Proteins

Table of Contents

Definition

  • biomolecules that are made up of building blocks of amino acids joined by peptide bonds.
  • within the membrane, nonpolar amino acids
    • hydrophobic
    • anchors protein into membrane
  • on outer surfaces of membrane in fluid, polar amino acids
    • hydrophilic
    • extend into extracellular fluid & into cytosol.
  • C-terminus is the top side of the bilayer
  • N-terminus is the bottom side of the bilayer

Functions

Transporter

  • serves as a channel for materials to go through and out.

Enzyme Activity

Cell surface receptor

Cell surface identity marker

  • serves as antigen

Cell adhesion

Attachment to the cytoskeleton

  • serves to have the cell a defined structure.

Classes

Peripheral proteins

Integral proteins

  • also called integrins
  • goes through the Phospholipids Bilayer
  • monotropic attached to only one side of the membrane
  • Lipid-anchored protein attached to lipids embedded to the lipid bilayer.
    • Ex: Glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)

Transmembrane protein

  • spans across the membrane
  • can be either bitropic or polytropic
  • bitropic when the protein only spans once
  • polytropic when the protein spans multiple times
  • Types
    • α-helical/Helix Bundle Proteins
      • found in all types of biological membrane
    • β-barrel Proteins
      • found in outer layers of gram-negative bacteria, mitochondrion, and chloroplast

References

Principal Components

(Principal Components > Proteins)

Date: August 26, 2023

Author: Paul Gerald D. Pare

Emacs 29.1 (Org mode 9.6.6)