The properties of proteins give them a variety of functions: they form structural components of animals in particular, are important as enzymes, antibodies and some hormones, and their tendency to adopt specific shapes makes them important as membrane constituents.
Just like the glycosidic bond and the ester bond, making a peptide bond involves a condensation reaction, and breaking a peptide bond involves hydrolysis.
Comparative protein modelling is a technique where a protein threading scan is performed against a database of solved structures to produce a set of possible models which will match the sequence.
Elastin helps our blood vessels to stretch and recoil as blood is pumped through them, helping maintain the pressure wave of blood as it passes through.
Pepsin is an enzyme that digests protein in the stomach, the enzyme is made up of a single polypeptide chain of 327 amino acids, but it folds into a symmetrical tertiary structure.
At one position on the outside of each chain in the haemoglobin molecule, there is a space in which a haem group is held, these groups are called prosthetic groups.
Haemoglobin carries oxygen from the lungs to the tissues, and in the lungs an oxygen molecule binds to the iron in each of the four haem groups in the haemoglobin molecule.
Elastin is found in living things where they need to stretch or adapt their shape as part of life processes, such as skin stretching around bones and muscles, and in the lungs and bladder.