| Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Polarity (ability to form H-bonds in solution) Ability to ionize (act as weak acid/weak base in solution)
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        | Term 
 
        | H-bonds are what type of interactions? |  | Definition 
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        | Term 
 
        | Typical length of an O-H bond? Length of an H-bond in water? |  | Definition 
 
        | O-H = 1 Angstrom H-bond = 1.8 Angstroms
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Directional -> O---H-O bond is linear (forms a straight line) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | In ice, one molecule of water forms how many neighboring H-bonds? |  | Definition 
 
        | Forms H-bonds with 4 neighbors (maximum) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Average lifetime of 1 H-bond? |  | Definition 
 
        | 10^-12 seconds = 1 picosecond |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | In liquid water, how many neighboring H-bonds & why? |  | Definition 
 
        | 3.4 bonds w/ neighbors; due to there being increased entropy in this state (less order) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Thermodynamic reasoning for the dissolution of glucose... |  | Definition 
 
        | It is a polar solute, so it can readily form H-bonds with water; as the solid disperses in the water, the entropy of the system increases (S>0); entropic effect of less of order of solute is main reason |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Thermodynamic reasoning for dissolution of salt in water... |  | Definition 
 
        | Normally as a solid, see Na & Cl ions in crystal lattice structure; as it enters water, see electrostatic attraction of dipole in water molecules to the ions (6 moc H2O/ion) - causes entropy of the whole system to increase (freeing of ions from lattice) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Main interaction for NON-polar solutes in water? |  | Definition 
 
        | van der Waal's interactions - transient dipoles based on varying electron densities of atoms; NOT TRUE ELECTROSTATIC INTERACTIONS |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Non-polar solute aggregation in water is known as... |  | Definition 
 
        | The Hydrophobic Effect; aggregation is mainly an ENTROPIC EFFECT (solutes aggregate to minimize SA exposed to water, so water becomes less ordered) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What is the primary contributor to protein conformational changes? |  | Definition 
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        | Term 
 
        | Concentration of pure water |  | Definition 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | pH = pKa - 1 (90% HA, 10% A) |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | pH = pKa + 1 (10% HA, 90% A) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | All but one aa is chiral, which is not? |  | Definition 
 | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Which amino acid is NOT S (has R chirality)? |  | Definition 
 
        | Cysteine because of SH group |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | The point at which a molecule has no net charge |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | R Mass = Amino Acid Mass - 18 (MW of water) 
 In a polypeptide, the N and C-terminal amino acids will be represented by amino acid MW and the internal aa's will be represented by residue masses
 |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What is isoelectric focusing used for? |  | Definition 
 
        | To separate different proteins based on different pI values; to determine the unknown pI value of a protein |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | SDS-PAGE is what method of protein purification? |  | Definition 
 
        | Semi-quantitative method; determine the relative amounts of proteins in a sample (mole ratios) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What property does SDS-PAGE use to separate proteins? |  | Definition 
 
        | Separates proteins based on differences in MW (all proteins w/ SDS have same charge to mass ratio and roughly the same shape) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What is proportional to the amount of dye that binds to a protein? |  | Definition 
 
        | The protein's mass; heavier proteins bind more dye |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What interactions typically hold oligomeric proteins together? How can we separate the individual protomers? |  | Definition 
 
        | Hydrophobic interactions Can use SDS to separate protomers - binds to hydrophobic surfaces which causes protomers to separate
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        | Term 
 
        | What conditions are S-S bonds formed/broken in? |  | Definition 
 
        | Formed = OXIDIZING Broken = REDUCING
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        | Term 
 
        | 2D Gel Electrophoresis... |  | Definition 
 
        | Combination of IEF and SDS PAGE; first use IEF to separate proteins based on pI, then SDS PAGE to separate based on MW |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Where do aromatic aa side chains absorb mainly at? |  | Definition 
 | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What are limitations of using A280 (absorbance) to measure the purity and amounts of a protein sample? |  | Definition 
 
        | Not very sensitive (only to 50 micrograms/mL) Can only use on random mixes; cannot be done on pure samples
 |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | If you have a pure sample of known F/Y/W composition, how can you calculate the concentration? |  | Definition 
 
        | Use the known relative amounts to determine the extinction coefficient -> then rearrange Beer's Law formula to calculate the concentration of protein |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Can SDS break S-S bonds alone? |  | Definition 
 
        | NO. Need to add a reducing agent to break bonds |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What interactions cause dye molecules to associate with proteins? |  | Definition 
 | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | 1 unit = amount of protein it takes to convert 1 micromole of substrate in 1 minute at 25 degrees C |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Measure of purity; # of units/total protein (mg) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What is typically the 1st step in a purification process? |  | Definition 
 
