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AS.410 AS.410.601 Problem Set #1 (Johns hopkins university), Exams of Biochemistry

The Ka for a weak acid (HA) is known to be 1.9 x 10-5. What is the ratio of [A- ] to [HA] at a pH of 6? Explain your answer & show all mathematical work. pH=pKa+log([A]/[HA]) 6=log(1.9*10^-5)+log([A]/[HA]) 6=-4.72+log([A]/[HA]) 10.72=log([A]/[HA]) 10^10.72=10^log([A]/[HA]) 5.24*10^10 = [A]/[HA] Since the Ka = 1.9 x 10-5, then the pKa = -log[1.9 x 10-5], which is equal to 4.72. Using the H/H equation: pH = pKa + log([A- ]/[HA]) 6 = 4.72 + log([A- ]/[HA]) 1.28 = log([A- ]/[HA]) So: [A-]/[HA] = 19. Question 3 Selected Answer: E. For questions 3-6, consider the titration curve below. The chemical species being titrated by a strong base must be a __________ , since it is capable of donating ______ proton(s).

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Selected Answer:
Correct Answer:
Response
Feedback:
[None Given]
The Ka for a weak acid (HA) is known to be 1.9 x 10-5. What is the ratio of [A-] to [HA] at a
pH of 6? Explain your answer & show all mathematical work.
pH=pKa+log([A]/[HA])
6=log(1.9*10^-5)+log([A]/[HA])
6=-4.72+log([A]/[HA])
10.72=log([A]/[HA])
10^10.72=10^log([A]/[HA])
5.24*10^10 = [A]/[HA]
Since the Ka = 1.9 x 10-5, then the pKa = -log[1.9 x 10-5], which is equal
to 4.72.
Using the H/H equation:
pH = pKa + log([A-]/[HA])
6 = 4.72 + log([A-]/[HA])
1.28 = log([A-]/[HA])
So: [A-]/[HA] = 19.
Question 3
Selected Answer: E.
For questions 3-6, consider the titration curve below. The chemical species being titrated by a
strong base must be a __________ , since it is capable of donating ______ proton(s).
triprotic acid; three
0.5 out of 0.5 points
pf3
pf4
pf5
pf8
pf9
pfa
pfd
pfe

Partial preview of the text

Download AS.410 AS.410.601 Problem Set #1 (Johns hopkins university) and more Exams Biochemistry in PDF only on Docsity!

Selected Answer:

Correct Answer:

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

The K a

for a weak acid (HA) is known to be 1.9 x 10

. What is the ratio of [A

] to [HA] at a

pH of 6? Explain your answer & show all mathematical work.

pH=pKa+log([A]/[HA])

6=log(1.9*10^-5)+log([A]/[HA])

6=-4.72+log([A]/[HA])

10.72=log([A]/[HA])

10^10.72=10^log([A]/[HA])

5.24*10^10 = [A]/[HA]

Since the K a

= 1.9 x 10

, then the pK a

= -log[1.9 x 10

], which is equal

to 4.72.

Using the H/H equation:

pH = pK a

  • log([A

]/[HA])

6 = 4.72 + log([A

]/[HA])

1.28 = log([A

]/[HA])

So: [A

]/[HA] = 19.

Question 3

Selected Answer: E.

For questions 3-6, consider the titration curve below. The chemical species being titrated by a

strong base must be a __________ , since it is capable of donating ______ proton(s).

triprotic acid; three

0.5 out of 0.5 points

Answers: A.

B.

C.

D.

E.

weak base; no

strong base; three

monoprotic acid; one

diprotic acid; two

triprotic acid; three

Question 4

Specified Answer for: Blank1 basic

Correct Answers for: Blank

Evaluation Method Correct Answer Case Sensitivity

Exact Match

basic

Response

Feedback:

The chemical group being titrated around the point labeled (C) in the graph is most likely a(n)

________________ (basic or acidic) group. [Blank1]

Since the graph indicates the pKa is approximately 12.5 at point (C), then this must

be a basic group, such as an amino group.

Question 5

Specified Answer for: Blank1 Arginine

Correct Answers for: Blank

Evaluation Method Correct Answer Case Sensitivity

Exact Match

arginine

Response

Feedback:

The titration curve shown in Question #3 is that of a free amino acid in aqueous solution.

Based on the graph, which particular amino acid is most likely represented? Simply name

the amino acid. [Blank1]

The titration curve clearly shows that the amino acid in question has three ionizable

groups, due to the three distinct "steps" on the graph. So this means that the amino

acid must be Tyr, Cys, Lys, His, Arg, Asp, or Glu (these are the only free amino acids

with ionizable side chains). The chemical group at point (A) has a pKa of a little over 2;

the chemical group at point (B) has a pKa of approximately 9; the chemical group at

point (C) has a pKa of around 12.5. The only amino acid that fits this pKa profile is

ARGININE.

