Cysteine: Difference between revisions

From The School of Biomedical Sciences Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
No edit summary
Nnjm2 (talk | contribs)
Added the references correctly, that is, I added them as explained in the lecture. Cleaned up the text.
 
(11 intermediate revisions by 7 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
Cysteine (abbreviated to Cys or C) is an amino acid with the side chain -CH<sub>2</sub>SH.&nbsp; Cysteine, like [[Methionine|methionine]], contains sulphur. It is a non-polar [[Amino acids|amino acid that]] contains a very reactive&nbsp;thiol or sulfhydryl group (-SH). The presence of this group&nbsp;allows cysteine to&nbsp;form strong [[Disulphide bridges|disulphide bridges]]&nbsp;when paired with&nbsp;another cysteine. Cysteine therfore plays an important structural role in proteins&nbsp;<ref>Berg et al., Biochemistry, 6th Edition, 2007: 31.</ref>.&nbsp;<br>  
Cysteine (abbreviated to Cys or C) is one of 20 [[Amino acids|amino acids]] and has the side chain -CH<sub>2</sub>SH. Cysteine, like [[Methionine|methionine]], contains [[Sulphur|sulphur]]. It is a non-polar [[Amino acids|amino acid that]] contains a very reactive thiol or [[Sulfhydryl group|sulfhydryl group]] (-SH). The presence of this group allows cysteine to form strong [[Disulphide bridges|disulphide bridges]] when paired with another cysteine which is also one of the interactions in the tertiary structure of the protein . Cysteine, therefore, plays an important structural role in [[Proteins|proteins]]. The ability of cysteine to form [[Disulphide bridges|disulphide bridges]] is of great significance for [[Proteins|proteins]] that have to work outside of the [[Cell|cell]] e.g immunoglobulins in which the loops in the light and heavy chains are stabilised by the disulphide bridges. This is because the cysteine side chain of these [[Protein|proteins]] forms [[Disulphide bond|disulphide bonds]] which increases the stability of the [[Proteins|proteins]]. It should be noted, however, that [[Proteins|proteins]] working inside the cell do not form [[Disulphide bond|disulphide bonds]]<ref>Berg et al., Biochemistry, 6th Edition, 2007: 31.</ref><ref>Jacek Leluk, Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, why cysteine is special link : http://www.cryst.bbk.ac.uk/pps97/assignments/projects/leluk/project.htm</ref>.


=== '''References'''  ===
=== References ===


<references />
<references />

Latest revision as of 20:51, 6 December 2017

Cysteine (abbreviated to Cys or C) is one of 20 amino acids and has the side chain -CH2SH. Cysteine, like methionine, contains sulphur. It is a non-polar amino acid that contains a very reactive thiol or sulfhydryl group (-SH). The presence of this group allows cysteine to form strong disulphide bridges when paired with another cysteine which is also one of the interactions in the tertiary structure of the protein . Cysteine, therefore, plays an important structural role in proteins. The ability of cysteine to form disulphide bridges is of great significance for proteins that have to work outside of the cell e.g immunoglobulins in which the loops in the light and heavy chains are stabilised by the disulphide bridges. This is because the cysteine side chain of these proteins forms disulphide bonds which increases the stability of the proteins. It should be noted, however, that proteins working inside the cell do not form disulphide bonds[1][2].

References

  1. Berg et al., Biochemistry, 6th Edition, 2007: 31.
  2. Jacek Leluk, Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, why cysteine is special link : http://www.cryst.bbk.ac.uk/pps97/assignments/projects/leluk/project.htm