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Biochemistry Flashcards

Remember the basic structure and nomenclature of each amino acid, understand their chemical properties and classification,

Hello! This is an amino acid set by Fadil Nohur, aka fiddle_n. Here are a list of the 20 amino acids coded in the genome. Amino acids vary in their difficulty for learning. Some amino acids are easy to learn, whilst some defy memorisation (yes, tryptophan, I'm looking at you!). All amino acid pictures have been painstakingly edited and uploaded by none other than me, for your learning pleasure! Have fun learning, and maybe give me a high five if you feel like it ;)

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8721614164alanineMethyl R-group0
8721614165valine2 Methyl R-group1
8721614166leucine4 extra C2
8721614167isoleucineMethyl moved to beta C3
8721614168glycineH instead of R4
8721614169prolineCyclic Shape5
8721614170cysteine-SH R-group (thiol)6
8721614171methionineOnly one with -S7
8721614172phenylalanineBenzene as R group8
8721614173tryptophanPentene-benzene R group9
8721614174tyrosinephenol as R10
8721614175asparagineAmide 1 C away11
8721614176glutamineAmide 2 C away12
8721614177serineHydroxy as R13
8721614178threonineMethyl and Hydroxy as R14
8721614179lysineAmine 4 Cs away15
8721614180histidineImidazole (ring), under very acidic conditions both H get deprotonated16
8721614181arginine4 N's, 3 Cs away17
8721614182aspartic acidCarboxyl 1 C away, found deprotonated in cells18
8721614183glutamic acidCarboxyl 2 C away, found deprotonated in cells19
8721614184S configurationR/S configuration of Amino Acids20
8721614185L- enantiomerThe amino group is to the left21
8721614186R- enantiomerThe amino group is to the right22
8721614187GlycineOnly amino acid that is achiral23
8721614188PeptidesCovalent bond chain of amino acid residue. Requires condensation of two amino acids, forming H2024
8721614189Dipeptide2 Amino Acids linked25
8721614190Oligopeptide2-20 amino acid residue chain26
8721614191PolypeptidesOver 20 peptide chain, but less than 5027
8721614192ProteinOver 50 amino acids linked together28
8721614193The C=N bond has delocalization of electrons due to resonance, making it very stable.The peptide bond is rigid because...29
8721614194Break a Polypeptide BondRequires 1 water molecule and hydrolytic enzymes to... (This process is commonly found in the digestive system)30
8721614195linearThe primary structure of a protein is...31
8721614196from amino to carboxyIn the primary structure of proteins the sequence is read...32
8721614197Hydrogen bonding between the oxygen of the carboxy and N of the amino groupIn secondary structures the alpha-helix and beta-pleated sheets are stablilized by by...33
8721614198strengthen the helix shape because of the repulsive interactions with the surrounding environmentThe R groups in the secondary structure alpha-helix...34
8721614199pointing up, while the other half point downHalf of the R groups in the beta-pleated sheets are..35
8721614200it contains kinks in its peptideProline affects tertiary structure of proteins because...36
8721614201Glycine, Alanine, Valine, Leucine, Isoleucine, Methionine, ProlineNon Polar and Non Aromatic Side Chain37
8721614202Tryptophan, Phenylalanine, TyrosineAromatic Side Chain38
8721614203Serine, Threonine, Asparagine, Glutamine, CysteinePolar Side Chain39
8721614204Aspartic Acid, Glutamic AcidNegatively Charged Side Chain and Acidic40
8721614205Arginine, Lysine, HistidinePositively Charged Side Chain and Basic41
8721614206Alanine, Leucine, Isoleucine, Valine, PhenylalanineHydrophobic and found inside of proteins42
8721614207Histidine, Lysine, Arginine, Glutamate, AspartateHydrophilic and found on the surface of proteins because charge43
8721614208ZwitterionNeutral Amino Acid because has negative and positive charges on it.44
8721614209AmphotericCan be protonated or deprotonated45
