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Eukaryotic Post-Translational Regulation exam Flashcards

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Eukaryotic Post-Translational Regulation exam
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  • Post-Translational Modifications (PTMs)


    Covalent modifications to proteins after translation that can activate or inactivate proteins.

  • What is the role of proteases in post-translational regulation?


    Proteases degrade proteins by breaking polypeptide bonds into amino acids.

  • Ubiquitination


    A PTM where ubiquitin ligase adds ubiquitin to proteins, marking them for degradation.

  • What does ubiquitin ligase do?


    It adds ubiquitin to target proteins for degradation.

  • Protease


    An enzyme that degrades proteins by breaking polypeptide bonds.

  • How do PTMs regulate gene expression?


    By activating or inactivating proteins, or marking them for degradation.

  • What happens to proteins tagged with ubiquitin?


    They are marked for degradation by proteases.

  • Gene Expression Regulation


    The process of turning genes on or off through mechanisms like PTMs.

  • What is the outcome of protein degradation?


    Proteins are broken down into individual amino acids.

  • Inactive Protein


    A protein that is not functional until it undergoes post-translational modification.

  • What is the significance of ubiquitination in cellular function?


    It helps maintain cellular homeostasis by removing unnecessary or misfolded proteins.

  • Active Protein


    A protein that has been modified post-translationally to become functional.

  • What does the term 'post' in post-translational modifications refer to?


    It refers to modifications that occur after translation.

  • Ubiquitin


    A small peptide used to tag proteins for degradation.

  • How do proteases contribute to cellular homeostasis?


    By degrading unnecessary or misfolded proteins, maintaining protein balance.

  • Protein Degradation


    The process of breaking down proteins into amino acids by proteases.

  • What is the function of ubiquitin ligase in ubiquitination?


    It transfers ubiquitin to target proteins, marking them for degradation.

  • Misfolded Protein


    A protein that has not folded into its correct functional shape and is often targeted for degradation.

  • What is the result of protein ubiquitination?


    The tagged protein is degraded by proteases.

  • What is the role of PTMs in protein activity?


    PTMs can either activate or inactivate proteins.

  • Amino Acids


    The building blocks of proteins, released during protein degradation.

  • What is the purpose of tagging proteins for degradation?


    To remove proteins that are no longer needed or are misfolded.

  • Protein Activity Control


    Regulated by post-translational modifications and degradation by proteases.

  • What does protein degradation achieve in terms of gene regulation?


    It turns off genes by removing their protein products.

  • Ubiquitin Ligase


    An enzyme that adds ubiquitin to proteins, marking them for degradation.

  • What is the effect of PTMs on gene expression?


    PTMs can turn genes on or off by modifying protein activity.