Exam Iii: Only V V
Exam Iii: Only V V
Exam Iii: Only V V
III. __________________/25
TOTAL /100
A. Vmax.
B. intercept on the l/V axis.
C. intercept on the l/[S] axis.
D. curvature of the plot.
E. pK of the plot.
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NAME ________________________________
6. Protein S will fold into its native conformation only when protein Q is
also present in solution. However, protein Q can fold into its native
conformation without protein S. Protein Q therefore, may function as a
____________ for protein S.
A. molecular chaperone
B. protein precursor
C. ligand
D. supersecondary structural unit
E. structural motif
9. Allosteric enzymes:
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NAME ________________________________
A. alternative inhibitor.
B. allosteric inhibitor.
C. homotropic activator (positive effector).
D. competitive inhibitor.
E. transition-state analog.
14. Which of the following statements about the Bohr effect is true?
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NAME ________________________________
18. What is the difference between the data in a file or record from the
GenBank database versus that from the Protein database? (5 pts)
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NAME ________________________________
22. You have been working on the mechanism of a b-keto decarboxylase. You
find that reaction of the b-keto substrate with the enzyme in H218O
yields product with the keto group labeled with 18O. This is evidence
for a mechanism with what kind of intermediate? What further experiment
could you do to confirm the mechanism? How do the results of either
experiment argue against metal ion catalysis? (10 pts)
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Answers for Exam 3 11/6/2000
Test Correct
Question Answer
The following questions are in section “Multiple Choice”
1 B
2 C
3 B
4 E
5 C
6 A
7 C
8 E
9 C
10 A
11 B
12 E
13 A
14 A
15 B
The following questions are in section “Short Answer”
16 In a globular, water-soluble protein such as myoglobin,
most of the hydrophobic side chains are inside the
protein and away from the aqueous solvent, while most of
the polar and charged residues have their side chains on
the outside surface, in contact with the solvent. In a
membrane protein such as rhodopsin, the hydrophobic
residues occur on the outside, where they contact the
lipid bilayer, and the polar residues tend to cluster on
the two faces of the membrane bilayer, where they
contact the polar, aqueous phase.
---
17 The binding of glucose to hexokinase induces a
conformation change that brings the amino acid residues
that facilitate the phosphoryl transfer into position in
the active site. Binding of water alone does not induce
this conformational change.
---
18 GenBank data is in the form of DNA sequences. Protein
data is in the form of protein structures with a list of
x, y, z coordinates.
---
19 When a mutation in the R subunit of cAMP-dependent
protein kinase prevents R-C interaction, the inhibitory
effect of R is lost, and the catalytic subunit continues
to phosphorylate target proteins regardless of cAMP
concentration.
---
20 (a) Km; (b) Vmax; (c) both; (d) both; (e) neither
---
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Test Correct
Question Answer
21
Hb in blood
Y
Hb + neg. effector
[O 2]
Negative heterotropic effectors could be protons (lower
pH), 2,3-bisphosphoglycerate(BPG), or carbon dioxide
---
The following questions are in section “Mechanisms”
22
The appearance of 18O in the product keto group indicates
that the keto group exchanges with water during the
mechanism. This is evidence for a Schiff base
intermediate in the mechanism. This can be confirmed by
reduction of this imine to the non-hydrolyzable amine
using sodium borohydride (NaBH4). Treatment of the
enzyme with NaBH4, in the presnece of substrate, will
result in the inactivation of the enzyme. A control
would be to do the same treatment in the absence of
substrate, which should not affect enzyme activity.
Metal ion catalysis would polarize the keto group such
that the negative charge from the resulting carbanion
formed following decarboxylation can be delocalized, and
thus stabilized. This role does not require the
exchange of the keto group with bulk water, nor the
presence of an imine.
---
23 The serine has a polar hydroxyl, with the oxygen
functioning as an electronegative nucleophile. A nearby
histidine residue, with pKa » 6.0, however, can function
as a base to abstract the proton from the serine
hydroxyl group. The result of transfering the proton
from the serine hydroxyl to the histidine imidazole ring
is to increase substantially the electronegativity of
the serine oxygen, making it a much stronger
nucleophile. This, in turn, lowers the activation
energy of the covalent catalysis between serine and the
carbonyl carbon of a peptide bond. The protonated His
is further stabilized by delocalization of the positive
charge by a low-barrier H-bond with the neighboring
Asp-102 residue. The reaction would look like this:
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Test Correct
Question Answer
oxy-anion
hole PEPTIDE
O
R SUBSTRATE
+ C
COO -
CH
HN CH NH
3
:
R CH2 O
H
:
Ser-195 N
CH2 low-barrier
ENZYME
His-57 H-bond
O-
NH
:
CH2 C
O
Asp-102
---
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