8721614210Isoelectric point (pI)Average 2 pka values below/above neutral (if more than 2 pka values, the average the ones that are closest together until you have two). Half protonated and other half is deprotonated at this point.46
8721614211Tertiary Structures3D shape of 1 polypeptide chain that is stabilizied by hydrophobic interactions (hydrophobic amino acids inside protein and hydrophilic amino acids on the surface), acid-base interactions (salt bridges), H-bonding within protein between amino and carboxyl end of proteins, Disulfide bonds (oxidation of cysteine to cystine)47
8721614212Quartenary StructuresInteractions between peptides in a protein that has many subunits48
8721614213Lyases, Isomerase, Ligase, Hydrolase, Oxidoreductase, TransferaseLil Hot49
8721614214LyasesThey cleave molecules into two molecules without water50
8721614215IsomeraseThey help change molecules from 1 isomer to another, such as a constitutional to stereoisomer51
8721614216LigaseThey help add molecules together, usually large biomolecules that are the same52
8721614217HydrolaseThey use water to break molecules apart53
8721614218OxidoreductaseAid in the facilitation of oxidation-reduction reactions54
8721614219TransferaseThey aid in the movement of functional groups from one molecule to another55
8721614220Lock and KeySubstrate and enzyme are complimentary and fit with one another.56
8721614221Induced- FitThe Active site of the enzyme changes to compliment the substrate57
8721614222Co-factorsMetal cations used to aid in enzyme activity58
8721614223Saturation KineticsAs substrates increases so does the reaction rate, until it reaches a point where it no longer does59
8721614224Temperature, pH, SalinityFactors affecting Enzyme Activity60
8721614225Competitive InhibitionInhibitor competes with substrate for the active site of the enzyme. Adding more substrate overcomes this type of inhibition.61
8721614226Non Competitive InhibitionInhibitor has same affinity for enzyme and enzyme-substrate complex. It binds to the allosteric site of the enzyme.62
8721614227Km increases, while the Vmax stays the same, adding more substrateIn Competitive inhibition the inhibitor causes the km to ________ and vmax_________. Can overcome effects by____________63
8721614228Stays the same, decreasesIn Non Competitive inhibition the km _____, while the Vmax ________64
8721614229Mixed InhibitionInhibitor has unequal affinity for the enzyme and enyzyme-substrate complex.65
8721614230Uncompetitive InhibitionInhibitor only binds to enzyme-substrate complex. Works best when theres more ES and more enzyme.66
8721614231DeprotonationpH > pka67
8721614232Protonationpka > pH68
8721614233AlanineA69
8721614234Asparagine or Aspartic AcidB70
8721614235AlanineAla71
8721614236CysteineC72
8721614237CysteineCys73
8721614238Aspartic AcidD74
8721614239Aspartic AcidAsp75
8721614240Glutamic AcidE76
8721614241Glutamic AcidGlu77
8721614242PhenylalanineF78
8721614243PhenylalaninePhe79
8721614244GlycineGly80
8721614245GlycineG81
8721614246HistidineHis82
8721614247HistidineH83
8721614248IsoleucineI84
8721614249IsoleucineIle85
8721614250LysineLys86
8721614251LysineK87
8721614252LeucineLeu88
8721614253LeucineL89
8721614254MethionineMet90
8721614255MethionineM91
8721614256AsparagineAsn92
8721614257AsparagineN93
8721614258ProlineP94
8721614259ProlinePro95
8721614260GlutamineGln96
8721614261GlutamineQ97
8721614262ArginineArg98
8721614263ArginineR99
8721614264SerineSer100
8721614265SerineS101
8721614266ThreonineThr102
8721614267ThreonineT103
8721614268ValineVal104
8721614269ValineV105
8721614270TryptophanW106
8721614271Tryptophantrp107
8721614272TyrosineTyr108
8721614273TyrosineY109
8721614274Glutamine or Glutamic AcidZ110
8721614275OxidationMore Oxygen bonds are added, and less Hydrogen bonds111
8721614276ReductionLess Oxygen bonds, and more Hydrogen bonds112
8721614277Transition MetalsMetals that change colors when they are oxidized113
8721614278HemoglobinThis protein can hold 4 Oxygen molecules in total, and after the first Oxygen molecule has binded its conformation shifts to increase the affinity for more Oxygens114
