
Arginine (Arg, R)
Histidine (His, H) |
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Term
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Definition
His, H
amino acid with basic side chain
less basic than Lys and Arg because of imidazole group
but can exchange H+
aromatic
ring can be pos charged depending on environ |
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Term
peptide bond that links amino acids |
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Definition
partial covalent bond
no freedom of rotation
limits possible conformations
as a result of bond, four atoms of peptide bond are coplanar
semi rigidity
has important consquences for higher protein structure
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Term
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Definition
molecule or structure with both a hydrophilic and hydrophobic part |
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Term
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Definition
type of secondary structure: rod like spiral
formed by regular pattern of H bonding btw carbonyl O of one aa to amide H of aa four residues toward c end of chain
arrangement confers polarity (H donors have same orientation)
hydrophobic or hydrophilic quality of helix conferred entirely by side chains |
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Term
structural characteristics of alpha helix |
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Definition
right handed
pitch: 5.4Å
3.6 residues per turn
ideally positioned for intra- or intermolecular interactions (with DNA or other proteins) |
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Term
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Definition
planar alignment of 2 or more B strands--which are usually short fully extended regions of the backbone
B strands are usually 5-10 aa in length
line up along each other
can be formed from parallel B strands, antiparallel, and mixed
Most adopt a twisted shape (more compact as a result) |
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Term
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Definition
U shaped four residue segments stabilized by H bonds btw arms
usually at surface of protein and redirect chain into interior
allow polypeptide chains to reverse direction
frequent in antiparallel B-sheets |
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Term
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Definition
combinations of secondary structures with characteristic 3D organization |
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Term
Coiled Coil motif
example
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Definition
2 amphipatic α helices wrap around each other
non polar side chains of one helix interact with non polar side chains of the other
e.g. Leu zipper |
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Term
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Definition
also called Leucine scissors
protein with coiled coil motif
Leu (hydrophobic aa is found at every 7th position)
common dimerization domain
found in some proteins regulating gene expression
DNA binding motif
leu zipper regulatory proteins interact with DNA as dimers and are called basic leu zippers |
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Term
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Definition
insoluble fibrous protein aggregates; highly resistant to proteolysis
cross-B structure (stacked B sheets)
alzheimer's disease |
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Term
Protein Tertiary Structure |
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Definition
describes spatial arrangement of all amino acids
folding of secondary structures into fibrous or globular structures called domains
stabilized by hydrophobic interactions btw non-polar side chains and in some cases by disulfide bonds
stabilizing forces hold various secondary structure elements together into compact internal scaffold |
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Term
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Definition
70% of structure is made of alpha helices |
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Term
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Definition
exception to the hydrophobic-in, hydrophilic-out rule
hydrophilic channel
hydrophobic exterior |
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Term
protein quaternary structure
held together by what kind of bonds |
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Definition
interaction of several polypeptide chains to form an active multimeric molecule
held together by non covalent bonds |
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Term
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Definition
four subunits (2 a, 2 B subunits)
each subunit structurally similar to myoglobin |
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Term
secondary structure
stabilized by what bonds |
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Definition
localized organization (spatial arrangement) of amino acids
without stabilizing interactions, polypeptide chain assumes random coil shape
stabilized by H bonds |
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Term
protein's size and shape dependent on |
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Definition
1. amino acid sequence
2. number size and arrangement of secondary structures |
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Term
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Definition
modular unit from which many larger proteins are constructed btw 40-350 aas
region of a protein with distinct tertiary structure and characteristic activity
compacy independently folded region of a protein
domains of a protein connected by flex segments of polypeptide chains--can usually be seperated by mild protease |
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Term
nuclear magnetic resonance |
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Definition
technique that exploits magnetic properties of certain nuclei to give info about distance btw part of prot molecules
data can be recorded in solution
not good for large proteins
no crystal required
use external magnetic field to change spin of atoms (usually 1H, but sometimes 13C and 15N)
record the resonance spectrum (can distinguish signals from H nuclei of diff aa residues and measure shifts when it ineracts with neighbors)
neighboring atoms will influence the signals chemical shift |
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Term
ab initio method for predicting 3D protein structure |
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Definition
use computer to minimize free energy of a structure with a given aa seq
prob: vast number of possible configs |
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Term
knowledge based methods of predicting 3D protein structure |
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Definition
compatibility of an aa seq of unknown structure with known structures
prob: only possible is similar structure has already been id'd |
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Term
way to purify protein according to solubility |
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Definition
ammonium sulfate precipitation |
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Term
way to purify proteins according to charge |
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Definition
ion exchange chromatography |
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Term
way to purify proteins according to binding affinity |
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Definition
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Term
ion exchange chromatography |
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Definition
seperates proteins according to their net charge
if you want to seperate positively charged proteins, immobilize negatively charged beads on resin (Carboxymethyl or CM group)
later to get the entrapped proteins released, increase concentration of sodium chloride or other salt to buffer--will compete with pos prots for binding to CM group. prots with lower densitiy of pos charge will emerge first followed by prots with higher dens of pos charge.