Question 6

Assume that the equilibrium represented around point (A) in the titration can generically be

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0.5 out of 0.5 points

1 out of 1 points

C.

D.

E.

Response Feedback:

The ionizable groups are:

The amino terminal group of His

The side chain of His

The side chain of Asp

The side chain of Tyr

The carboxy terminal group of Ser

Question 9

Selected Answer: B.

Answers: A.

B.

C.

D.

E.

Response

Feedback:

At a pH of 6, which of the following best approximates the net charge on the peptide?

At a pH of 6, which is equal to the pKa for the imidazole side chain on His,

the charges are as follows:

N-terminal group is +

His side chain is +1/

Asp side chain is -

Tyr side chain is 0

C-terminal group is -

Question 10

Selected

Answer:

Within this peptide, which amino acid residue is the most hydrophobic? Explain your

answer.

Phe is most hydrophobic as it has an aromatic R group which makes it somewhat

hydrophobic. Also the hydropathy index of Phe is 2.

0.5 out of 0.5 points

1 out of 1 points

Correct

Answer:

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

I will accept an answer of either Met or Phe for this question. Both contain very

hydrophobic side chains; what is most important is your reasoning behind your

answer.

Question 11

Selected

Answer:

Correct

Answer:

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

Calculate an approximate pI (isoelectric point) for this peptide. Please use the pK a

's listed

within Table 3-1 of Lehninger. Show and/or explain all your work; you must be very

clear about WHY you use particular pK

a

's in your calculation.

pKa histidine = (1.82+9.17)/2 = 5.

pKa serine = 2.

pI= (5.50+2.21)/

pI=3.

The approximate pI for this peptide is the average of the pK a

's for the His side

chain (6.00) and the Asp side chain (3.65), resulting in a value of 4.80. At a pH

of 4.8, the His side chain is still-protonated (the pK a

is more than one pH unit

above the pH) and therefore contributes a +1 charge. Also at a pH of 4.8, the

Asp side chain is fully deprotonated (the pK a

is more than one pH unit below the

pH) and therefore contributes a -1 charge. All other pK a

's are well away from

4.8, thereby rendering them fully protonated or deprotonated: the amino

terminus is +1; the Tyr side chain is 0; the carboxy terminus is -1. Therefore,

at a pH of 4.8, the net charge on our peptide is 0.

Question 12

Selected

Answer:

Correct

Answer:

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

Based on your answer for Question #11, would you categorize this peptide as "acidic" or

"basic"? Explain.

We would categorize this peptide as acidic because the isoelectric point is 3.

which corresponds to an acidic pH. isoelectric point tells us the overall

acidic/basic character of a protein.

This is definitely an acidic peptide because it's pI is well below neutral pH (7).

This means that the peptide loses more than half of its dissociable protons at low

pH values, meaning it contains a majority of acidic groups.

Question 13

0 out of 1 points

1 out of 1 points

1 out of 1 points

Correct

Answer:

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

Answers will obviously vary, based on PTM selected.

Question 16

Selected Answer: A.

Answers: A.

B.

C.

D.

E.

Disulfide linkages:

are covalent bonds.

are covalent bonds.

are a type of electrostatic interaction.

occur between methionine residues.

can be disrupted by SDS.

can only occur within the same polypeptide chain.

Question 17

Selected Answer: A.

Answers: A.

B.

C.

D.

E.

The idea that primary sequence determines tertiary structure first came from experiments in

the 1950's about:

the renaturation of RNaseA (ribonuclease A).

the renaturation of RNaseA (ribonuclease A).

the denaturation of lysozyme.

the 3D structure of lysozyme.

the role of Hsp70 in protein folding.

the role of PDI (protein disulfide isomerase) in protein folding.

Question 18

Questions #18 & 19 refer to the following information. Altered conformations of the prion

protein (PrP) are implicated in the infectivity and/or pathogenesis of Scrapie-like diseases,

such as "mad cow disease" and Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease (CJD). Below are ribbon diagrams

of two different conformations of PrP:

0.5 out of 0.5 points

0.5 out of 0.5 points

1 out of 1 points

Selected

Answer:

Correct

Answer:

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

Which of the conformations illustrated above (a or b) is more likely PrP

c

(the normal cellular

form of PrP) and which is more likely PrP

Sc

(the pathogenic form of PrP)? Why?

A is the PrP

c

form and B is the PrP

Sc

form.

Prions typically appear as form B, with beta-sheets, when in pathogenic form

(e.g., amyloid beta plaques found in neurodegenerative diseases). This form is

more structurally stable due to the cross beta structure which is supported by

hydrogen bonding.

