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possible peptide formation and ratio of acid to baseModerator: BioTeam
3 posts • Page 1 of 1
possible peptide formation and ratio of acid to baseI have two homework problems that are stumping me....
How many different peptides of 15 residues can be made from the 20 common amino acids? -is this a simple 15^20 caluclation or am I overlooking something. 15^20 = 3.3*10^23. This number seems quiet large. Calculate the ratio of conjugate base to acid form for each of the ionizable groups of glutamic acid in a medium of pH 4.0 -when calculating the ionizable groups of a amino acid, do you condisder the R-group or just the carboxyl and ammine groups? pH = pka + log [base]/[acid] since pH < pka (4 < 4.5) does this mean both of the COO- groups (r and carboxyl groups) are in the form COOH and the ammine group has a (+) charge? therefore, 4 = 4.5 + log [NH3+] \ 2 [COOH] ? or is this problem more simple than I am making it.... and the ratio is 1:2 (+):neutral ionizable groups?
Re: possible peptide formation and ratio of acid to base1 residue: 20 = 20^1 possible sequences
2 residues: 20x20 = 20^2 possible sequences 3 residues: 20x20x20 = 20^3 possible sequences . . . 15 residues: ? It is a large number, just not 15^20. I think you had the right idea, but you didn’t think it through from the beginning. You consider the ionizable groups separately. There are three pKa’s, one for the alpha-carboxylate (pKa1 = 2.2), one for the alpha-amino group (pKa2 = 9.7) and one for the gamma-carboxylate (pKa3 = 4.3). The Henderson-Hasselbalch relation for each group is: pH – pKa1 = log[alpha-COO-]/[alpha-COOH] pH – pKa2 = log[alpha-NH2]/[NH3+] pH – pKa3 = log[gamma-COO-]/[gamma-COOH] What you should find is that two out of three of these equilibria heavily favor one of the ionization states, while the other has a significant proportion of both ionization states.
3 posts • Page 1 of 1
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