8721614279ProtonatedAmino Acids in low pH are found _____115
8721614280deprotonatedAmino Acids in high pHs are found ________116
8721614281cDNADNA that only contains the exons of a strand and made from reverse transcription of RNA. Purpose is to sequence specific genes, identify disease causing mutations, produce recombinant proteins or produce transgenic animals.117
8721614282Hill CoefficientTells you if protein exhibits cooperativity. If it is greater than 1 yes, if at 1 no.118
8721614283Gel ElectrophoresisUses to separate macromolecules, such as proteins (kDa) and DNA (#base pairs, kilobases), based on size and charge. For DNA, use agarose gels because it weeds out large molecules because larger pores. Negative ions to cathodes, while positive ions to anode. Shows bands with smaller sizes farther away and larger sizes closer.119
8721614284Michaelis Menten ExperimentKeep enzyme concentration level, manipulate substrate concentration (by adding usually) to get Km and Vmax in the presence or absence of inhibitor.120
8721614285Sense, coding, non-template strandDNA strand that RNA polymerase II doesnt bind to during transcription. But is the same as the mRNA made121
8721614286Antisense, noncoding, template strandDNA strand that RNA polymerase II binds to during transcription. Complements mRNA strand.122
8721614287km increases, and the vmax decreasesIn Mixed inhibition if the inhibitor favors the Enzyme more than the enzyme substrate the km_________ and the vmax__________123
8721614288km decreases and the vmax decreasesIn Mixed Inhibition if the inhibitor favors the enzyme substrate more than the enzyme the km_______ and the vmax ___________124
8721614289km decreases and the vmax decreasesIn uncompetitive inhibition the km________ and the vmax_________125
8721614290Competitive inhibitionThe lineweaver burke plot shows km gets larger (line shifts to right of non inhibitor), but crosses the same point on the y axis (vmax)126
8721614291Noncompetitive InhibitionThe lineweaver burke plot shows the inhibitor present and inhibitor not present lines intersect at x axis and for the inhibitor present line it is higher than the inhibitor not present line (vmax gets smaller)127
8721614292Mixed InhibitionThe lineweaver burke plot shows an intersection somewhere in the plot not on an axis128
8721614293Uncompetitive InhibitionThe lineweaver burke plot shows no intersection only parallel lines.129
8721614294Kmat 1/2vmax it is the substrate concentration at which half of the enzymes active sites are full. High km means that theres more substrate not bound to enzyme, so enzyme has low affinity for substrate. At low km means there is not a lot of substrate unbound to enzyme so the enzyme must really like the enzyme.130
8721614295Enzyme Saturation KineticsAt substrate concentrations below km adding more substrate greatly increases the rate of the raction, but at concentration higher than km the reaction rate does not increase that much faster as it reaches vmax.131
8721614296SDS PAGEIt is a way of separating proteins due to only their mass. It uses SDS a detergent to denature the protein. It is best for determining small size differences in proteins. We expect smaller protein fragments to travel farther (might be considered more compact)132
8721614297Native PAGEIt is a protein isolation technique that analyzes proteins in their native states. Separation is based off of charge and mass. Smaller/more charged/more compact proteins are more mobile than larger/not charged/less compact proteins.133
8721614298mutarotationIt is the rapid conversion of different anomers of a sugar. So in glucose it goes from alpha to beta.134
8721614299Tollens ReagentUses Ag(NH3)2 to detect reducing sugars by using the aldehyde of the sugar to reduce Ag+ to a metallic silver135
8721614300Benedicts Reagentused to detect reducing sugars by oxidizing the aldehyde, which is indicated by a red precipitate.136
8721614301TerpenesPrecursors to steroid hormones. (C5H8) are units of isopropene.137
8721614302TriterpenesPrecursors to cholesterol138
