Practice Flashcards
What is an amino acid?
Track your progress — Sign up free to save your progress and get smart review reminders based on spaced repetition.
All Flashcards in Topic 2.2
Below are all 62 flashcards for this topic. Sign up free to track your progress and get personalized review schedules.
2.2.112 cards
What is an amino acid?
The **monomer (subunit)** that **proteins** are built from.
What four groups are bonded to the central carbon of an amino acid?
An **amino group (—NH₂)**, a **carboxyl group (—COOH)**, a **hydrogen (—H)** and a **variable R group**.
Which group gives the 'amino' in 'amino acid'?
The **amino group (—NH₂)** — a nitrogen-containing group.
Which group gives the 'acid' in 'amino acid'?
The **carboxyl group (—COOH)**.
What is the R group?
The **variable side chain** of an amino acid — the only part that differs from one amino acid to the next.
How many different amino acids are there, and why?
**20** — because there are **20 different R groups**; the rest of the structure is identical.
Which parts of an amino acid are the same in all 20 of them?
The **central carbon**, the **amino group**, the **carboxyl group** and the **hydrogen** — only the R group differs.
Which elements does an amino acid contain?
**Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen and nitrogen** (some also contain sulfur).
Where does the nitrogen in an amino acid come from?
From the **amino group (—NH₂)**.
How can you tell a protein from a carbohydrate or lipid by its elements?
A protein contains **nitrogen**; carbohydrates and lipids contain only **C, H and O**.
Do carbohydrates and lipids contain nitrogen?
**No** — they contain only carbon, hydrogen and oxygen. Nitrogen is found in proteins / amino acids.
How many central carbons does a single amino acid have?
**One** — all four groups attach to this single central carbon.
2.2.212 cards
What reaction joins two amino acids?
**Condensation** — it forms a **peptide bond** and releases one water molecule.
What is a peptide bond?
The covalent bond (**CO—NH**) that joins two amino acids; it forms by condensation.
Which two groups react to form a peptide bond?
The **carboxyl group (—COOH)** of one amino acid and the **amino group (—NH₂)** of the next.
Which atoms are removed when two amino acids join?
An **—OH** (from the carboxyl group) and an **—H** (from the amino group), leaving together as **one water molecule**.
How much water is released per peptide bond formed?
**One** molecule of water (H₂O) per peptide bond.
Define a dipeptide.
**Two amino acids** joined by a single peptide bond.
Define a polypeptide.
A long chain of **many amino acids** joined by peptide bonds.
What reaction breaks a peptide bond?
**Hydrolysis** — one water molecule is **added** across the bond, splitting the chain into amino acids.
When does hydrolysis of peptide bonds happen in the body?
During **digestion**, when dietary protein is broken back down into amino acids.
How many peptide bonds are in a single chain of n amino acids?
**n − 1** — each bond links a pair, so there is one fewer bond than amino acids.
How do you count peptide bonds across several chains?
**Total amino acids − number of chains** (each chain has one fewer bond than its amino acids).
How many peptide bonds are in a chain of 5 amino acids?
**4** (5 − 1).
2.2.312 cards
How many different amino acids build human proteins?
**20** — about **nine** are essential and about **eleven** are non-essential.
Define an essential amino acid.
An amino acid the body **cannot synthesise (make)**, so it **must be obtained from the diet**.
Define a non-essential amino acid.
An amino acid the body **can synthesise (make)** for itself, so it **does not have to be supplied by the diet**.
Does 'non-essential' mean an amino acid is unimportant?
**No** — every amino acid is needed to build proteins. 'Non-essential' only means it is **not required in the diet**, because the body can make it.
What does 'synthesise' mean here?
To **make / build** a molecule inside the body from simpler materials.
Which type of amino acid must come from food?
**Essential** amino acids — the body cannot make them.
How do you distinguish essential from non-essential amino acids?
**Essential = cannot be made by the body → must be eaten**; **non-essential = can be made by the body → need not be eaten**.
Why can most animal proteins supply protein needs in one food?
