Quaternary structure: Difference between revisions
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The quaternary structure of a [[Protein|protein]] refers to the arrangement of cross-linked proteins (several [[ | The quaternary structure of a [[Protein|protein]] is the fourth level of organisation. It refers to the arrangement of cross-linked proteins (several [[Polypeptide|polypeptide]] chains inter-linked). The structure is held together by [[Hydrogen bonds|hydrogen bonds]], [[Disulphide bond|disulphide bonds]], [[Ionic bond|ionic bonds]] and [[Hydrophobic interaction|hydrophobic interactions]] <ref>Biology 1 for OCR, Mary Jones, Cambridge University Press (2008)</ref>. | ||
=== References === | The simplest form is when two polypeptide chains (2 subunits) form a dimer, a more complicated example is that of haemoglobin. Haemoglobin has 4 subunits which interact to form the quaternary structure. Small changes to this allow it to carry oxygen round the body to organs. | ||
=== References === | |||
<references /><br> | <references /><br> |
Revision as of 16:55, 15 November 2012
The quaternary structure of a protein is the fourth level of organisation. It refers to the arrangement of cross-linked proteins (several polypeptide chains inter-linked). The structure is held together by hydrogen bonds, disulphide bonds, ionic bonds and hydrophobic interactions [1].
The simplest form is when two polypeptide chains (2 subunits) form a dimer, a more complicated example is that of haemoglobin. Haemoglobin has 4 subunits which interact to form the quaternary structure. Small changes to this allow it to carry oxygen round the body to organs.
References
- ↑ Biology 1 for OCR, Mary Jones, Cambridge University Press (2008)