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Chapter 6: Proteins: Three-Dimensional Structure

Matching
For questions 1-10:
A) tertiary structure
B) keratin
C) molecular chaperones
D) hydropathy
E) cis
F) trans
G) sterically forbidden conformation
H) regular secondary structure
I)
collagen
J)
peptide bond
K) ribonuclease A (RNase A)
L) alpha
1. Repeating values of and make up predictable orientations of amino acid with a chain, this
predictable orientation forms___________.
Ans: H
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.1.B
Learning objective: Secondary Structure
2. The strength of _______ comes from close packing of glycine residues and the characteristics
of hydroxyproline allowing formation of a left- handed helical conformation which combines
with two other left handed structures to form a right-handed triplet helix.
Ans: I
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
3. The overall arrangement of the regular structural elements such as the helix and the sheet
in the protein are considered the protein's ______.
Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.2.C
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure
4. A historical experiment exploring denaturation upon - mercaptoethanol reduction of

disulfide bonds and spontaneous renaturation upon dialysis to remove the - mercaptoethanol
was carried out using the protein ______. This experiment demonstrated the importance of
disulfide bonds and amino acid sequence in folding of proteins.
Ans: K
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.4.B
Learning Objective: Protein Stability
5. A rigid, planar structure between at least two amino acids consisting of about 40% double
bond character is characteristic of a ______.
Ans: J
Section 6.1.A
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Learning Objective: Primary Structure
6. The _____________ of an amino acid can be used to predict whether an amino acid side
chain folds towards the inside or outside of a globular protein.
Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.2.B
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure
7. ________ is a fibrous protein that contains a hydrophobic amino acid approximately every 4
residues which forms an helix with one hydrophobic side.
Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
8. In most peptide groups the ______ conformation is not sterically favored.
Ans: EF
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.1.A
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure

9. In vivo protein folding is often is assisted by ______.

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.5.B
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
10. In a ______, the and angles of the peptide backbone would orient atoms closer than their
van der Waals distance.
Ans: G
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.1.A
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure

Multiple Choice
11. In a Ramachandran diagram, a larger area represents sterically allowed torsion angles of
and that are allowed in _____ rather than in ______ because there is greater opportunity for
separation of amino acid side chains.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

secondary structuretertiary structure


helix sheet
sheet helix
tertiary structuresecondary structure
none of the above

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.A and B
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
12. In a protein, the most conformationally restricted amino acid is ______; the least
conformationally restricted is ______.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

Trp, Gly
Met, Cys
Pro, Gly
Ile, Ala
Ala, Pro

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.1.A
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure

13. Which of the following has (have) both a favorable hydrogen bonding pattern and and
values that fall within the allowed Ramachandran conformational regions?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

helix
collagen helix
sheet
all of the above
none of the above

Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.1.A, B, and C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
14. Which one of these characteristics is not true for the helix?
A) There are 3.6 amino acids per turn.
B) There is a requirement for glycine every third amino acid residue.
C) A hydrogen bond forms between the carbonyl oxygen of the nth amino acid residue and the NH group of the (n + 4)th amino acid residue.
D) Proline is typically not found in the helix.
E) It is right-handed.
Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.1.B
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
15. Which of these characteristics does not describe the sheet?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

Amino acid side chains are located both above and below the sheet.
sheets have a pleated edge-on appearance.
They can exist in either parallel or antiparallel configurations.
The sheets contain as few as two and as many as 22 polypeptide chains.
Parallel sheets containing fewer than five chains are the most common.

Ans: E
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.1.B
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure

16. Which statement below does not describe fibrous proteins?


A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

Domains have a globular fold.


These proteins usually contain only one type of secondary structure.
These proteins usually exhibit structural or protective characteristics.
These proteins have usually elongated hydrophilic surfaces.
These proteins are usually insoluble in water.

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
17. Which of the following changes would not alter the functional characteristics of keratin?
A) Increasing the number of residues per turn to 4.1 while maintaining the same amino acid
sequence.
B) Substitution of a hydrophilic amino acid for a hydrophobic amino acid at position a and d of
the 7-residue pseudorepeat.
C) Decreasing the number of cysteine amino acids within each protofilament.
D) Changing the environment surrounding the protein to one that is more reductive.
E) All of the above would alter the functional characteristics of keratin.
Ans: E
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
18. Which of the following statements is true regarding collagen?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

The inability to hydroxylate proline results in the inability to synthesize collagen.


The helical structure is ideal for intertwining 3 filaments.
Hydrogen bonds between the OH groups of Hyp residues stabilize the helix.
The requirement for glycine every 3rd amino acid is essential for the triplet helix formation.
On average, there is one proline for every hydroxyproline.

Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure

19. Which of the following gives the best example of a nonrepetitive structure in a protein?
A) a random sequence of 12 amino acids with high P values forming an helix
B) an amino acid sequence with the following pattern "a-b-c-d-e-a-b-c-d-a-b-c-d"
C) a 13 residue helix with a Gln at position n+12 which hydrogen bonds to a residue at
position n+10
D) All of the above statements describe nonrepetitive protein structures.
E) None of the above describe nonrepetitive protein structures.
Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.D
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
20. Which of the following is true regarding crystalline proteins?
A) Many crystallized enzyme proteins remain catalytically active.
B) The diffractive pattern observed during X-ray exposure to the crystal can be used to calculate
the electron density map of the crystalline protein.
C) The larger region indicating electron density with in the electron density map, the more
accurate the structure determination.
D) A and B are true.
E) A, B, and C are true.
Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.2.A
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure
21. In the absence of ascorbic acid, prolyl oxidase is unable to oxidize proline residues in
collagen to hydroxyproline, resulting in:
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

lathyrism
prion diseases
amyloid formation
scurvy
allysine

Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.5.C
Learning Objective: Protein Folding

22. Of the following, which amino acid is most likely to be found in position 1 or 4 on
keratin?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

Phe
Ala
Lys
Trp
Pro

Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.2.B and 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure and Secondary Structure
23. Which of the following amino acids combinations have side chains with groups that have the
greatest ability to stabilize the tertiary structure of a protein?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

Lys and Arg


Cys and Glu
Glu and Lys
Gln and Glu
Pro and Asp

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.4.A
Learning Objective: Protein Stability
24. The low pH found in the gut can enhance the digestibility of dietary protein by causing ___.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

amide hydrolysis
protein denaturation
disulfide reduction
prion formation
cysteine oxidation

Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.4.B
Learning Objective: Protein Stability

25. Which of the following occurs first when folding a disordered polypeptide chain into a stable
protein formation?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

formation of a low energy state


association of ordered subunits
aggregation of hydrophobic regions in the protein
tertiary structure refinement
formation of a low entropy state

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.5.A
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
26. Imagine that a researcher treated a protein with a high concentration of a chaotropic agent.
Which of the following is the most likely result of the treatment?
I. Nonpolar portions of the protein become more soluble.
II. The protein begins to denature ,
III. The protein stability increases due to hydrophobic collapse,
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

I, II, III
I, II
II, III
I, III
II

Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.4.B and 6.5.A
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
27. For-sheets, the terms parallel and antiparalllel refer to ___________.
A)
B)
C)
D)
D)

the direction of the associated peptide strands


the orientation of the amide cross-links
the quaternary structure of the protein
the orientation of the hydrogen bonding
the topology of the reverse turns

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.1.B

Learning Objective: Secondary Structure


28. In general molecular chaperone proteins function by
A) mediating disulfide bond formation
B) synthesizing new proteins when one is misfolded.
C) preventing premature folding by binding hydrophobic regions of the protein.
D) enhancing salt bridge formation.
E) none of the above
Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.5.B
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
29. Conventional one dimensional NMR spectroscopy is not generally an effective tool for
determination of protein structure because
I. Proteins (including small proteins) have a high number of hydrogen atoms.
II. NMR requires a high quality protein crystal.
III. The NMR spectra exhibit high peak overlap.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

I and II
II and III
I and III
I, II, and III
III only

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.2.A
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure
30. When comparing similarities among multiple protein structures, which of the following is
false?
A) Proteins with the same function from a different species are likely to have similar motifs.
B) Proteins with the same function from different species are likely to be more similar in
sequence than in structure.
C) An effective protein motif isl likely be observed in multiple proteins.
D) Proteins with the same motifs are likely to perform similar functions.
E) None of the above statements are false.
Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.2.C

Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure


31. The structure and sequence of a protein of unknown function was examined. Which of the
following provides the best prediction of the protein's function?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

the observation of several disordered helical domains.


the observation of multiple protein subunits.
the observation of motif known as the Rossmann fold.
the observation of a large number of random coil regions.
All of the above offer excellent prediction of the protein's function.

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.2.C
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure
32. The Protein Data Bank (PDB) is a database provides structural information about proteins
that may be useful for which of the following?
I. A researcher studying the changes in protein fold associated with prions.
II. A researcher classifying structural elements by function.
III A researcher designing a compound to bind tightly to a particular region in the protein.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

I only
II only
III only
I, II
I, II, II

Ans: E
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.2.E
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure
33. Noncovalent forces that stabilize protein structure include all of the following except
__________.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

the hydrophobic effect


salt bridges
electrostatic interactions with metal ions
hydrogen bonding
disulfide bridges

Ans: E
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.4.A

Learning Objective: Protein Stability


34. The classic experiment demonstrating that reduced and denatured RNase A could refold into
the native form demonstrates that _______.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

1 structure can determine 3 structure


denaturation does not disrupt protein 2 structure
disulfide bonds do not stabilize folded proteins
All of the above.
None of the above

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.4.B
Learning Objective: Protein Stability
35. The first step in the folding of disordered polypeptides into ordered functional protein is the
formation of ______.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

1o structure
2 structure
3 structure
4 structure
hydrogen bonds

Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.5.A
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
36. Evolutionary processes have
A) increased the stability of 4 structures.
B) decreased the number of subunits.
C) increased similarity amount 1 structures.
D) enhanced efficient folding pathways.
E) all of the above
Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.5.A
Learning Objective: Protein Folding

37. Chaperonins such as the GroEL/ES system


A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

function with thermophilic proteins only.


are required at low pH.
require ATP hydrolysis.
in vitro only.
function in a nonaqueous environment.

