An interaction from a protein structure is shown below. This interaction is commonly referred to as a and consists of and ionic interactions.
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- Question 1Predicting Secondary Structure Which of the following peptides is more likely to take up an -helical structure, and why? (a) LKAENDEAARAMSEA (b) CRAGGFPWDQPGTSNQUESTION 22 When the final product of a series of enzymatically-catalyzed reactions binds to the first enzyme in the pathway to limit its production, it generally uses ___ because the structure of this final product is generally not similar to that of any of the enzyme's normal substrates. Allosteric activation Zymogen activation Covalent modification Competitive inhibition Allosteric inhibitionQUESTION NO. 1L-Carnitine is synthesized primarily in the liver but also in the kidneys and then transported to other tissues. It is most concentrated in tissues that use fatty acids as their primary fuel, such as skeletal and cardiac muscle. In this regard, L-carnitine plays an important role in energy production by conjugating to fatty acids for transport from the cytosol into the mitochondria. L-carnitine shuttle is an example of A. ion driven active transport B. facilitated diffusion C. simple diffusion D. ATP driven active transportE. symport F. antiportQUESTION NO.2 Statements: (1) Glucose is both a hexose and a aldose. (2) There can never be more than three enantiomers for a molecule. (3) All common disaccharides have beta-one-four linkages. Which statements are true?
- Question:- The enzyme aromatase is found in the cytoplasm of some cells and converts testosterone to estrogen. You decide to test aromatase from a particular cell, and oops, your lab partner admits he drastically increased the pH in all the test tubes. Which of the following is a likely result? a. The enzyme will be denatured and the substrate will not bind to the active site. b. The enzyme will convert testosterone to estrogen at a faster rate. c. The mistake will have no effect on the experiment, because enzymes are not sensitive to pH. d. The free energy will be lowered and the reaction will not proceed spontaneously.QUESTION NO. 1Targeting a protein to be degraded within proteasomes usually requires ubiquitin. In the function of ubiquitin all of the following are true except: A. ATP is required for activation of ubiquicin. B. a peptide bond forms between the carboxyl terminal of ubiquitin and an ε-amino group of a lysine . C. linkage of a protein to ubiquitin does not always mark it for degradation. D. the N-terminal amino acid is one determinant of selection for degradation. E. ATP is required by the enzyme that transfers the ubiquitin to the protein to be degraded QUESTION NO. 2Much of procollagen formation occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus which requires signal peptide. All of the following statements about targeting a protein for the ER are true except. A. signal peptide usually has a positively charged N-terminus and a stretch of hydrophobic amino acids. B. signal peptide emerging from a free ribosome binds signal recognition…Question: A decapeptide composed of ser, ala, IIe. his, trp, phe was treated with 1-flouro- 2,4-dinitrobenzene. It gave a DNP-his on the N terminal and free trp when treated with carboxypeptidase. Upon partial hydrolysis of the peptide, the following fragments were obtained. a. his-lle-phe-ala c. his-ala-phe e. ser-lle-his b. ala-phe-trp d. phe-ala-ser Give the amino acid sequence of the above decapeptide.
- QUESTION NO.1which of the following are chemical characteristics of monosaccharides? A. They contain multiple hydroxyl groupsB. they contain an aldehyde or ketone group C. They contain a branching carbon backbone D. They contain a carbon-carbon double bond E. Every carbon in a monosaccharide is fully reduced F. Every carbon in a monosaccharide is a chiral centerQUESTION NO.2 glucose absorption is hindered by _________ deficiency A. Retinol B. Thiamine C. Potassium D. Sodium E. Ascorbic acid F. Calciferol QUESTION NO.3 phospholipids is made primarily from A. L-glycerol 1-phosphate B. L-glycerol 3-phosphate C. D-glycerol 3-phosphate D. -glycerol 1-phosphate E. sn-glycerol 1-phosphate F. sn-glycerol 3-phosphatequestion 38 The constant region of each heavy chain determines the class of the heavy chain. True FalseQuestion 1: When the CAC is run in reverse by microorganisms that use it to fix carbon, the citrate synthase reaction is different and is catalyzed by an enzyme called ATP-citrate lyase. Write the reaction catalyzed by ATP-citrate lyase, then briefly (in one sentence) explain why the use of different chemistry (different from the ‘normal’ direction) makes sense here.
- QUESTION 26 During gluconeogenesis, whereby liver cells convert pyruvate to glucose, Fructose-6-phosphate (F6P) is converted to Glucose-6-phosphate (G6P). If the standard equilibrium concentrations are: [F6P] = 0.52 M and [G6P] = 1.48 M, then Keq’ is ______ and the reaction is ________. Fructose-6-P ó Glucose-6-P > 1; exergonic > 1; endergonic < 1; exergonic < 1; endergonicQUESTION 16 Peptidyl transferase activity (peptide bond enzyme activity) is associated with what site in the ribosome? E P A XQuestion 1: ATP synthases contains 3 copies of each of the large subunits (called α and β in the E. coli enzyme). The number of c subunits can vary among different ATP synthases, ranging from 8 to 17. Part a: Briefly explain how this variation in the number of c subunits would affect the energetics of ATP synthesis. For a fixed value of the protonmotive force, how much energy can the gradient provide to drive one revolution of the ATP synthase, in a synthase with 8 c- subunits versus a synthase with 17 c-subunits?