Proteins are large biomolecules and macromolecules that are comprised of one or more long chains of amino acid residues. Proteins perform a vast array of functions within organisms, including catalysing metabolic reactions, DNA replication, responding to stimuli, providing structure to cells and organisms, and transporting molecules from one location to another. Proteins differ from one another primarily in their sequence of amino acids, which is dictated by the nucleotide sequence of their genes, and which usually results in protein folding into a specific 3D structure that determines its activity.
A linear chain of amino acid residues is called a polypeptide. A protein contains at least one long polypeptide. Short polypeptides, containing less than 20–30 residues, are rarely considered to be proteins and are commonly called peptides, or sometimes oligopeptides. The individual amino acid residues are bonded together by peptide bonds and adjacent amino acid residues. The sequence of amino acid residues in a protein is defined by the sequence of a gene, which is encoded in the genetic code. In general, the genetic code specifies 20 standard amino acids; but in certain organisms the genetic code can include selenocysteine and—in certain archaea—pyrrolysine. Shortly after or even during synthesis, the residues in a protein are often chemically modified by post-translational modification, which alters the physical and chemical properties, folding, stability, activity, and ultimately, the function of the proteins. Some proteins have non-peptide groups attached, which can be called prosthetic groups or cofactors. Proteins can also work together to achieve a particular function, and they often associate to form stable protein complexes.
Once formed, proteins only exist for a certain period and are then degraded and recycled by the cell's machinery through the process of protein turnover. A protein's lifespan is measured in terms of its half-life and covers a wide range. They can exist for minutes or years with an average lifespan of 1–2 days in mammalian cells. Abnormal or misfolded proteins are degraded more rapidly either due to being targeted for destruction or due to being unstable.
Like other biological macromolecules such as polysaccharides and nucleic acids, proteins are essential parts of organisms and participate in virtually every process within cells. Many proteins are enzymes that catalyse biochemical reactions and are vital to metabolism. Proteins also have structural or mechanical functions, such as actin and myosin in muscle and the proteins in the cytoskeleton, which form a system of scaffolding that maintains cell shape. Other proteins are important in cell signaling, immune responses, cell adhesion, and the cell cycle. In animals, proteins are needed in the diet to provide the essential amino acids that cannot be synthesized. Digestion breaks the proteins down for use in the metabolism.
Proteins may be purified from other cellular components using a variety of techniques such as ultracentrifugation, precipitation, electrophoresis, and chromatography; the advent of genetic engineering has made possible a number of methods to facilitate purification. Methods commonly used to study protein structure and function include immunohistochemistry, site-directed mutagenesis, X-ray crystallography, nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry.
Homework Statement
Two protein having same density 1.35 g /cm^3 but with different diameter 4nm and 5nm. They are mixed at the top of a centrifuge tube that is of length 1cm. What is the centripetal acceleration needed to separate them before they move to the end of the tube?
Homework...
protein synthesis in an animal cell takes place
(a)in the cytoplasm as well as mitochondria
(b)only on ribosome attached to nucleus
(c)only in the cytoplasm
(d)in the nucleolus as well as in the cytoplasm
some sites suggest option (a)is correct
and some site says option d is correct.
Which is...
Please could someone tell me the difference between an elastomeric protein and polyprotein?
I'm trying to figure out the force-extension curve for each and I am unsure of how they would differ.
edit here is the curve for a polyprotein
http://nptel.ac.in/courses/102103044/module3/lec20/6.html...
Homework Statement
Hi, I have one more question about the Bradford Assay. This one involves dilution.
Given 1ml of protein A, I am to determine its protein concentration (in mg/ml) using Bradford Assay (with known BSA protein standards).
Also, Under a 5 times dilution, the average absorbance...
There are a lot of florescent proteins in the visible range, but why haven't we fount any above or below that range?
I think a protein that emits radio waves could be very helpful both biologically and scientifically. Are we not looking for such proteins, or do they not exist?
As a non-biologist, I'm curious: What are some things that current research on protein folding is focusing on? What are some current challenges that researchers are facing? I understand that the protein folding problem is a very important problem in the field of biophysics. Any experts on here?
Is Protein Synthesis a vicious circle?
When we take proteins they are converted to amino acids. But during protein synthesis amino acids are converted to proteins. Is this correct and in a sense its a vicious circle.
Myoglobin is a globular protein, with molar mass m ≈ 17,000g/mole. The buoyant correction typically reduces m to m' ≈ 0.25m. Calculate the concentration ratio of the protein at the top of a 4 cm test tube and that at the bottom.
Here, m' stands for effective mass.
I tried as below.
I...
