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Study Guide
1. Create a sequence of peptides containing 10 amino acids. Chose any of the 20 amino acid types in any combination. You can choose an amino acid type more than once. Make the peptides - hydrophobic, hydrophilic, positively charged, negatively charged, neutral (one with a glutamic acid, and one with no charged residues). Use single letter codes/three letter codes (you should make 6 peptides). 2. What molecular properties determine the solubility of polar molecules in water? What is the importance of electrostatic interaction in protein secondary structures? Which type of interaction is mostly involved in the presence of chemical groups containing oxygen, nitrogen, but not carbon atoms? Which amino acid residues should you avoid when designing a water soluble peptide? How many amino acids do you need in a peptide to span a distance of 30 Angstroms in alpha helical conformation? 3. Transfer RNA contains a high amount of unusual bases. During the synthesis of a tRNA molecule, however, only ATP, GTP, UTP and CTP are used, and are enzymatically modified after transcription. Imagine a cell that is defective in an enzyme that methylates guanine bases in tRNA's. What would the effect be on tRNA-mRNA interaction? 4. What stabilizes the supramolecular structure of a phospholipid membrane? Define the interior of the membrane with the dielectric property of the system. What does 'amphipathic' mean, and how does this property relate to the stability of membranes? Could you imagine amphipathic peptides behaving like phospholipids in aqueous solution? 5. Explain in your words the melting temperature of DNA? Would you expect a melting temperature behavior of tRNA? What makes the base pairing of nucleotides in DNA precise? How does the base pair stacking contribute to the stability of hydrogen bonds in AT and GC pairs? 6. Why do proteins in a protein crystal need to be ordered? Why not in protein solutions for NMR analysis? 7. Define the chemical bonds between units in the three major biochemical macromolecules: proteins, nucleic acids, polysaccharides. Write down the generic reaction equation for each type (substrate Û product) and name enzymes involved in the catalysis for both the forth and back reactions. 8. Draw the water structure around a:
9. Cellulose Fibers are composed of many polysaccharide strands of several thousand glucose molecules. Monomeric glucose is water soluble, yet cellulose fibers do not dissociate from the supramolecular bundle into single strands. Why? 10. Chargaff's rule says that the G+C content of DNA differs from organism to organism. You have extracted the DNA from two bacterial strains ('F' and 'H') which you found in a soil sample from Cuyuamaca State Park. A denaturation experiment shows that strain 'F' has a higher G+C content than strain 'H'. Draw the melting curves for both DNA's on a single figure and indicate them with 'F' and 'H'. If the melting temperature (Tm) of strain 'H' is 76 degrees Celsius, what could you say about the corresponding Tm of strain 'F'? 11. Using the single letter code, design a 15 amino acid peptide for each of the following properties (write the sequence only). You can choose only among the following 10 amino acids types (more than once, of course): Ala, Val, Phe, Ser, Thr, Met, Glu, Asn, Lys, Pro
12. You study the helical structure of a short piece of double stranded nucleic acid, diluted in water buffered and pH 7.4, with sequence: 5' A G G T C T A A C T 3'
