Hey this is a good topic. I've noticed they change it heaps too. Like some say covalent bonding in primary and others say peptide. What do you guys reckon would be best to say if the question came up? Also with tertiary I have written down, hydrogen, ionic, disulfide bridges, dipole-dipole... Once again, which would you guys put down.. Thanks.
Buzz words.
Proteins primary: Covalent, peptide links, amino acids.
Secondary: Hydrogen bonding of the C (double bond) O and the N-H, coiling, pleating.
Tertiary: Overall 3d shape, determines activity (in case of enzymes), disulfide links make it harder to denature coz its strong covalent bonding, ionic attractions, hydrogen bonding, dispersion forces.
Note: Heat and changes in pH can denature a protein to its primary structure. This is because the bonds responsible for the tertiary structure are broken when heated or pH changes. As the tertiary structure is responsible for biological activity (such a active sites on enzymes) this makes sense.
A good question is to ask: which part of a protein (taken from the small intestine) is affected when it is heated with a strong acid?
A) Primary
B) Secondary
C) Tertiary
D) all of the above.
DNA -> Primary: ORDER of nitrogen bases as they are covalently bonded to the deoxy's. IT IS NOT involved in peptide links
Secondary -> Double helix, hydrogen bonding CG = 3, AT = 2, nitrogen bases ordered complementary.
Tertiary -> bonded with histones which have a +ve charge, DNA = -ve charge, SUPERCOILING.