BIO 1140 Lecture Notes - Lecture 5: Southwest Ohio Regional Transit Authority, Centrosome, Tubulin

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As the backbones link up there forms a shape and that is going to impose a secondary stricture. The secondary structure relies on which nucleic acids are placed in which order: alpha helix, beta pleated. Helix: charged polar nucleic acids are in this one (more spherical, globular protein) Pleated: more rigid, would be used as a protecive covering, non-polar will be here. Teriary structure: disulide bonds will form and it will take a lot of energy to unfold the bond. Within a polypepide there will be areas that will be primarily polar (alpha) and nonpolar (beta), each of these areas are called domains. Once you have this, you can assemble them into a large quaternary structure. You may need two, three, four subunits (a. k. a. teriary subunits) to form to inal protein. Hemoglobin has two alpha and two beta subunits. If it isn"t produced properly it will go to the lysosome to be degraded.

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