Hello,
I am reading about the Western blot technique, and I am looking for clarification of the transfer step described in the wikipedia article and in this video walkthrough. It is not clear to me why the proteins should keep their shape needed for the probing step rather than breaking or...
Hello
I'm trying to implement a application that will scan the electrophoresis gels and draw a graphic of the proteins: albumin, alpha1, alpha2, beta1, beta2 and gamma.
The problem is that the resulted graphic is not as it should be. Albumin percentage is too low and the rest of the proteins...
Homework Statement
You toss a protein bar to your hiking companion located 8.6m up at 39° slope. Determine the initial velocity vector so the bar reaches your friend moving horizontally.
The Attempt at a Solution
assuming the projectile lands on the friend at the apex of the...
Homework Statement
15) How is it possible that many different linear sequences of amino acids can form the same secondary structure (alpha helices, beta sheets, random coils, etc.)?
I understand that alpha-helices, beta-sheets, etc. appear in tons of proteins and peptides, but I do not...
Homework Statement
I am to create "my own" protein that follows the primary structure, then can be formed to follow the secondary structure, and so on until of course the quaternary structure. I am looking for some help on creating my protein so that it meets these needs (first follows the...
Homework Statement
A protein contains both an N-terminal mitochondrial matrix targeting sequence and an internal
ER start transfer sequence. Where do you think this protein goes?
The Attempt at a Solution
I've been told that it would still go to the ER. I know that when the ER...
Hi all,
I was just wondering, what stimulus activates protein synthesis? I already know the steps of protein synthesis but is there a particular mechanism that triggers the RNA polymerase to start transcription? In other words, how does the body know when to produce proteins? Is it possibly...
Homework Statement
You are studying a receptor tyrosine kinase and want to investigate the nature of the
autophosphorylation of this protein. To do this, you construct three forms of the receptor in an
expression vector: 1) a normal form with an active kinase domain and one tyrosine that...
given humans have 64 possible codons, I am imagining a crowd of tRNA, each carrying an amino acid, swarming clumsily with random thermal motion around a ribosome with a feed of mRNA. How do the tRNA anti-codons find the right mRNA codons so quickly?! I saw a video that shows the amino acids...
Homework Statement
I am not able to clearly understand the role of t-RNA in the synthesis of proteins using m-RNA as a template.
please explain how does a t-RNA supply an amino acid??
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
hello!
it is often used and in many cases safely accurate to use enlarged and mechanistic models of proteins in order to study them
given than, trying to elucidate the 3D structure of a protein, I wonder if it would be possible to somehow place the protein inside a material that would...
When a foreign protein is introduced in a rabbit or a mouse, its immune system attacks the protein by antibodies which specifically recognize the protein. How does the body know the sequence of the protein such that it manufactes an antibody which will specifically target that non-self protein.
What's protein transduction?
Is it a process by which proteins manufactured in one cell can be transferred into another cell or is it just another way of saying transduction proteins which are used in signal transduction (propagation/relaying)?
Homework Statement
Given that high concentration of urea break all bonds except covalent bonds in protein molecules.Which level of protein would remain unchanged when a protein is treated with urea?
Homework Equations
The Attempt at a Solution
tertiery protein
why is it...
Hi,
The question is the same as the title :
Are ribosomes complexes of protein and RNA?
I read that in a book and though I have no idea what ribosomes are made of I thought it did'nt make sense that they are complexes of protein and DNA.
Help?
So how exactly do tau plaques resulting from CTE cause strange behavior? Jr. Seau was found dead due to suicide, several hockey enforcers have died violently or due to drug overdoses just recently, and Chris Benoit murdered himself and his whole family. What is the understood physiology behind...
I have a question about one of the methods used to draw the alpha helix structures in proteins.
This is a typical drawing from Wikipedia of a small protein transcriptional activator Myb;
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Protein_MYB_PDB_1guu.png
Now that drawing looks typical of any...
So we are learning about vectors and how you can insert vectors into a plasmid and then that plasmid in a bacteria will make lots of copies of the protein that your sequence codes for.
I don't understand how inserting the DNA that codes for a protein into a bacteria gives you just the protein...
Hello!
I'm looking for information, articles and theories about which could have been the original molecule of life: DNA, RNA or protein.
Most of what I've found is based on the RNA world theory (which I think is pretty well explained and sounds plausible), but I haven't found out any...
I've been given an 'assignment' of sorts (more of a thought exercise really) to mutate specific amino acid residues in a viral protein (from poliovirus) such that it can catalyse its own cleavage independently of RNA.
I've learned from my own research that the usual cleavage mechanism...
Hello!
