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Protein Degradation 8/15/13
Protein degradation 8/15/13
25
Medical
Professional
08/18/2013

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Term
Where is info found for folding?
What controls the folding (not proteins)
Typical for what size of protein?
Definition
In the primary structure of proteins. Thermodynamically controlled. typical for proteins <100
Term
What drives side chain folding?
What happens when its driven?
How was it proven?
Definition
Hydrophobicity drives and compacts protein. Polar groups get packed inwards, cant interact with water. Proven by only polar amino acid chains cant fold.
Term
What did levinthal prove?
Definition
Proteins cant fold randomly, not enough time in universe.
Term
What is the foldon concept?
Definition
sections of protein fold and act as a template for other parts to fold
Term
What competes with protein folding?
Definition
protein aggregation
Term
What does concentration favor?
Definition
Concentration favors aggregation of protein rather than folding.
Term
"Activity"
Definition
macromolecules being crowded by other molecules, which limites their space and they act like they are in higher concentration
Term
Excluded volume effect due to crowding causes what?
Definition
effective concentration is higher, association rate constatnts of larger molecules increase, solubility goes down, rate of aggregation goes up.
Term
Aggregation: Competes with? puts what at risk during translation? What is special about nuclear proteins?
Definition
Folding, puts nascent chains at risk, and negative DNA interacts with positive histones which can cause aggregation.
Term
Why are mutant proteins bad?
Definition
Foldon sequence not working well, could take more time, more time for aggregation. Mutations can cause aggregation themselves.
Term
What do foldases do? 2 types?
Definition
catalyze proper folding? peptidyl-propyl cis trans isomerase (PPI), and Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI).
Term
PPI. What stands for? What does it do?
Definition
peptidyl-probly cis trans isomerase. catalyzes isomerization of protines, acts on proline residue to convert from trans to cis
Term
PDI. What stands for? What does it do? In what family?
Definition
protein disulfide isomerase. Oxidizes proteins quickly as compared to invitro which is slow. Catalyzes disulfife interchange reacctions, faciliites formation and shuffling of protein disulfides. In thioredoxin superfamily.
Term
Molecular chaperones? What do they do? allow proteins to do what?
Definition
prevent and correct interactions, like aggregation or wrong folding. Allow proteins to fold and assemble in a crowded enviornment in a fast way.
Term
Are chaperones permanent?
Definition
No, they leave once folded.
Term
Structure of molecular chaperones?
Definition
large diverse groups, non-covalent interaction, sometimes use ATP.
Term
low MW chaperones, examples? What do they do?
Definition
Hsp70, Hsp40, papD, prefoldin. Bind to hydrophobic sections until protein gets folded. Do not affect conformation
Term
High MW. Examples? How do they act?
Definition
GroEl, TriC. Cage principle, sequester proteins so they can fold away from others.
Term
What can a mutation cause?
Definition
aggregated protein, gain of too much stability and not let protein be changed or folded, can gain toxicity.
Term
What can incomplete folding cause?
Definition
loses function, loses stability, degrades.
Term
Cystic fibrosis: Caused by? 70% have what? What protein affected? What happens? Aggregation or misfolding?
Definition
Genetic mutation. 70% have deletion of phenylalanine at 508. Protein CFTR, misfolded. Cant transport NaCl out of cell so raised infection, blocks digestion by blocking pancreatic ducts, lowers nutritional uptake.
Term
Lissencephaly (smooth brain) what happens? Caused by?
Definition
Does not let neurons migrate well. lower tubulin function or certain microtubule function. R264T tubulin missnse affects chaperone mediated folding. Does not affect tubulin, but affects the chaperone.
Term
Amyloidoses. What type of disease? how do they work?
Definition
Aggregation disease. Dominated by beta sheet structure. gains toxicity.
Term
A-1 antitrypsin deficiency. Due to? what happens? Where happens?
Definition
misfolding or aggregation. loss of normal protease inhibitor. Aggregates in liver, causing damage. Lack of protein in lungs causing damage by neutrophil elastase.
Term
Prion disease. Caused by? associated with?
Definition
Infection of previously misfolded proteins, they act as a template for properply folded proteins and misfolds them. Associated with transmissable spongiform encephalopathy.
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