BIOL 1201 Chapter : 2016-01-28

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15 Mar 2019
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Where in the protein would you expect to find glutamic acid? on the surface. Secondary structure: alpha helix, beta pleated sheet, results from hydrogen bonding involving the peptide backbone, r group not involved, alpha helix, fibrous proteins, hair, beta pleated sheets, silk, core of many globular proteins, spider webs. Tertiary structure: folding into a 3 dimensional structure ( a globule, folding is due to the properties and interactions of the r groups (amino. Nonpolar: hydrophobic r groups, buried in the interior of the protein, hydrophilic r groups, interact with one another or are on the surface to interact with water. Stabilizing tertiary structure: weak, hydrogen bonds, ionic interactions, hydrophobic and van der waals interactions, strong, disulfide bridge (covalent bond) Quaternary structure: multiple polypeptide chains (subunits) fit together to form a larger protein, can be identical subunits or different polypeptide chains, the sickle-cell hemoglobin mutation alters what level(s) of protein.

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