I'm guessing nanotechnology poses many difficulties, especially when using synthetic materials to manufacture complicated machines on such a small scale. I was thinking, therefore, that, if the mechanisms of protein folding are figured out, then mRNA sequences can be designed to...
Homework Statement
Proteins and lipids have some similar but also some different functions in living organisms. Describe these functions and explain why proteins and lipids are suitable for these functions.
(It is a question for F.4)
Homework Equations
NO.
The...
Homework Statement
An analysis of proteins in plasma membranes would reveal that:
they are all enzymes.
they are immobile in the bilayer.
they are entirely non-polar molecules.
they are formed from nitrogenous bases linked together by peptide bonds.
they are built by the same...
Protein structure drawing method
I want to know the proper name given to this particular method of drawing proteins, RNA and Genes. I have two examples;
If you look at the Wikipedia page for tRNA, they show the Tertiary structure of tRNA like this...
Hello Forum,
please take a look at this image
http://imageshack.us/photo/my-images/98/0bigg.jpg/
It shows a Western blot of an extract of proteins.
My question is how can you determine the length of both proteins A and B graphically?
Could you please help me?
Just a thought. We have the capability to use viral transfection to stimulate brain cells into producing channelrhodopsin proteins which cause the brain cell to fire in response to a light impulse of a specific frequency. If neuroscientists were able to synthesize a protein with similar...
Since it obviously takes energy and extra amino acids to express the green fluorescent protein, so it's possible that bacteria expressing GFP might have slightly lower fitness (on average) than bacteria that aren't expressing GFP.
I'm sure the effect is negligible in most cases. But maybe...
From this week's New Sceintist, "Cassava packs a protein punch with bean genes".
http://www.newscientist.com/article/mg20927984.800-cassava-packs-a-protein-punch-with-bean-genes.html
Free registration may be required to view the article. From the article,
"A DEADLY poison could save the...
Hello,
I've a book in cell biology (it's an advanced book not a crash course or something) where's written that peripheral proteins are loosely connected to the membrane. However in most sources on the internet it's written that the protein is temporally adhered to the membrane.
I'm a bit...
These days, it seems that we all rely on trial and error in order to predict the biochemical reactions of new drugs (say, we want a drug to be a ligand, but we have to rely on trial and error to predict whether or not it will actually fit - plus - we also need trial and error to determine the...
Here is a little concept I have difficulty reasoning it out and I was hoping if someone can guide me through it.
pKa of amino acid residues in a protein active site. Take histidine for example, below pH of 6.0 it stays positively charged but above pH of 6.0 it becomes neutral with the removal...
Can one monitor dynamics of a specific protein domain (helix, strand etc) by Raman Sp? If one labels a specific residue with an isotope, like in NMR, can one use that to monitor the dynamics of the region that encompasses this residue?
Hey folks :smile:
My girlfriend and I have a pet hairless rat named Hester. She is getting quite old and is in the final stages of her life. She can only eat soft mushy foods since her teeth have become quite worn down. We have been feeding her a diet that consists of grapes (skinned)...
Homework Statement
I'm a little confused as to how exactly a protein folds into an alpha helix...like what causes it exactly to assume that conformation...does it fold spontaneously in water (like i know hydrophobic R groups cause the protein to fold where the hydrophobic groups are faced...
Homework Statement
I'm a little confused as to which conformation of protein is more stable (folded or unfolded)...like in my book it says that the most stable (lowest free energy) is the one with the maximum number of weak interactions...so in this case, shouldn't it be the folded one? but on...
I was wondering whether anyone knows an experiment relating to bodybuilding protein shakes.
I want to find out which amino acids are present within the protein shake by doing an experiment but i have no clue what how to carry it out. The protein is in powder form. I was thinking of...
I'm not a science student. So, please keep your reply simple and straightforward. Thank you.
A fat molecule is made up of two types of molecules: glycerol and fatty acid. There are different kinds of fatty acids. Are there also different types of glyceol, does it come only in one variety...
Hello everyone,
Quick question. I can understand proteins are needed to make everything in the cell, so if you inhibit bacterial protein synthesis, cell division can not occur. However my question is does the DNA replicate and divide, and then the cell can not make other things they want so...
Hi,
Just need to clear up any misunderstanding about protein structure. Do all proteins have at least three levels of structure? If a protein has a quaternary structure, does it mean it also has primary, secondary and tertiary structures?
I was wondering what separates a polysaccharide from...
Hello everyone,
Why is that when denature protein you can't get it back to orginal shape. Practically it is obvious that when you burn something it is not going to come back for original shape but what is the chemical basis behind this. Are molecules loss or, heat loss or why is it this so...