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03 August 2014

#13. Protein - Primary, Secondary, Tertiary and Quaternary structure

Amino acids can be linked together in any order to form a long chain - polypeptide.

Protein molecules can be made up of the same polypeptides or different polypeptides.




1. Primary structure: The sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide or protein molecule. 

The 3 letters in each circle are the first 3 letters of the amino acid.

2. Secondary structure: The way in which the primary structure of a polypeptide chain folds.


  • After synthesis, polypeptide chains are folded or pleated into different shapes: Alpha helix (regular 3D shape) and Beta-pleated sheet (twisted, pleated sheet)
  • The helix is hold by many Hydrogen bonds between amino acids at different places in the chain, giving the shape great stability.

The typical Alpha helix is about 11 amino acids long.

3. Tertiary structure: The final 3D structure of a protein, involving coiling or pleating of the secondary structure.
Tertiary structure.

Tertiary structure is held by:
  1. Hydrogen Bonds - formed between amino acids at different points in the chain.
  2. Disulphide Bonds - a strong double bond (S=S) formed between the Sulphur atoms within the Cysteine monomers.  
  3. Ionic Bonds - formed between 2 oppositely charged 'R' groups (+ and -) found close to each other.
  4. Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions: amino acids may be hydrophobic or hydrophilic; in a water based environment, the hydrophobic parts of globular protein are orientated towards centre and the hydrophilic parts are towards edges.


4. Quaternary structure:  ≥ 2 polypeptide chains join together to form a protein.




  • Some proteins are made up of multiple polypeptide chains, sometimes with an inorganic component (e.g. a haem group in haemoglogin) called a Prosthetic Group. These proteins will only be able to function if all subunits are present.
  • The polypeptide chains are held by the same type of bonds as in the tertiary structure


The tertiary and quaternary structures of a protein, and its properties, are determined by its primary structure.

Additional sources: Some parts of the note are taken from A level Notes


 Syllabus 2015

 (g) explain the meaning of the terms primary structure, secondary structure, tertiary structure and quaternary structure of proteins and describe the types of bonding (hydrogen, ionic, disulfide and hydrophobic interactions) that hold the molecule in shape;



Syllabus 2016  - 2018

b)   explain the meaning of the terms primary structure, secondary structure, tertiary structure and quaternary structure of proteins and describe the types of bonding  (hydrogen, ionic, disulfide and hydrophobic interactions) that  hold these molecules in shape





3 comments:

  1. I would like more information about this, because it is very nice. Thanks for sharing.

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  2. "The tertiary and quaternary structures of a protein, and its properties, are determined by its primary structure."

    Determined?

    Have you heard of the 'multiple minima problem'?

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  3. "The tertiary and quaternary structures of a protein, and its properties, are determined by its primary structure."

    The primary structure of a protein (an amino acid sequence of a polypeptide chain) constitutes and restricts – but does not determine – its secondary structure (alpha-helix or beta-sheet).Likewise, the secondary structure of a protein (an alpha helix or a beta sheet) constitutes and restricts – but does not determine – its tertiary structure, its bending into an irregular shape.There are secondary and tertiary structure predictor computer programs.
    The thermodynamical tertiary structure predicting method, the computation of the thermodynamically most stable tertiary structure from a given sequence of amino acids predicts many minimal energy conformations. But, a protein has its unique tertiary structure (its native state), and (with some exceptions) it will not fold into other equally probable forms.
    This referred to as ‘the multiple minima problem’.
    The more effective tertiary structure predicting method is homology modeling (template-based modeling or comparative modeling), which uses experimentally determined, known tertiary structures of homologous proteins as templates.
    For example, the forms of various hemoglobin macromolecules are very similar notwithstanding the very different amino-acid sequences of their polypeptide chains. In all known amino-acid sequences of hemoglobins, only two percent of the amino-acids (3 out of 140-150) are the same in the same positions, but most of the twists and turns of these polypeptide chains are identical. (B. K. Vainshtein et al., 1975)
    The relative effectiveness of the homology modeling method is attributable not to the known amino-acid sequences, but to the known tertiary structures of homologous proteins as templates.
    The nucleotide sequence of a gene corresponds to the amino acid sequence, the primary structure of a corresponding protein, but does not correspond to the tertiary structure of that protein; that is a gene does not ‘program’ for, does not determine a functional (e.g. not denatured) protein macromolecule.

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