Electroneutral compounds as the proton donated by COO- is given to +H3N. This means that they are unreactive and hydrophobic.
Examples of these are:
Glycine
Alanine
Proline
Valine
Leucine
Isoleucine
Methionine
Aromatic a-radical
Contains an aromatic chain
Examples of these are:
Phenyl-alanine
Tyrosine
Tryptophan
Polar uncharged alpha radicals
Amino acids with polar side chains- can be in a hydrogen bonding interactions
Examples of these are:
Cysteine
Threonine
Serine
Asparagine
Glutamine
Positively charged alpha radical
Amino acids with at least one NH3+ group on its side chain (basic side chain)
Examples of these are:
Lysine
Arginine
Histidine
Negatively charged alpha radical
Amino acids with an acidic side chain
Examples of these are:
Aspartic acid
Glutamic acid
Structure of proteins
Primary structure of the proteins- Amino acid residues upon binding to each other. This forms polypeptide chains, which is the primary structure. It is a sequence of a chain of amino acids
An example of this is lysozyme- which helps wounds in the mouth to heal quicker
Secondary structure
Alpha helix-each spiral of the helix is 3.6 amino acid residues long. Hydrogen bonds forms between each other which links sequence of amino acids together
Residue is a term for a monomeric unit of a polymer
Beta sheetsformed by hydrogen bonds between the NH group of one amino acid and the CO groups of neighbouring parallel/antiparallel chains
Tertiary structure
This is formed by certain attractions between alpha helices and beta pleated sheets.
There can be disulfide covalent bonds, hydrogen bonding, van der waals etc
Quaternary structure
Haemoglobin has a quaternary structure as it has 4 16kDa subunits that form a single protein. Several protein molecules are bound together to create a single unit
Protein structural domain
It is an independently folder region within the 3D structure of a protein. Different parts of the protein are responsible for a range of different chemical interactions. Protein structural domains can do specific jobs and comes together to build a protein with various functions.
Enzymes are specific proteins that catalyse biochemical reactions.
All known enzymes are divided into 6 classes: Oxidoreductases, which catalyse oxidation/reduction reactions, attaching and removing electrons; Transferases, which transfer groups of atoms from one molecule to another, for example, kinase attaches phosphoric acid to a protein to stimulate proteins activity; Hydrolases, which catalyse reactions associated with hydrolysis, using water to break compounds; Liases, which attach functional groups to pi- bonds; Isomerases, which catalyse reactions of isomerisation, for example, the catalysis of glucose and fructose as they have the same molecular for