Protein
A protein, colloquially known as egg white (outdated protein
substance ), is a biological macromolecule made up of amino acids linked by
peptide bonds.
Myoglobin was the first protein whose spatial structure was
determined by crystal structure analysis
This globin serves as an oxygen store in muscle cells. Its
peptide chain with α-helices, made up of more than 150 amino acids, folds into
a spherical protein structure and holds a heme group on the iron atom of which
O 2 can attach.
Proteins are found in every cell and usually make up more
than half of the dry weight. They serve as molecular "tools" and,
depending on the particular structure, perform different tasks by enabling cell
movements, transporting metabolites, pumping ions, catalyzing chemical
reactions, or recognizing signal substances. Muscles, heart, brain, skin, and
hair also consist mainly of proteins.
The whole of all proteins in a living being, a tissue, a
cell, or a cell compartment, under precisely defined conditions and at a
certain point in time, is called a proteome.
Word
origin and history
The word protein was first used in 1839 in a publication by
Gerardus Johannes Mulder. This designation was suggested to him in 1838 by Jöns
Jakob Berzelius , who derived it from the Greek word πρωτεῖος proteins for
'fundamental' and 'primary,' based on FIRST photos for 'first' or 'more
important.' This was based on the wrong idea that all proteins are based on a familiar
primary substance. This resulted in a violent disagreement with Justus von
Liebig.
The detail that proteins are made up of amino acid chains
via peptide bonds was first suspected in 1902 at the 14th meeting of German
naturalists and doctors, independent of Emil Fischer and Franz Hofmeister gave
lectures. Fischer introduced the term peptide.
Protein
biosynthesis
The building blocks of proteins are certain amino acids
known as proteinogenic, i.e., protein-building, linked to chains by peptide
bonds. There are 21 different amino acids in humans - the 20 known for a long
time and selenocysteine. The human organism is mainly dependent on eight amino
acids because they are essential, which means that the body cannot produce them
itself but has to take them in with food. The amino acid chains can have a
length of up to several thousand amino acids, amino acid chains with a length
of less than about 100 amino acids being used as peptides and only speaks of
proteins from a more considerable chain length. The molecular size is usually
given in kilo-Daltons (kDa). Titin, the largest known human protein with
approx. 3600 kDa, consists of over 30,000 amino acids and contains 320 protein
domains.
The amino acid sequence of a protein - and thus its
structure - is encoded in deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). The genetic code used
for this has hardly changed during the evolution of living things. In the
ribosomes, the cell's "protein production machinery," this
information is used to assemble a polypeptide chain from individual amino acids,
whereby the amino acids determined by a codon are linked in the sequence
specified by DNA. Only with this chain's folding in an aqueous cell
environment, the three-dimensional shape then produced a specific protein
molecule.
The haploid human genome contains around 20,350
protein-coding genes - much fewer than assumed before the genome was sequenced.
Only about 1.5% of total genomic DNA encoding proteins, while the rest of the genes
for non-coding RNA and introns, regulatory DNA, and non-coding deoxyribonucleic
consist. Since many of the
protein-coding genes - for example, through alternative splicing of the primary
transcript ( precursor mRNA) of a gene - producing more than one protein, there
are far more than just 20,350 different proteins in the human body. We now know
proteins whose formation goes back to exons of genes or gene segments in
spatially distant chromosome regions, sometimes even different chromosomes. The traditional one-gene-one-enzyme hypothesis
(also: one-gene-one mRNA -one protein hypothesis) is no longer tenable for
higher organisms today.
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