Asked by Jana
We are learning about proteins and their structure, but one thing is confusing me.
At what structural point is something considered a protein? Is a protein formed after two amino acids synthesis, or is a protein the whole structure (all four levels) put together?
I would think you would need all four structural levels to form a protein, but my teacher refers to the first structure as a protein molecule.
Thanks for the clarification.
At what structural point is something considered a protein? Is a protein formed after two amino acids synthesis, or is a protein the whole structure (all four levels) put together?
I would think you would need all four structural levels to form a protein, but my teacher refers to the first structure as a protein molecule.
Thanks for the clarification.
Answers
Answered by
Anonymous
They need all three levels of structure (i.e., primary, secondary, and tertiary structure.) Anything less than 20 amino acids is rarely consider a protein, and not all proteins have quanternary structure. Only proteins that are composed of two or more polypeptide chains are considered to have quanternary structure.
Answered by
Jana
Thanks! Great answer. :)
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