if you want to seperate negatively charged proteins, immobilize positively charged beads on resin (Diethylaminoethyl or DEAE group) |
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Term
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Definition
way to purify protein based on its binding affinity
involves designing a stationary phase that reversibly binds to the protein you want to purify |
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Term
protein purification according to solubility |
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Definition
salting out
ammonium sulfate precipitation
most prots are less soluble at high salt concentrations
salt concentration at which prot precipites, varies protein to protein |
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Term
Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE gel) |
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Definition
seperates proteins by mass at good resolution
uses SDS which denatures proteins and applies neg charge in porportion to its mass--so that all prots have roughly same charge to mass ration and hency equal mobilities in an electric field
chain length is sole determinant of migration rate
smallest proteins move most rapidly |
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Term
isoelectric point
(For a protein) |
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Definition
pH at which the net charge of the protein is zero |
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Term
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Definition
way to seperate proteins electrophoretically based on their relative contents of basic and acidic residues
at a protein's isoelectric point (pI), it's electrophoretic mobility is zero
run proteins through a pH gradient, and they will stop at point of their pI
gradient formed by subjecting polyampholytes with various pIs to electrophoresis |
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Term
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Definition
small multicharged polymers |
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Term
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Definition
protein sample seperated by charge via isoelectric focusing (horizontal direction)
and then by mass via SDS-PAGE
(vertical direction)
former drawback was that proteins were seperated but not identified. NOW you can couple 2D protein gel results with mass spectrometry to id proteins |
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Term
steps of MALDI-TOF
mass spectrometry
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Definition
1. laser beam ionizes protein sample
2. electric field draws ions from sample through flight tube to detector
3. smaller ions move faster
4. laser triggers a clock which records time of flight
molecular weight calculated using time of flight |
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Term
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Definition
makes it possible to find a protein in a complex mixture--used in test for Hep C
after proteins are seperated by mass via SDS-PAGE
Blotting transfers proteins resolved to a polymer sheet to make them more accessible to reaction
antibody specific for antigen added to sheet
tagged second antibody specific to first antibody added; radiated antibody produces dark band on xray film (autoradiogram)
SDS Page prior to protein blot gives info about molecular weight and possible existence of protein isoforms |
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Term
Hydrogen bond donors
and acceptors |
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Definition
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Term
for max specificity DNA prots have to bind to which groove? |
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Definition
major
Why? in minor groove, patterns are similar for GC and CG and for AT and TA |
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Term
two common protein-DNA interactions |
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Definition
1. asparagine with adenine
2. arginine with guanine
because of guanine's two H bond acceptors, it can be recognized with high specificity by the side chain of arginine
both bind to major groove |
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Term
Arginine and Guanine
(one of most common protein-DNA interactions)
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Definition
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Term
Asparagine and Adenine
(common protein-DNA interaction)
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Definition
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Term
five DNA binding motifs
commonly found where?
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Definition
these are commonly found in transcriptional regulators
1.Basic Leu Zipper (bZip)
2.Helix turn Helix (HTH)
3.zinc finger
4.ribbon-helix-helix
5.basic-helix-loop-helix (bHLH) |
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Term
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Definition
most common DNA binding motif
composed of two alpha helices (one a C-term and one an N term) connected by a turn
C-term helix is recognition helix
N-term is a structural positioning helix
involved in regulation of gene expression
fits into major groove
~120° angle
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Term
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Definition
refers to two areas of DNA strand whose base sequences are inverted repeats (reverse complements of each other)
e.g. GAATAC and GTATTC
these areas form hairpin loops with each other |
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Term
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Definition
2 α-helices interact to form a coiled coil
hydrophobic residues (e.g. Leus) on each helix inetract with one another
region rich in basic a.a. interacts with DNA
heterodimers with distinct DNA binding specificities can be formed |
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Term
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Definition
two α-helices joined by extended loop
note: 1st helix is shorter
loop is flex so one helix can fold back and interact with the other |
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Term
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Definition
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Term
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Definition
heterodimers can be formed
basic a.a. interact with DNA |
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Term
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Definition
composed of loop of polypeptide chain held in hairpin bend held by zinc atom
Zn2+ coordinated by 2Cys and 2His
the four amino acids that bind the zinc hold one end of the α-helix to one end of the Β-sheet
2 antiparallel Β-strands (contains 2 Cys)
followed by an α-helix (containing 2His)
α-helix recognizes major groove of DNA |
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Term
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Definition
zing finger motif often found in clusters
DNA-binding proteins can have 2-37 repeats of motif |
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Term
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Definition
seq recognition by Β-sheet |
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Term
peptide mass fingerprinting |
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Definition
unknown protein cleaved into smaller peptides
absolute mass determined by mass spectrometry
these masses compared to known databases
can be coupled with 2D gels to identify specific proteins |
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Term
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Definition
dyad symmetry, coiled coil dimerization
DNA binding induces bending
two subunits
each subunit has two domains:
Sensory domain cAMP binding
DNA binding domain 3 α-helices including HTH motif |
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Term
acid carries what charge
base carries what charge |
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Definition
acid negative
basic positive |
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Term
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Definition
S score is measure of similiarity of query to sequence shown
e value is measure of the reliability of the S score
The probability due to chance, that there is another alignment with a similarity greater than the given S score.
The typical threshold for a good E−value from a BLAST search is e−5=(10−5) or lower. |
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Term
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Definition
allows you to view the domain organization of proteins |
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Term
Four levels of protein structure |
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Definition
primary--aa seq--polypeptide chain
secondary--folding of chain into into 3d shapes
tertiary--overall confirmation of the chain
quaternary--joining of 2 or more chains into multisubunit structures |
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Term
in gel filtration chromatography, what size proteins emerge first? |
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Definition
the largest
the smaller proteins enter the internal volume of the beads |
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Term
is it only aplha helices that recognize DNA? |
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Definition
no beta sheets recognize too
for example, ribbon-helix-helix motif |
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