Proteins: Structure & Classification | chemca

Proteins: Structure & Classification | chemca
Biomolecules

Proteins and Structure

Polymers of Alpha-Amino Acids and their organization.

By chemca Team • Updated Jan 2026

Proteins are the most abundant biomolecules. They are polymers of $\alpha$-amino acids connected by peptide bonds.

1. Amino Acids

Building Blocks

Contain amino ($-NH_2$) and carboxyl ($-COOH$) groups. Depending on the relative position, they are $\alpha, \beta, \gamma$, etc. Proteins yield only $\alpha$-amino acids.

Zwitterion: In aqueous solution, the carboxyl group loses a proton and the amino group accepts a proton, forming a dipolar ion.
$$ R-CH(NH_2)-COOH \rightleftharpoons R-CH(NH_3^+)-COO^- $$

Classification:

  • Essential: Cannot be synthesized by body (e.g., Valine, Leucine).
  • Non-Essential: Synthesized by body (e.g., Glycine, Alanine).

2. Peptide Bond

Amide Linkage

Proteins are connected by peptide linkages ($-CO-NH-$) formed between the $-COOH$ of one amino acid and the $-NH_2$ of another with the loss of water.

$$ H_2N-CH(R)-COOH + H_2N-CH(R')-COOH \xrightarrow{-H_2O} H_2N-CH(R)-CO-NH-CH(R')-COOH $$

3. Structure of Proteins

Levels of Organization

Primary Structure: The specific sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide chain. Any change creates a different protein.
Secondary Structure: The shape the chain takes due to Hydrogen bonding between $-CO-$ and $-NH-$ groups.
  • $\alpha$-Helix: Spiral structure (e.g., Keratin).
  • $\beta$-Pleated Sheet: Sheets laid side-by-side (e.g., Silk Fibroin).
Tertiary Structure: Overall 3D folding of the polypeptide chain. Stabilized by H-bonds, Disulphide links, Van der Waals, and Ionic bonds. (Fibrous vs Globular).
Quaternary Structure: Spatial arrangement of multiple polypeptide subunits with respect to each other (e.g., Hemoglobin).

4. Denaturation of Proteins

Loss of Activity

When a protein in its native form is subjected to physical change (heat) or chemical change (pH change), the Hydrogen bonds are disturbed.

Key Point: Globules unfold and helix get uncoiled. Secondary and Tertiary structures are destroyed, but Primary structure remains intact. The protein loses its biological activity (e.g., Coagulation of egg white).

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