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Protein

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About 1 pages (258 words)
Protein Summary

Any of numerous organic compounds, complex polymers of amino acids that are involved in nearly every aspect of the physiology and biochemistry of living organisms. Twenty different amino acids are common to proteins, linked in chains of hundreds to thousands of units. An active protein molecule has three important levels of structure: primary (the amino acid sequence), determined by the genes; secondary (the geometric shape, often a helix), determined by the angles of the covalent bonds between and within amino acids; and tertiary (the looped and folded overall shape), determined largely by attraction between oppositely charged groups (and repulsion between like charged groups) on amino-acid side chains and especially by hydrogen bonding. The tertiary structure, which can be globular or sheetlike with ridges, crevices, or pockets, often holds the key to a protein's biological activity.

Proteins can serve, e.g., as structural material (as in connective tissue and hair; &see; collagen; keratin), as enzymes and hormones, as transporters of essential substances such as oxygen (&see; hemoglobin), as antibodies, or as regulators of gene expression. Some proteins are simple (amino acids only), some conjugated (&see; conjugation) to other groups, often vitamins or metal atoms needed in tiny amounts in the diet (&see; coenzyme; cofactor). Rhodopsin and hemoglobin are conjugated proteins. Proteins may be covalently linked to other atoms or molecules, as to sugars (glycoproteins), phosphate groups (phosphoproteins), or sulfur (sulfoproteins). Proteins are an essential human nutrient, obtained from both plant and animal foods. Their greatest commercial use is in food products; they are also employed in adhesives, plastics, and fibres.

This is the complete article, containing 258 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page).

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    Protein from Encyclopedia Brittanica. ©2009 Encyclopedia Brittanica. All rights reserved.

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