13. You are designing a short protein and have two peptides as intermediates.
peptide I: M S K F S C I R E peptide II: M F S T W C D
1. Self assembly systems are often pH sensitive. What do you think is the reason for this and which chemical groups are affected? What other factor(s) determine(s) the stability of protein complexes? 2. Explain how the specificity pocket of serine proteases affects the substrate-enzyme affinity, but not the kcat of the reaction. Begin your answer with the definition of the enzyme specificity and end with an argument in favor of renaming the specificity pocket the 'affinity' pocket. 3. Why are cystein residues in globular proteins advantageous for the study of protein folding pathways in vitro? 4. Which redox molecule in the photosynthetic reaction center couples electron and H+ transport? 5. A Hill plot is used to determine if a protein shows cooperativity between subunits or not. How do you determine the Hill constant from the plot and how would the curve for a non-cooperative enzyme complex look like? Draw a Hill-plot for an enzyme with negative cooperativity. 6. The melting curve of a protein shows a sigmoidal transition from the native fold to the unfolded conformation. What is the mechanism behind this type of curve? Give an other example of such a process for a macromolecule which is not a protein. 7. Myoglobin and Hemoglobin belong to the same protein family. What level of structural information is usually used to define the evolutionary relationship between proteins? What other protein families do you know? Why can the tertiary structure for such analyses be more important than simple sequence? 8. How do the T and R conformation of the hemoglobin quaternary structure support a symmetric model of allostery? 9. What biological role(s) distinguishes Ca++ ions from other (divalent) metal ions? 10. Explain the name 'serine/aspartate/cystein protease' (consult the chapter on the HIV protease for aspartate proteases). 11. You constructed a hydropathy plot of a not yet purified membrane protein (you know the sequence). You identified 6 hydrophobic stretches of at least 20 amino acids. What additional (structural) criterion do you need to know if those sequence fragments could be putative transmembrane spanning segments? 12. Explain the allosterism of the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor. 13. Bacterial porin channels contain 16 anti-parallel beta strands that form a b barrel. What could you say about the distribution of amino acids along the sequence to make the channel stable in membranes an suitable for the flux of hydrophilic molecules? 14. Why is the helix of gramicidin A called a beta helix? What is unusual about its amino acids? 15. What is the driving force of self-assembly systems / protein-folding in water? 16. What are the basic concentration conditions of enzyme and substrate to measure Vmax of enzymatic catalysis? 17. Explain one possible way of lowering the activation energy for an enzymatic reaction. 18. How does the tertiary structure of the chymotrypsin family of serine proteases affect the kcat of the proteolytic activity? 19. You analyzed the specificity pocket of a new type of protease and found Lysine as part of it. What could you say about the sequence specificity of the protease? 20. What is the reason to find amphipathic helices on the surface of proteins/at the center of ion channel complexes like the acetyl choline receptor? 21. Ion channels can be compared to enzymes, even though they do not catalyze a chemical reaction? Describe the enzymatic mechanism of a ligand gated ion channel. What is the role of allostery in ligand gated channels? 22. Thermal motion is important in enzymatic activity? Explain. 23. What is the packing ratio (stoichiometry) of Histones in a nucleosome core particle? 24. The alpha subunit of Na-channels contains more than 2,000 amino acids. How many nucleosomes (approx.) would be needed to pack the gene coding for this protein into the chromosomal structure? 25. What type of amino acid residues are involved in nucleosome-nucleosome interaction? Which post-translational modification affects this interaction? What structural feature in the nucleosome crystal structure explains why histone-DNA interaction is not DNA sequence specific? 26. Keratin is part of which cellular structure? What is its supramolecular structure in mammalian hair cells? 27. Macromolecular structures in cells can be shown to have self-assembly properties in vitro. In vivo, however, the assembly of those structures is often assisted by 'helper proteins'. What are these proteins called and give an example (for nucleosome assembly, for example). 28. What is the mechanism of subunit shuffling in cytoskeletal fibers? What is the energy source of this shuffling process (distinguish different filament types for different energy sources)? 29. What is the importance of having regions of high variability, like the CDR, on antibodies? On T-cell receptors? 30. How can he X-ray structure of the immunoglobulin fold help us understand that these regions of high variability don't affect the stability of the variable domain (compare this problem to the non related structures found in the chymotrypsin superfamily of serine proteases)? 31. What biochemical 'trick' was needed to solve the X-ray structure of immunoglobulins? 32. Which of the following protein(s) is not a membrane protein: class I MHC, T-cell receptor, IgG, IgM, muscarinic Acetylcholine Receptor, Myoglobin? 33. What are the major core constituents of N-linked oligosaccharides? 34. You study a new plasma membrane protein and try to identify its topology. You already predicted 7 potential transmembrane spanning segments. Based on the sequence analysis, how could you predict the inside-to-outside orientation of the protein, i.e., if the N-terminal domain is extra- or intracellular? What is the superfamily of proteins we are dealing with called? 35. What is the mechanism of lectin binding to other proteins? Can it bind any protein? 36. Cadherins are one type of protein family involved in cell-cell interaction. Explain all potential analogies to the PDGF receptor based on their domain structure. 37. The movement of eukaryotic and prokaryotic flagella are based on different mechanisms. What is the energy source of each process? 38. How does a cell recognize if a protein has to be secreted or put into the plasma membrane? 39. How can a protease inhibitor be a potential drug suppressing the proliferation of HIV but not affect the host physiology? 40. What is the structural principle of a leucine zipper; what general feature of an alpha helix does it follow? 41. Explain the functional differences and similarities of Zn++ ions in carbonic anhydrase and Zn-finger proteins. 42. Describe one of the motifs in the binding site of DNA binding proteins (interaction to major groove only).
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