Biology 2e
2nd Edition
ISBN: 9781947172517
Author: Matthew Douglas, Jung Choi, Mary Ann Clark
Publisher: OpenStax
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Textbook Question
Chapter 3, Problem 17RQ
Mad cow disease is an infectious disease where one misfolded protein causes all other copies of the protein to being misfolding. This is an example of a disease impacting
structure.
- primary
- secondary
- tertiary
- quaternary
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Chapter 3 Solutions
Biology 2e
Ch. 3 - Figure 3.5 What kind of sugars are these, aldose...Ch. 3 - Figure 3.23 Which categories of amino acid would...Ch. 3 - Figure 3.33 A mutation occurs, and cytosine is...Ch. 3 - Dehydration synthesis leads to formation of...Ch. 3 - During the breakdown of polymers, which of the...Ch. 3 - The following chemical reactants produce the ester...Ch. 3 - An example of a monosaccharide is fructose glucose...Ch. 3 - Cellulose and starch are examples of:...Ch. 3 - Plant cell walls contain which of the following in...Ch. 3 - Lactose is a disaccharide formed by the formation...
Ch. 3 - Which of the following is not an extracellular...Ch. 3 - Saturated fats have all of the following...Ch. 3 - Phospholipids are important components of...Ch. 3 - Cholesterol is an integral part of plasma...Ch. 3 - The monomers that make up proteins are called...Ch. 3 - The helix and the pleated sheet are part of...Ch. 3 - Mad cow disease is an infectious disease where one...Ch. 3 - A nucleotide of DNA may contain. ribose, uracil,...Ch. 3 - The building blocks of nucleic acids are ____. a....Ch. 3 - How does the double helix structure of DNA support...Ch. 3 - Why are biological macromolecules considered...Ch. 3 - What role do electrons play in dehydration...Ch. 3 - Amino acids have the generic structure seen below,...Ch. 3 - Describe the similarities and differences between...Ch. 3 - Why is it impossible for humans to digest food...Ch. 3 - Draw the ketose and aldose forms of a...Ch. 3 - Explain at least three functions that lipids serve...Ch. 3 - Why have trans fats been banned from some...Ch. 3 - Why are fatty acids better than glycogen for...Ch. 3 - Part of cortisol’s role in the body involves...Ch. 3 - Explain what happens if even one amino acid is...Ch. 3 - Describe the differences in the four protein...Ch. 3 - Aquaporins are proteins embedded in the plasma...Ch. 3 - What are the structural differences between RNA...Ch. 3 - What are the four types of RNA and how do they...
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- A protein that has lost its tertiary structure and is non- functional is called -deanarrow_forwardProteins can be separated into 9 general classifications based on the role they play in a cell. List or briefly describe two of these functional classifications and provide an example of a protein that falls into each of those two categories.arrow_forward"The elasticity of elastin derives from its high content of a helices, which act as molecular springs" is true or false.arrow_forward
- The final 3-dimensional structure of a globular protein is defined by several types of structural units. Rank the following structural units in function of their complexity, starting from the bigger and more complex and ending with the smaller and less complex structural unit: Alpha helices, domains, peptide bonds, oligomers, reverse turnsarrow_forwardAt what level of protein structure (primary, secondary, tertiary, or quaternary) will protein structure be initially altered? Heating a protein (due to fever), causing hydrogen bonds to break. Drastic changes in pH (like the above patients), causing some polar amino acids to turn into non-polar amino acidsarrow_forwardWhich of the following is the first step in folding a linear polypeptide into an ordered functional protein? O Secondary Primary Quaternary Tertiaryarrow_forward
- The primary structure of a protein does not describe the number of each type of amino acid (percent composition). True Falsearrow_forwardProteins undergo  a process, called folding to establish their final, functional configuration. Amino acids them selves are covalently, bound to gather, but for other forces are needed to maintain a functional proteins structure. Briefly describe these forces.arrow_forwardWhich statement best describes the protein structure shown below? This is an alpha helix. This is a tertiary structure that consists almost entirely of beta strands. This is a tertiary structure consisting of a roughly equal mixture of alpha helices and beta sheets. This is a beta sheet. This is a tertiary structure that consists almost entirely of alpha helices.arrow_forward
- Match the protein structure terms on the left with the descriptions on the right. v (Choose ) commonly observed combinations of secondary structural elements tertiary structure Long segments of secondary structure. supersecondary structure basic component of quaternary structure Spatial arrangement of peptide atoms, stabilized by non-covalent interactions between atoms found within the peptide Spatial arrangement of peptide atoms, stabilized by non-covalent interactions between atoms found within the side chain compact structural or functional regions within a given polypeptide functional structures formed by non-covalent interactions between multiple polypeptides. domain (Choosel subunit quaternary structure (Choose)arrow_forwardWhich statement about quaternary structure is TRUE? Quaternary structure is unaffected by acids or heat. Quaternary structure is determined by the same interaction that holds an α-helix together. Quaternary structure is how prosthetic groups are held in a protein. Quaternary structure is the position of subunits in the overall structure of a protein. All proteins have quaternary structurearrow_forwardQuaternary structure defines the spatial arrangement of proteins with at least two polypeptide chains. True Falsearrow_forward
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