UPDATED Tertiary Structure Video: • Protein Structure (Par...
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In this video, I explain the tertiary structure of proteins, as well as the differences (and key features) of fibrous and globular proteins.
Tertiary structure, generally speaking, refers to the overall 3D structure of a protein, but more specifically includes interactions between side chains of amino acids in the protein.
With fibrous proteins, the polypeptide backbone does not fold back upon itself to form a sort of clump or glob (as is the case with globular proteins). Instead, fibrous proteins are strong, long rods that serve some sort of structural purpose. Examples include collagen and keratin.
With globular proteins, however, the polypeptide backbone does fold upon itself into a spherical sort of shape, and which amino acid residues exist on the surface and which amino acids are buried inside the glob depends on the environment in which the protein exists. Most often, globular proteins (the more common of the two types of 3D structures) exist in aqueous environments. Thus, the surfaces of globular proteins interacting with said aqueous environments are the polar or hydrophilic amino acids, while the interior of the proteins will consist of many nonpolar or hydrophobic amino acid residues burying themselves away from the aqueous environments.
This idea of the hydrophobic residues burying themselves away from aqueous environments is called the hydrophobic effect, which is one of the factors contributing to the folding of the polypeptide into a 3D globular protein. Another factor is hydrogen bonds, specifically those between the side chains (or R groups) of amino acids. These hydrogen bonds differ from the hydrogen bonds between the backbone that hold alpha helices and beta pleated sheets (in secondary structure) together. A third factor is electrostatic interactions. Acidic and basic side chains can carry negative or positive charges, respectively, depending on the pH of the environment. The interactions of said charges contributes to how the protein folds overall. (Remember: like charges repel, while opposite charges attract). The fourth factor, the formation of disulfide bridges / disulfide bonds, is distinct from the rest in that the interactions are covalent bonds between thiol groups on cysteine residues that form in oxidative environments and are denatured in reductive environments. The rest of the interactions are non-covalent interactions. It’s worth mentioning that detergents can denature hydrophobic interactions, heat can disrupt hydrogen bonds, and pH changes can disrupt electrostatic interactions.
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Негізгі бет Protein Structure (Part 4 of 4) - Tertiary Structure - Fibrous and Globular Proteins
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