Utilisateur
A protein is a polymer of amino acids linked by peptide bonds.
A central alpha carbon, an amino group, a carboxyl group, a hydrogen, and a variable side chain.
Its side chain or R group.
Nonpolar, polar uncharged, and charged.
A covalent bond formed between the carboxyl group of one amino acid and the amino group of another.
From the N-terminus to the C-terminus.
The end of the protein with the free amino group.
The end of the protein with the free carboxyl group.
Translation is the process of synthesizing a protein from an mRNA template.
The mRNA binds to the 30S ribosomal subunit.
The Shine-Dalgarno sequence.
A purine-rich ribosome-binding site just upstream of the start codon that base pairs with 16S rRNA.
The initiator tRNA carrying N-formylmethionine binds the start codon.
GTP hydrolysis by initiation factors brings in the 50S subunit.
AUG.
N-formylmethionine.
The P site.
A site, P site, and E site.
It binds the incoming aminoacyl-tRNA.
It holds the tRNA attached to the growing peptide chain.
It briefly holds the empty tRNA before it exits.
Aminoacyl-tRNA binding, transpeptidation, and translocation.
The correct aminoacyl-tRNA enters the A site based on codon recognition.
EF-Tu.
GTP hydrolysis.
A peptide bond is formed and the growing peptide is transferred from the P-site tRNA to the A-site tRNA.
The peptidyl transferase activity of 23S rRNA.
Because the catalytic activity is performed by rRNA, not protein.
The ribosome moves forward one codon, the peptidyl-tRNA moves from A site to P site, and the empty tRNA moves to E site and exits.
EF-G.
GTP hydrolysis.
UAA, UAG, and UGA.
Release factors recognize the stop codon and terminate translation.
They help free the completed polypeptide and dissociate the ribosome.
Yes, GTP hydrolysis is required.
Initiation, elongation, and termination.
The set of processes that make a new polypeptide into a functional protein.
Folding, post-translational modification, complex formation, and localization.
They help proteins fold properly.
Proteins that assist folding of nascent or misfolded polypeptides.
They help protect cells from thermal damage by refolding partially unfolded proteins.
DnaK, DnaJ, GroEL, and GroES.
It provides a protected environment for a protein to fold properly.
They tend to be buried inside the protein and help stabilize the folded structure.
A chemical change made to a protein after translation.
Acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, glycosylation, uridylylation, proteolysis, and addition of prosthetic groups.
Protein activity, localization, stability, or binding partners.
No. Some last for the protein’s lifetime and some are dynamic and reversible.
That post-translational modifications can control gene expression in response to environmental conditions.
Uridylylation and phosphorylation help activate nitrogen-assimilation gene expression.
Assembly of multiple protein subunits into a functional complex.
Getting a protein to the correct place in or out of the cell.
Unfolded proteins across the membrane.
Helping integral membrane proteins fold and insert properly.
An N-terminal signal sequence and ATP hydrolysis.
Folded proteins across the membrane.
A twin-arginine signal sequence.
Proton motive force.
Sec transports unfolded proteins, while Tat transports folded proteins.
To obtain nutrients, protect themselves, attach to surfaces, interact with other cells, and help form biofilms.
An ABC transporter that can move proteins from the cytoplasm directly to the outside.
They rely on Sec or Tat first to get proteins into the periplasm.
It injects proteins directly into another cell.
Injectosome.
Injecting proteins, often toxins, into other cells, especially other bacteria.
Transfer into another cell, especially during conjugation, and it requires ATP.
Type IV pili used for twitching motility are not the same as the Type IV secretion system. The Type IV secretion system is associated with conjugative pili and transfer between cells.
A change in DNA sequence.
The strain found in nature or the standard reference form.
A strain that carries a DNA sequence change.
The genetic makeup or nucleotide sequence of an organism.
The observable traits resulting from the genotype.
A mutation that arises without an external mutagen, often from replication errors or tautomeric shifts.
A mutation caused by an external agent such as radiation or chemicals.
A change in a single nucleotide.
A point mutation that changes one amino acid to another.
A point mutation that creates a stop codon.
A point mutation that changes the DNA sequence but not the amino acid.
Because wobble and code degeneracy often make third-base changes non-disruptive.
It can create pyrimidine dimers that distort DNA and lead to replication errors.
Transformation, transduction, and conjugation.
Uptake of free DNA from the environment.
Transfer of DNA by a bacteriophage.
Transfer of DNA directly from one bacterial cell to another through cell-to-cell contact.
Conjugation.
A community of microbes attached to a surface and embedded in a self-produced extracellular matrix.
Mostly polysaccharides, plus proteins and extracellular DNA.
Biotic and abiotic surfaces.
Attachment, colonization, development or maturation, and dispersal.
Cells initially stick to a suitable surface.
Cells grow on the surface and begin producing matrix material.
A three-dimensional matrix community forms, often with water channels.
Cells leave the biofilm and return to a planktonic state.
They help movement of nutrients and waste through the biofilm.
They are the main structural glue that holds the biofilm together.
Hydrogen bonding, ionic interactions, electrostatic forces, and van der Waals interactions.
They help resist physical stress, predators, antimicrobials, and environmental fluctuations.
They trap extracellular enzymes and keep cells close to nutrient sources.
Cells are close together, so they can exchange signals, genes, and metabolites more easily.
A bacterial intracellular signaling molecule that strongly promotes biofilm formation and sessility.