The tertiary conformations of PrP

c

and PrP

Sc

differ largely in the relative

amounts of secondary structures, namely beta-sheet structures. PrP

Sc

is high in

beta-sheet structure, whereas PrP

c

has very little beta-sheet structure. As you

can see from the ribbon diagrams, the conformation on the left (a) is largely

composed of alpha-helical, turns, and random coil structures. The conformation

on the right (b) has at least two apparent beta sheet structures (two strand in

green and two strands in red). Therefore, it's more likely that (b) represents

PrP

Sc

and that (a) represents PrP

c

.

Question 19

Selected Answer: E.

Answers: A.

The red arrows within the (b) conformation are best categorized as:

antiparallel beta-strands

alpha helices

0.5 out of 0.5 points

Selected Answer: A.

Answers: A.

B.

C.

D.

E.

Question #20: According to the gel (Step 6), which protein has the highest molecular

weight?

Protein A

Protein A

Protein B

Protein C

Protein D

YFP

Question 21

Selected

Answer:

Correct

Answer:

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

Are the bands indicated in Step 6 (SDS-PAGE) likely visualized by western blot or by a general

protein stain (such as Coomassie or silver)? Explain your answer.

it is a general protein stain using a stain such as coomassie blue which allows us

to see proteins separated by size. For western blotting, antibodies need to be

washed through the gel after general SDS-PAGE procedure.

Since all proteins in the complex can be "seen" on the gel, then it must not be a

western, but rather a general protein stain. If we were seeing a western, then

we would only have seen one of the many bands shown, as an antibody against

just one of those proteins would have been used.

1 out of 1 points

Question 22

Selected

Answer:

Correct

Answer:

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

Step 7 states "Excise bands and analyze by mass spectrometry."

(A) Following excision of the bands (simply cutting each band out of the gel), briefly describe

each step, in order, that must be taken prior to analysis in the mass spectrometer.

(B) What's the big experimental question that the researchers hope to answer following Step

A) we would need to first do an in-gel digestion. This procedure allows us to

remove staining from the SDS-PAGE experiment, break up disulfide bonds, break

the protein up using a proteolutic agent, and then finally extract the

peptide/protein for MS analysis.

B) MS will allow researchers to determine the identify of the proteins in the

sample and their quantity in the sample.

(A) Sequence of steps (to be done for each band independently):

  1. reduce (elim. disulfides) with BME or DTT
  2. digest with protease (like trypsin) or CNBr
  3. separate peptides generated in Step 2 via chromatography (reverse-phase

HPLC)

  1. sequence one (or several) peptides, from Step 3, by mass spec

(B) The big question: "What proteins specifically interact with YFP?" The mass

spec analysis will allow them to IDENTIFY the proteins (A, B, C, D) that associate

with YFP.

Question 23

Selected

Answer:

C.

Answers: A.

B.

C.

Following Step 5 ("competitive elution with peptide encoding the epitope"), it appears that

the YFP/protein complex has dissociated -- all proteins are drawn floating freely. Which of

the following is the most likely explanation for dissociation of the protein complex?

Treatment of the eluate (Step 5) with sodium dodecyl sulfate, in preparation

for loading onto the gel (Step 6)

Treatment of the eluate (Step 5) with beta-mercaptoethanol, in preparation for

loading onto the gel (Step 6)

Treatment of the eluate (Step 5) with dithiothreitol, in preparation for loading

onto the gel (Step 6)

1 out of 1 points

0.5 out of 0.5 points

Response

Feedback:

[None Given]

Question 25

Selected Answer: A.

Answers: A.

B.

C.

D.

E.

For the table shown in Question #24, the purification step labeled "40-60% (NH 4

SO

" is

most likely a(n):

salting in/out step.

salting in/out step.

cation exchange chromatography.

anion exchange chromatography.

hydrophobic interaction chromatography.

size exclusion chromatography.

Question 26

Selected Answer: B.

Answers: A.

B.

C.

D.

E.

For the table shown in Question #24, the purification step labeled "CM-sepharose" is most

likely a(n):

cation exchange chromatography.

salting in/out step.

cation exchange chromatography.

anion exchange chromatography.

hydrophobic interaction chromatography.

size exclusion chromatography.

Question 27

Selected Answer: E.

Answers: A.

B.

C.

For the table shown in Question #24, the purification step labeled "Gel filtration" is most

likely a(n):

size exclusion chromatography.

salting in/out step.

cation exchange chromatography.

anion exchange chromatography.

0.5 out of 0.5 points

0.5 out of 0.5 points

0.5 out of 0.5 points

Monday, April 4, 2022 6:31:14 PM EDT

D.

E.

hydrophobic interaction chromatography.

size exclusion chromatography.

← OK