They contain **all nine essential amino acids** in a single source (meat, fish, eggs, dairy).
Why is a single plant protein sometimes not enough?
A single plant protein often **lacks one or more essential amino acids**.
What must a vegan / plant-based eater do for protein?
**Combine different plant proteins** (e.g. rice + beans) so that **all nine essential amino acids** are supplied.
What happens if an essential amino acid is missing from the diet?
The body has **no source** of it, so it **cannot build the proteins** that contain it (a protein deficiency).
A table marks an amino acid 'essential' — what can you conclude about how to get it?
It **cannot be synthesised by the body**, so it **must be obtained from the diet**.
2.2.413 cards
What is a protein's 'conformation'?
Its specific **folded 3D shape**. The protein only works correctly in its normal conformation.
What determines a protein's conformation (folded shape)?
The **sequence (order) of its amino acids** — the primary structure.
What is the primary structure of a protein?
The **sequence (order) of amino acids** in the chain, joined by peptide bonds.
What is the secondary structure of a protein?
Local folding into **α-helices** (coils) and **β-pleated sheets**, held by **hydrogen bonds**.
What is the tertiary structure of a protein?
The way the **whole single chain folds** into one overall **3D shape**, held by bonds between the R-groups.
What is the quaternary structure of a protein?
The way **two or more folded chains (subunits)** join together to make one functional protein (e.g. haemoglobin).
Name the four levels of protein structure in order.
**Primary → secondary → tertiary → quaternary.**
Which proteins do NOT have quaternary structure?
**Single-chain** proteins — quaternary structure needs **two or more** chains.
What holds the secondary structure together?
**Hydrogen bonds** between parts of the polypeptide backbone.
What is denaturation?
The **loss of a protein's folded 3D shape**, so it can no longer do its job.
What two conditions commonly cause denaturation?
**High temperature** and **extreme pH** (very acidic or alkaline).
When a protein denatures, what is preserved and what is lost?
The **amino acid sequence (peptide bonds) is preserved**; the **folded 3D shape (conformation) is lost**.
Why does a denatured enzyme stop working?
Its **active site changes shape**, so the **substrate no longer fits** and the reaction is not catalysed.
2.2.513 cards
What determines a protein's function?
Its specific **3-D shape**, which comes from the **order of its amino acids**.
What is meant by the functional diversity of proteins?
Proteins, as a group, can carry out a very **wide range of different jobs** — more than any other type of molecule.
Name a protein that acts as an enzyme, and what it does.
**Amylase** — it **catalyses** the breakdown of starch into sugar.
Name a transport protein and what it carries.
**Haemoglobin** — it **carries oxygen** in red blood cells.
Name a structural protein and where it gives strength.
**Collagen** — it strengthens **skin, tendons and bone**.
Name a protein hormone and what it signals.
**Insulin** — it signals cells to **take up glucose** from the blood.
What role do antibodies perform?
**Defence** — they **bind to specific pathogens** so the body can destroy them.
Which proteins make muscle contract?
**Actin and myosin** — contractile proteins that generate **movement**.
Name a pigment protein and its job.
**Rhodopsin** — it **absorbs light** in the rod cells of the retina (needed for vision).
Define a protein deficiency.
A **shortage of, or fault in, a particular protein**, so the job it normally does cannot be carried out.
How do you predict the effect of a protein deficiency?
Name the **protein's job**, then state that this **job is lost** — so the process that relied on it **fails**.
Which protein deficiency would most likely impair vision, and why?
A shortage of **rhodopsin** — it normally **absorbs light** in rod cells, so without it light is not detected and vision is impaired.
Why can proteins do so many different jobs?
The 20 amino acids can be **ordered in countless ways**, giving countless **shapes** — each shape gives a different **function**.
Topic 2.2 study notes
Full notes & explanations for Proteins
Biology exam skills
Paper structures, command terms & tips
Want smart review reminders?
Sign up free to track your progress. Our spaced repetition algorithm will tell you exactly which cards to review and when.
Start Free