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Access Slides - Science Signaling
Access Slides - Science Signaling

... Fig. 2. A: protein structure of protein-activated receptor (PAR)-1, PAR-2, and PAR-3. Amino acid sequences in NH2-terminus and second extracellular loop that are important for receptor activation are shown. Boxed residues indicate tethered ligand domains (PAR-1, PAR-2, and PAR-3) and anion binding ...
Krebs Intro and CycleON
Krebs Intro and CycleON

... It takes 2 H+ to cross the F1 particle to provide enough energy to make ATP. Because the electron transport chain oxidizes NADH or FADH2 and uses the energy to phosphorylate ADP, this is also known as oxidative ...
fermentation
fermentation

3. The distribution of electrons within elements can be related to
3. The distribution of electrons within elements can be related to

Document
Document

... (b) The anion sulfite is SO32-; therefore you need 2 Na+ for each sulfite. The formula is Na2SO3. (c) The ionic compound is barium hydroxide. When water is included in the formula, we use the term “hydrate” and a prefix that indicates the number of molecules of H2O. This compound is barium hydroxide ...
removal of amino gp from glutamate to release ammonia Other
removal of amino gp from glutamate to release ammonia Other

... 3. Metabolic break down of carbon skeleton to generate common intermediates that can be catabolized to CO2 or used in anabolic pathways to be stored as glucose or fat. ...
File
File

... triphosphate (ATP) by breaking down organic compounds.  Both autotrophs and heterotrophy undergo cellular respiration to breakdown organic compounds into simpler molecules to release energy.  Some energy is used to make ATP which is then used by the cells to do work.  The figure below shows that ...
Protein
Protein

... • Testosterone secretion is optimal when protein:CHO ratio is 1:4 (ie. 15%:60% as in balanced diet) Volek et al., (1997) • If an overall energy deficit exists (due to heavy training/dieting) then –ve N balance will occur even if protein intake is 2x RDA. • Gater et al., (1992) – Resistance training ...
5.Hard and Soft Acid and Bases
5.Hard and Soft Acid and Bases

Chapter 5 Spring 2017
Chapter 5 Spring 2017

... 14. Compare and contrast substrate-level phosphorylation and oxidative phosphorylation. What is chemiosmosis? 15. Describe the similarities and differences between aerobic and anaerobic metabolism. 16. What does ATP stand for? Describe its general structure. 17. What are the steps of aerobic cellula ...
Horse pancreatic ribonuclease Scheffer, Albert Jan
Horse pancreatic ribonuclease Scheffer, Albert Jan

... peptides were positioned by sequence homology and overlappings; all but four peptide bonds were overlapped by one or nore peptides (6.2). Alnost al1 amide groups were l o c a t e d u n e q u i v o c a l l y ( 6 . 1) . Horse ribonuclease consists of a polypeptide chain containing 125 anino acid re id ...
to an allosteric site
to an allosteric site

H 3 O - TeacherWeb
H 3 O - TeacherWeb

... Calculate the pH of a 0.30 M solution of acetic acid, HC2H3O2, at 25C. HC2H3O2 (aq) + H2O (l) ...
Coordination- and Redox-Noninnocent Behavior of Ambiphilic
Coordination- and Redox-Noninnocent Behavior of Ambiphilic

... fundamental interest in the chemistry of heavy group 15 elements, we became fascinated by the possibility of employing antimony centers as Lewis acids within ambiphilic ligands. The chemistry of antimony-based ligands, most often encountered as trivalent stibines, has historically been considered to ...
Combinatorial mutagenesis to restrict amino acid usage in an
Combinatorial mutagenesis to restrict amino acid usage in an

... by KSC (K ⫽ G ⫹ T); the Leu and Val codons were replaced by STG; the Ile codons were replaced by VTC or VTT (V ⫽ A ⫹ C ⫹ G); the Met codons were replaced by VTG; the Lys codons were replaced by ARA or ARG; the Glu codons were replaced by GAW (W ⫽ A ⫹ T) or GAS; the Asn codons were replaced by RAC or ...
Photosynthetic reaction centers
Photosynthetic reaction centers

... the highly hydrophobic environment of the dimer is unfavorable for charges, it is unlikely that any of the nearby residues are ionized, so that electrostatic interactions from charged amino acid residues may not play a major role in adjusting the energy levels of the dimer. The electron density dist ...
Amino acid frequency distribution at the enzymatic active site
Amino acid frequency distribution at the enzymatic active site

... acid frequency distribution at the active site can be exploited in designing novel enzyme active sites as well as the specific inhibitors and novel peptide based drugs. ...
basic principles of isoelectric focusing in biomedical engineering
basic principles of isoelectric focusing in biomedical engineering

... Surfaces naturally charge to form a double layer. In the common case when the surface chargedetermining ions are H+/OH-, the net surface charge is affected by the pH of the liquid in which the solid is submerged. Again, the pI is the pH value of the solution at which the surfaces carries no net char ...
BIOTRANSFORMATION PHASE I Phase II
BIOTRANSFORMATION PHASE I Phase II

... Azo- and Nitro-reductions can be catalyzed •by enzymes of intestinal flora • by cytochrome P450 (usually oxidizing enzyme), has the capacity to reduce xenobiotics under low oxygen or anaerobic conditions (substrate rather than oxygen, accept electrons and is reduced) •interactions with reducing agen ...
(II) With Pyrimidine Derivatives
(II) With Pyrimidine Derivatives

... which renders their absorption spectra to be quite complex. Copper (II) forms a large number of complexes with various donor ligands and with interesting stoichiometries but perfect octahedral and tetrahedral complexes of Cu (II) are very few. Cu (II) gives rise to only one free ion ground term 2D, ...
(iii) Formation of Hydrogen chloride molecule
(iii) Formation of Hydrogen chloride molecule

... During the process their outer shell either holds eight electrons (octet) or two (doublet) electrons. The process of attaining stable electron configuration is called chemical bonding. ...
04. Proteins
04. Proteins

... Charge-charge interaction (ionic bonds)  interaction between two charged amino acids  negatively charged amino acids: glutamate and aspartate;  positively charged amino acids: lysine, arginine and hystidine ...
How organisms get energy - Fall River Public Schools
How organisms get energy - Fall River Public Schools

... to form twelve 3-carbon molecules  The twelve 3-carbon molecules are energized by ATP and NADPH  2 of the 3-carbon molecules are removed to make sugars, lipids, amino acids, or other molecules the plant cell needs  The ten 3-carbon molecules that are left over are converted back into six 5-carbon ...
Communication - Dundee Life Sciences
Communication - Dundee Life Sciences

... single transmembrane span with the bulk of the protein exposed to the stromal phase. There is now clear evidence for the existence of a similar system in prokaryotes. It has been pointed out (15) that a subset of exported proteins are synthesized with twin-Argcontaining presequences, and this applie ...
slides on Protein Structure
slides on Protein Structure

... –7 Å repeat length & two rotatable bonds at Ca (f & y) –highly polar bond due to resonance –high energy bond due to resonance ...
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Metalloprotein



Metalloprotein is a generic term for a protein that contains a metal ion cofactor. A large number of all proteins are part of this category.
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