QUESTION IMAGE
Question
which of the following best describes the effect of a greater number of cysteine amino acids on the stability of the proteins? figure 1. chemical structure of cysteine a the change has no effect on the stability of the protein because only one type of amino acid is involved. b the change leads to increased protein stability because of an increased number of s-s bonds in the tertiary structure of the proteins. c the change leads to decreased protein stability because of an increased number of s-s bonds in the tertiary structure of the proteins. d the change leads to increased protein stability only when the added cysteine amino acids are next to other cysteine amino acids in the primary structure.
To determine the effect of more cysteine on protein stability, we analyze each option:
- Option A: Incorrect. Cysteine affects stability via S - S bonds, so it does have an effect.
- Option B: Correct. Cysteine has an -SH group. More cysteine means more opportunities to form S - S bonds (disulfide bridges) in the protein's tertiary structure. These covalent bonds increase the protein's stability by holding the folded structure together more tightly.
- Option C: Incorrect. More S - S bonds (from more cysteine) should increase, not decrease, stability.
- Option D: Incorrect. The effect is on the tertiary structure (via S - S bonds), not just when cysteine is next to other cysteines in the primary structure.
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B. The change leads to increased protein stability because of an increased number of S - S bonds in the tertiary structure of the proteins.