8721614303Steroids3 cyclohexanes and 1 cyclopentane139
87216143042pka of carboxylic group on amino acid140
87216143059pka of amino group on amino acid141
872161430610pka of side chain of lysine142
872161430712pka of side chain of arginine143
87216143086pka side chain of histidine144
87216143094pka of glutamic and acidic acid145
8721614310TriglycerideStorage form of fatty acid146
8721614311Fatty AcidFuel source for the body that consist of carboxylic head and hydrocarbon tail. Synthesis (from Acetyl CoA) occurs in the liver and in the cytoplasm of those liver cells. They are oxidized in the mitochondria to provide energy.147
8721614312Beta oxidationIs the reverse of fatty acid synthesis. Occurs in the liver in the mitochondria of cells. Purpose is to make Acetyl coA that will drive gluconeogenesis.148
8721614313ChromatographyUsed to separate proteins and other macromolecules, like nucleic acids. Forms bands of different compounds in column149
8721614314High Performance Liquids Chromatography (HPLC)used to separate proteins based on polarity for small amounts. Stationary phase is silica beads and mobile phase is organic solvent. Compound will stick to silica/aluminum if polar, will move quickly down if nonpolar with organic solvent.150
8721614315Size ExclusionChromatography where proteins are separated based on size. The beads (stationary phase) have pores in them to let small proteins go through, so less retention rate, while larger proteins get stuck higher up the stationary phase.151
8721614316Ion exclusionChromatography where proteins are separated based on charge. Beads are charged, and so compounds with opposite charge are attracted to them, while those with the same charge are repelled and move down column quickly152
8721614317AffinityChromatography where beads are coated with antibody or enzyme that has high affinity for a protein, so compound gets lodged in the stationary phase and the rest of the mixture goes down the column.153
8721614318Peptide HormonesType of hormone that does not require transport proteins to remain soluble in the blood stream because they are hydrophilic and soluble in blood.154
8721614319Positive controlControls where a phenomenon is expected.155
8721614320LactoseHemiacetal that can be further reduced. in Beta position. Galactose + glucose156
8721614321epimerdiastereoisomer that is different at one chiral center157
8721614322Maltose2 glucose. Hemiacetal. Alpha position. Hemiacetal158
8721614323SucroseGlucose + furctose. Acetal. Alpha position.159
8721614324D-FructoseKetohexose160
8721614325D-mannoseAldohexose. Man with gun161
8721614326D-galactoseAldohexose162
8721614327D-riboseAldopentose. Everythings All Right163
8721614328Denaturing GelFor mRNA and DNA that are large and single stranded, this type of gel causes them to move like long rods (like double stranded DNA) instead of their clumped 3D structures.164
8721614329melting temperaturetemperature at which a protein is 50% denatured or unfolded165
8721614330Nuclear LocalizationSignaling that tells proteins (such as nuclear factors) that they can enter the nucleus of the cell166
8721614331Transcription FactorsAlso known as nuclear factors that have a DNA-binding site, so bind to response elements or specific nucleotide sequences. Also have activation domain, which is also known as the protein binding domain because they bind to other transcription factors.167
8721614332DNA Binding SiteSite in transcription factors that bind to response elements168
8721614333Activation DomainSite that allows transcription factors to bind to other proteins or transcription factors169
8721614334Signal sequence domainIts the sequence that tells the cell that a protein will be secreted out of the cell. This sequence makes ribosomes translating in the cytoplasm to move to the Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum.170
8721614335HydrophobicTypes of amino acids that are best for protein-protein interactions, such as dimerization.171

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