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Proteins: multipurpose molecules Proteins • Structure H2O – monomers = amino acids • 20 different amino acids – polymer = polypeptide • protein can be two or more polypeptide chains folded & bonded together via covalent and hydrogen bonds hemoglobin Rubisco growth hormones Proteins • Most structurally & functionally diverse group • Function: involved in almost everything – – – – enzymes (speed up reactions in the body) structure (keratin, collagen) carriers & transport (hemoglobin, aquaporin) cell communication • signals (insulin & glucagon) • receptors – defense (antibodies) – movement (actin & myosin make up muscles) – storage (bean seed proteins) Protein structure & function • Function depends on structure – 3-D structure/shape is unique to each protein pepsin hemoglobin collagen Amino acids • Structure – central carbon – amino group – carboxyl group (acid) – R group (side chain) H O H | || —C— C—OH —N— | H R • variable group • different for each amino acid • confers unique chemical properties to each amino acid Effect of different R groups: Nonpolar amino acids nonpolar & hydrophobic Effect of different R groups: Polar amino acids polar or charged & hydrophilic Primary (1°) structure • Order of amino acids in chain – amino acid sequence determined by gene (DNA) Secondary (2°) structure – folding along short sections of polypeptide – Hydrogen bonds between nearby amino acids Modeling tertiary structure! Tertiary (3°) structure • Whole molecule folding – interactions between R groups of distant amino acids Sulfur containing amino acids • Form disulfide bridges – covalent cross links betweens sulfhydryls – stabilizes 3-D structure H-S – S-H Quaternary (4°) structure • More than one polypeptide chain bonded together hemoglobin Protein structure (review) 3° 1° 4° 2° Protein denaturation • Unfolding of a protein – Extreme conditions that disrupt H bonds, ionic bonds, disulfide bridges – Temperature, pH, salinity