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Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester Bioc 3321 Study guide Module 1: Review of General and Organic Chemistry 1. In a hospital laboratory, a 10.0 mL sample of gastric juice, obtained several hours after a meal, was titrated with 0.1 M NaOH to neutrality; 7.2 mL of NaOH was required. The patient’s stomach contained no ingested food or drink, thus assume that no buffers were present. What was the pH of the gastric juice? Module 2: Amino Acids, Peptides and Proteins 2. Complete the table: Structure Name Three letter code Asn at pH=7 Leucine at pH=12 Aliphatic / PolarUncharged / Neg. Charged / Aromatic / Pos. Charged Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester His At pH=1 3. Lysine can be considered a triprotic acid with three pKas= 2.18, 8.95, 10.53. a. Draw the structure of Lysine and identify the most acidic proton, the second most acidic proton and the least acidic one b. Draw the titration curve of Lysine identifying the pH zones at which the buffer capacity is maximum Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester c. What is the Isoelectric point (pI) of Lysine? 4. State if the following peptides have a total positive, neutral or negative charge at the given pH a. (Gly)20 at pH 7.0 b. (Glu)20 at pH 7.0 c. (Lys–Ala)3 at pH 7.0 d. (Phe–Met)3 at pH 7.0 e. (Ala–Ser–Gly)5 at pH 6.0 f. (Asn–Ser–His)5 at pH 6.0 g. (Ala–Asp–Gly)5 at pH 3.0 h. (Asn–Ser–His)5 at pH 3.0 Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester 5. Below is the Ramachandran plot a. What do the islands of color indicate in the plot above? b. Draw the Newman projection of the Phi () angle: C-N-C-C for a alpha-helix c. Draw the Newman projection of the Psi (): Draw N-C-C-N for a beta sheet Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester 6. The following peptide adopts a alpha-helix secondary structure Leu-Glu-Glu-Val-Phe-Ser-Gln-Leu-Cys-Thr-His-Val-Glu-Thr-Leu-Lys a. By using the helical representation below. Answer why this sequence is compatible with a alpha helix.: b. Identify what area (circle it) of the alpha helix may be exposed to water/hydrophilic environment and what other area is exposed to a hydrophobic environment. Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester 7. Like many things in biology, a protein’s solubility is pH dependent. Under certain pH conditions, a protein may be quite soluble and at other pH values, the protein may become completely insoluble. This property is sometimes used to advantage during protein purification schemes. To understand why, answer the following questions. a. Suppose you have a mixture of two proteins with the following properties: Protein A has a pI of 4.1; Protein B has a pI of 10.0. At pH 7, your solution is clear, i.e., both proteins are soluble. You acidify your solution with strong acid to pH 4 and observe precipitate. What has happened and why? b. Describe the charge states (i.e., net negative (“anionic”), or net positive (“cationic”), or no net charge) for Proteins A & B at: pH 4, pH 7, and at pH 10. Module 2. Protein techniques 8. You hope to learn about an unknown protein by comparing it to known proteins (“standards”). You mix your unknown with all the standards and apply the mixture to a cation exchange column at low [NaCl] and buffered at pH 7.5. Polypeptide MW/chain pI standards A calmodulin 18,000 4.1 B carbonic anhydrase 31,000 6.0 C myogenin 25,000 8.7 D serum albumin 90,000 10.6 E trypsin inhibitor 22,000 9.6 F transferrin 110,000 5.9 G ubiquitin 9,000 6.6 a. Which standard proteins will NOT be retained on the column (Give the LETTERS)? EXPLAIN why in 1 sentence. Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester b. Your unknown is retained on the column. Draw a conclusion about your protein using the terms "acidic" or "basic" AND "pI". 9. The following diagram shows the anode, cathode, and pH gradient of an isoelectric focusing bed: anode+ -cathode pH 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 a. Indicate if the following aminoacids and peptides will move to the right or to the left and at what pH they may stop Placed at pH = Asn Glu-Asp Leu-His Ser Moving Right or Left? Stopping at pH= (approx. 1 digit) 2 9 4 7 Assume that for the backbone groups, all amino groups have pKa=9.6 and all carboxylic pKa=2.3. Amino acids with carboxlic side chains have pKa=4.0, and amino groups pKa=10.5, imidazole groups have pKa=6. Module 2: Protein function 10. Protein A has a binding site for ligand X with a Kd of 10−6 M. Protein B has a binding site for ligand X with a Kd of 10−9 M. a. Draw a plot representing binding fraction vs ligand concentration for the two proteins. Use a -logarithmic scale for concentration of ligand. Indicate how Kd can be found and labels of the axis. Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester binding fraction 1 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 b. Which protein has a higher affinity for ligand X? Explain your reasoning. c. Convert the dissociation constant Kd to association constant Ka for both proteins. Write the equilibrium reactions for both processes. d. At what concentration of X will protein A have 20% of their binding sites occupied? -log[S] Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester Module 3: Enzymatic Catalysis 11. The reaction catalyzed by hexokinase is: glucose + ATP glucose-6-phosphate + ADP A form of hexokinase called hexokinase D has a KM for glucose of 0.1 mM; the form called glucokinase has a KM for glucose of 10 mM. Normal blood glucose level is 4-5 mM. e. Will either isozyme work near its maximal rate under normal blood glucose levels? If so, which one and why? f. Blood glucose levels increase dramatically after a meal. Which isozyme will be more responsive to changes in blood [glucose] away from the normal? g. One of these isozymes is predominant in liver; the other in muscle. In muscle, glucose is consumed for energy—a process that must occur at all times, even in between meals. The liver isozyme’s job is to convert excess blood glucose into glucose-6-phosphate for transport to other tissues. Which isozyme works in which tissue? Explain your answer. 12. For an enzyme (E) catalyzed reaction that follows Michaelis-Menten kinetics, state whether the parameters listed below will INCREASE, DECREASE, or STAY THE SAME under the conditions listed by putting an "X" in the correct box. Condition #1. [E]total is increased. Condition #2. A competitive reversible inhibitor is added. Condition #1 Parameter Increase? Decrease? Same? KM Vmax [E-S] Condition #2 Increase? Decrease? Same? Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester V0 when [S] = KM kcat Catalytic efficiency d[E-S]/dt Module 4: Carbohydrates 13. In the disaccharide below h. Identify the anomeric carbons by circling them i. What kind of glycosidic bond exists between the two monosaccharides? (e.g. 14 linkage) j. Draw the linear form of the monosaccharide in furanose form. 14. A polysaccharide of unknown structure was isolated, subjected to exhaustive methylation, and hydrolyzed. Analysis of the products revealed three methylated sugars: 2,3,4-tri-O-methyl-d-glucose, 2,4-di-O-methyl-d-glucose, and 2,3,4,6-tetra-O-methyl-d-glucose, in the ratio 20:1:1. What is the structure of the polysaccharide? Bioc 3321 Spring 2011 Xavier Prat-Resina Univ. Minnesota Rochester Module 5: Lipids 1. Arachidonic acid is a fatty acid precursor of prostaglandins thromboxanes and leukotrienes. Arachidonic acid is labeled as 20:4(5,8,11,14) . a. Draw its structure below. b. Is it an omega-3 or omega-6 kind of fatty acid? c. Draw another fatty acid with the same number of carbons but with a higher melting point.