        | Separation of proteins based on solubility differences |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Solubility at LOW [salt]... |  | Definition 
 
        | Charges on different side-chains cause electrostatic interactions between proteins and they aggregate and precipitate out of solution (LOW solubility); little hydrophobic effects because [salt] is low |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Solubility as [salt] increases... |  | Definition 
 
        | As the [salt] increases, the salt ions coat the proteins in "compensating charges" to reduce interactions (shields proteins) - less aggregation (HIGH solubility) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Solubility at HIGH [salt]... |  | Definition 
 
        | At very high [salt] there are so many ions that they shield water molecules as well, interrupting with the H-bonding and other intermolecular interactions between the water and protein; less H2O to solvate proteins Hydrophobic surfaces of proteins aggregate together to cause ppt out of solution (LOW solubility) - aggregation due to hydrophobic effects
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Then the protein is NET POSITIVE - charges repel each other (HIGH solubility) |  | 
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        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Proteins aggregate due to hydrophobic effects because they are neutral (LOW solubility) |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Proteins are NET NEGATIVE; charges repel and proteins remain in solution (HIGH solubility) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Typical column molecule in CATION EXCHANGE? |  | Definition 
 
        | Carboxymethyl cellulose (-CH2-COO) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | Why is the hydrophobic effect more prevalent at high [salt]? |  | Definition 
 
        | It is due to an excess of ions in the solution which tie up more water molecules; this prevents them from solvating the proteins which allows for more hydrophobic binding (higher affinity to binding) |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Eluted volume of proteins TOO LARGE for the pores in size exclusion chromotography; = volume outside of the beads in the column |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Eluted volume of proteins which traveled through the beads in size exclusion chromotography; = void volume + volume of pores of beads |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What is the ratio of elution volume/void volume dependent on? |  | Definition 
 
        | The shape of the protein itself; rod-shaped proteins of identical MW to spherical proteins will elute FASTER in size exclusion columns because they behave as larger proteins (length of rod = diameter of "larger protein") |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Phenylisothiocyanate (PITC); benzene ring-N=C=S 
 Reacts with ALL free amino groups (including those at N-terminus and on Lys)
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | What can be used to recognize the PTHaa removed by Edman degradation? |  | Definition 
 
        | HPLC (combination of cation exchange and hydrophobic chromotography) |  | 
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        | Term 
 
        | What conditions is Edman degradation run under? |  | Definition 
 
        | ALKALINE - need alkaline conditions to make the amino group a good nucleophile |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Limitations of Edman Degradation |  | Definition 
 
        | PITC reacts twice with Lys side chains; however, only cleaves the peptide bond Limitation of less than 100 aa's
 Often there is NO free N-terminus
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Cleavage Sites of Enzymes |  | Definition 
 
        | Trypsin - after K, R Chymotrypsin - after F, Y, W
 Elastase - after G, A, S, V
 V8 Protease - after D, E
 Asp-N - before D, E
 
 ****Serine proteases do not cleave before (on N-terminus side of) Pro
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Problems with A.A. Composition sequencing? |  | Definition 
 
        | Destroys all Trp Hydrolyzes all amide bonds present -> converts all Asn to Asp and all Gln to Glu
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Qualifications for a "similar" sequence? |  | Definition 
 
        | Greater than/equal to 25% sequence identity |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | Divergent evolution will produce which form of homologue? |  | Definition 
 
        | Paralogue - two similar proteins with usually different functions within the same organism |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | 2 similar proteins in different organisms with the same function |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Fraction of bound receptors ([PL]/[P] + [PL]) |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | How does a molecule of dye bind to a protein? |  | Definition 
 
        | Binds hydrophobically (hydrophobic effect); will bind independent of the aa composition |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | To use standards to determine MW, need 2 things: |  | Definition 
 
        | Need void volume < elution volume Plot graph of Ve/Vo vs. logMW
 |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | How to elute affinity chromotography column? |  | Definition 
 
        | Add ligand in solution in free form (attached to nothing); binds to protein in mobile phase and causes it to bind less w/ the column, elutes |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | When using a His-tag, what is used to elute the column? |  | Definition 
 
        | Add in free IMIDAZOLE; mirrors the His side chain so that it competes for binding with the metals on the column (Co and Ni) |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | What is used to recognize PTHaa's? |  | Definition 
 
        | Characteristic elution times in a column; NOT the wavelength of absorption |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | What is the byproduct of cleavage w/ CNBr? |  | Definition 
 
        | Homoserine lactone where the Met residue was located |  | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 
        | What molecule can be used to block S-S bonds from forming? |  | Definition 
 | 
        |  | 
        
        | Term 
 | Definition 
 
        | Leu and Ile cannot be distinguished; both have the same molecular weight |  | 
        |  |