The big idea: A protein is a chain of amino acids, but it does not stay as a straight chain.
It folds up into a precise 3D shape. We call this folded shape the protein's conformation.
The shape is not random — it is decided by the order of the amino acids in the chain. Because a protein's job depends on its shape, the sequence determines the function.
The four levels of protein structure: primary (sequence) → secondary (α-helices and β-pleated sheets) → tertiary (one chain folded into a 3D shape) → quaternary (two or more chains together). The sequence determines every higher level.
Interactive diagram
Explore the labelled diagram, charts and maps for this topic in full study mode.
- Amino acid
- The small subunit (monomer) that proteins are built from. Different amino acids have different side groups (R-groups).
- Polypeptide
- A chain of many amino acids joined by peptide bonds. One or more polypeptides make up a protein.
- Conformation
- The specific folded 3D shape a protein takes. The protein only works correctly in its normal conformation.
- Primary structure
- The sequence (order) of amino acids in a polypeptide chain.
Sequence decides shape: The single most important idea here: the amino acid sequence (primary structure) determines the protein's conformation.
Change the sequence and you change the folding — which can change, or destroy, what the protein does.
Biologists describe protein folding at four levels. Each level builds on the one before it, starting from the simple chain and ending with the finished protein.
You should be able to name each level and say what it is.
- Primary structure
- The sequence (order) of amino acids in the chain, joined by peptide bonds.
- Secondary structure
- Local folding of the chain into α-helices (coils) and β-pleated sheets, held by hydrogen bonds along the backbone.
- Tertiary structure
- The way the whole single chain folds into one overall 3D shape, held by bonds between the R-groups.
- Quaternary structure
- The way two or more folded polypeptide chains (subunits) fit together to make one functional protein (for example haemoglobin's four chains).
| Level | What it is | What holds it together |
|---|---|---|
| Primary | The order (sequence) of amino acids in the chain | Peptide bonds (formed by condensation) |
| Secondary | Local folding into α-helices (coils) and β-pleated sheets | Hydrogen bonds between parts of the backbone |
| Tertiary | The whole single chain folds into a precise 3D shape | Bonds between R-groups (e.g. hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds, disulfide bridges) |
| Quaternary | Two or more folded chains (subunits) join into one protein | The same R-group interactions, now between subunits |
Single-chain proteins
- Made of one polypeptide chain
- Have primary, secondary and tertiary structure
- Do not have quaternary structure
- Example: lysozyme (one folded chain)
Multi-chain proteins
- Made of two or more polypeptide chains
- Have primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure
- The subunits fit together into one protein
- Example: haemoglobin (four chains together)
Denaturation — losing the shape: The folded shape is held mostly by weak bonds (hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds).
High temperature or extreme pH breaks these weak bonds, so the chain unfolds and loses its 3D shape. This is called denaturation.
A denatured protein can no longer do its job — for example, a denatured enzyme stops catalysing its reaction. The peptide bonds stay intact (the sequence is unchanged), but the conformation is lost.
| Cause of denaturation | What happens to the bonds | Effect on the protein |
|---|---|---|
| High temperature | Atoms vibrate more, breaking the weak hydrogen and ionic bonds that hold the folded shape | The chain unfolds — its 3D shape (conformation) is lost |
| Extreme pH (very acidic or alkaline) | Extra H⁺ or OH⁻ ions interfere with the charged R-groups, breaking ionic and hydrogen bonds | The chain unfolds — its 3D shape is lost |
| Result | Only the weak bonds break — the peptide bonds (primary sequence) stay intact | The protein can no longer do its job (e.g. an enzyme stops working) |
Why denaturation usually can't be undone: Because the sequence still depends on the order of amino acids, denaturation does not break the chain itself.
But the protein often cannot re-fold into exactly the right shape, so the loss of function is usually permanent (think of how a cooked egg white never turns runny again).
Never wonder what to study next
Get a personalized daily plan based on your exam date, progress, and weak areas. We'll tell you exactly what to review each day.
How this is tested: On Paper 2 a 4-mark Outline question asks you to outline the structure of proteins — give the four levels as four separate scoring points (primary = sequence; secondary = α-helix / β-pleated sheet; tertiary = whole chain folds into a 3D shape; quaternary = two or more chains together).
On Paper 1 a multiple-choice question asks you to select the correct statements describing protein structure — the key true statement is that the amino acid sequence determines the conformation.
Denaturation appears as a short question: name what high temperature or extreme pH does to a protein's shape (unfolds it / denatures it).
IB-style question — outline the structure of proteins
Outline the structure of proteins. [4]
How to score all four marks
- Primary structure. The sequence (order) of amino acids in the polypeptide chain, joined by peptide bonds.
- Secondary structure. The chain coils and folds locally into α-helices and β-pleated sheets, held by hydrogen bonds.
- Tertiary structure. The whole single chain folds into a precise 3D shape (conformation), held by bonds between the R-groups.
- Quaternary structure. Two or more folded chains (subunits) join together to make one functional protein. (Award 1 mark for each level correctly described, up to 4.)
Final answer
Primary = sequence of amino acids; secondary = α-helices and β-pleated sheets held by hydrogen bonds; tertiary = the whole chain folded into a 3D shape; quaternary = two or more chains joined together.
The four levels of protein structure: primary (sequence) → secondary (α-helices and β-pleated sheets) → tertiary (one chain folded into a 3D shape) → quaternary (two or more chains together). The sequence determines every higher level.
Interactive diagram
Explore the labelled diagram, charts and maps for this topic in full study mode.
✓ Why this scores full marks: Each of the four levels is a separate, distinct point — primary, secondary, tertiary, quaternary.
An 'outline' worth 4 marks needs four scoring points. Do not write 'it folds into a shape' three different ways — name each level and say what it is.