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Page 1: Protein

Protein

Page 2: Protein

roles of protein in the body

importance of protein in the diet. For example, people who associate meat

with protein and protein with strength may eat steak to build muscles.

Protein is a vital structural and working substance in all cells—not just

muscle cells.

To build strength

muscles cells need physical activity and all the nutrients—not just protein

protein is found in milk, eggs, legumes, and many grains

and vegetables—not just meat

proteins contain the same atoms as carbohydrates and lipids—carbon

(C), hydrogen (H), and oxygen (O)—but proteins also contain nitrogen

(N) atoms.

All amino acids have the same basic structure—a central carbon (C)

atom with a hydrogen atom (H), an amino group (NH2), and an acid

group (COOH) attached to it. However, carbon atoms need to form four

bonds

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Amino Acid Structure

Proteins are made up of about

20 common amino acids.

Essential Amino Acids Nonessential Amino Acids

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Methionine Tryptophan *Histidine leucine Isoleucine

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*Arginine phenylalanine lysine Threonine Valine

Essential Amino Acids

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Amino Acid Sequence of Human Insulin

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The Structure of Hemoglobin

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Essential amino acids :

Lysine, Leucine, Isoleucine, Valine, Methionine,

Phenylalanine, Threonine, Tryptophan

Nonessential amino acids:

Alanine, glycine, aspartate , glutamate, serine, tyrosine,

cysteine , proline , glutamine, aspargine

N.B. Histidine & arginine are semi essential. They are

essential only for infants growth, but not for old children

or adults where in adults histidine requirement is obtained by

intestinal flora & arginine by urea cycle.

For formation of new tissue protein :

all essential amino acids that can not be synthesized

by organism & provided by dietary protein must be

present at the same time with nonessential amino acids

that can be synthesized by organism

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Nitrogen Balance (NB):

Nitrogen balance is a comparison between

Nitrogen intake (in the form of dietary protein)

and Nitrogen loss (as undigested protein in feces ,

NPN as urea, ammonia, creatinine & uric acid in urine,

sweat & saliva & losses by hair, nail, skin).

NB is important in defining

1.overall protein metabolism of an individual

2.nutritional nitrogen requirement.

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Three states are known for NB:

a)Normal adult: will be in nitrogen equilibrium,

Losses = Intake

b)Positive Nitrogen balance:

Nitrogen intake more than losses (High formation of tissue proteins) occurs in growing children, pregnancy,

lactation and convulascence.

C)Negative Nitrogen balance:

Nitrogen losses more than intake occurs in:- (Low intake of proteins) in starvation, malnutrition, GIT

diseases

- (High loss of tissue proteins ) in wasting diseases like

burns, hemorrhage& kidney diseases with albuminurea

- (High breakdown of tissue proteins ) in D.M.,

Hyperthyroidism, fever, infection

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Biological Value for Protein (BV):

• BV is : a measure for the ability of dietary protein to provide the essential amino acids required for tissue protein maintenance.

• Proteins of animal sources (meat, milk, eggs) have high BV because they contain all the essential amino acids.

Proteins from plant sources (wheat, corn, beans) have low BV thus combination of more than one plant protein is required (a vegetarian diet) to increase its BV.

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DIGESTION OF PROTEIN

• Proteins are broken down by hydrolyases (peptidases

or proteases):

• Endopeptidases attack internal bonds and liberate

large peptide fragments (pepsin, trypsin, Chymotrypsin

& Elastase)

• Exopeptidases remove one amino acid at a time from

– COOH or –NH2 terminus (aminopeptidase &

carboxypeptidase)

• Endopeptidases are important for initial breakdown

of long polypeptides into smaller ones which

then attacked by exopeptidases.

• Digestion of protein can be divided into: a gastric,

pancreatic and intestinal phases.

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I. Gastric Phase of Protein Digestion:

(represents 15% of protein digestion)

1) Pepsin: in adult stomach , secreted as pepsinogen.

It is specific for peptide bond formed by aromatic or

acidic amino acids

2) Rennin: in infants for digestion of milk protein

(casein).

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II. Pancreatic Phase of Protein Digestion

This phase ends with free amino acids and small peptides of 2-8 amino

acid residues which account for 60% of protein digestion

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III. Intestinal Phase of protein digestion:

– Intestinal enzymes are:

aminopeptidases (attack peptide bond

next to amino terminal of polypeptide) &

dipeptidases

– The end product is free amino acids

dipeptides & tripeptides.

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Protein Synthesis

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Example of a Transport Protein

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Protein functions

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How does the chemical structure of proteins differ from

the structures of carbohydrates and fats?

Describe the structure of amino acids, and explain how

their sequence in proteins affects the proteins’ shapes.

What are essential amino acids?

Describe protein digestion and absorption

Describe protein synthesis

What are enzymes?

What roles do they play in chemical reactions?

Describe the differences between enzymes and hormones.

How can vegetarians meet their protein needs without eating meat?

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