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.5.B
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
38. Protein diseases can be caused by which of the following
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

mutations affecting the 1 structure.


mutations affecting the 3 structure.
changes in the post-synthetic processing of proteins.
All of the above are potential causes.
None of the above are potential causes.

Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.5.C
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
39. Which of the following would be most stable based on the information you have learned
about protein structure?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

a loop region with 8 amino acids


a sheet region made up of amino acids Val, Ile, Phe
an helix made up of Cys, Pro, and Phe
a hairpin with 12 amino acids
All have equal stability.

Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.D
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure

40. The structure of hen egg white protein has been solved and the torsion angles and are
shown for each residue in the table below. What structure motif most likely forms as a result of
this protein sequence?
Resid
ue
Numb
er
31
32
33
34
35
Break
42
43
44
45
46

-61
-72
-66
-67
-81
Brea
k
-30
-142
-154
-91
-110

-44
-29
-65
-23
-51
Brea
k
142
150
121
136
174

A) strand connected to another strand with a break (or loop/turn) in

between
B) Helix connect to another Helix with a break (or loop/turn) in between
C) strand connected to another strand with a alpha helix in between
D) Helix connected to a strand with a break (or loop/turn) in between
E) None of the above are correct.
Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.1.A
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
41. Hydrogen bonds and maximum separation of amino acid side chains make the _____very
stable and energetically ______________.
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

helix and sheet, favorable


helix, unfavorable
sheet, unfavorable
helix, favorable
sheet, favorable

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.1.B
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure

42. A chaperonin
A) helps fold some proteins in their lowest energy state.
B) is required for all proteins to fold properly.
C) mediates the unfolding of proteins.
D) is required for protein denaturation.
E) counteracts the laws of thermodynamics.
Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.5.B
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
43. A helix has hydrogen bonds between the carbonyl group from residue n and the amino
group of residue n+6, which of the following is TRUE?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

It has 3.6 residues per turn.


It is a random coil, not a helix.
It is an helix.
It has more residues per turn than an helix.
It has fewer residues per turn than an helix.

Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.B
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
44. Which of the following contribute to the minimization of energy that occurs with protein
folding?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

orientating amino acid groups to maximize hydrogen bonding


folding hydrophobic groups towards the exterior of the protein
burying polar groups towards the interior of the protein
extensive cavity formation
all of the above

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.5.A
Learning Objective: Protein Folding

45. Which of the following best describes the cause of Creutzfeld-Jakob Disease (a disease
which human can develop with symptoms similar to those of mad cow disease)?
A) aggregation of a misfolded protein.
B) aggregation of random coil regions on a protein.
C) ingestion of ammonium salts.
D) the serious side effects of experimental treatment with Quinacrine E) All are potential causes
Creutzfeld-Jakob disease.
Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.5.C
Learning Objective: Protein Folding
46. Which of the following lines in the figure at
right indicates a hairpin structure?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

A, C, D
B and C
A only
A, B, and D
C only

Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
47. Proteins can denature due to a change in
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

pH.
temperature.
ionic strength.
all of the above
none of the above

Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.4.A-C
Learning Objective: Protein Stability

48. Examine the three sequences below for collagen-like proteins. If hydrogen bonding were
the most important feature in determining strength in fibrous proteins, which of the following
sequences likely has the highest melting temperature and why? (Note: Flp = fluoroproline; Hyp
= hydroxyproline)
I. Pro-Hyp-Gly-Pro-Hyp-Gly-Pro-Hyp-Gly
II. Pro-Flp-Gly-Pro-Flp-Gly-Pro-Flp-Gly
III. Gly-Pro-Thr-Gly-Pro-Thr-Gly-Pro-Thr
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

1 because Hyp has OH groups


1 because the electronegativity of oxygen is greater
2 because the electronegativity of proline is greater
2 because the electronegativity of the OH group increases hydrogen bond strength
3 because Thr is a small amino acid which allows close packing

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.C and 6.4.A-C
Learning Objective: Protein Stability and Secondary Structure
49. Based on what you know about fibrous protein structure and sequence, what type of fibrous
protein is this sequence most likely to from (You can assume that the protein is longer than what
is shown and is repeating as shown, also note the polarity of each amino acid.)?
Val Cys Lys Val - Cys Ala Cys - Val Cys Lys Val - Cys Ala Cys
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

keratin
keratin
collagen
pleated collagen
This sequence cannot be from any of the structural proteins.

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure

50. Which of the following structural proteins has the greatest elasticity?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

keratin
ketatin
collagen
pleated collagen
A and B are equal

Ans: D
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
51. Noncovalent interactions account for the strength of which of the following structural
proteins?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

keratin
collagen
pleated collagen
A and B
B and C

Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
52. Examine the three sequences below for collagen-like proteins and their melting temperatures
(Tm). (Note: Flp = fluoroproline; Hyp = hydroxyproline) Based on this data, what is the most
important feature in determining the strength of the collagen protein?
1) -Pro-Hyp-Gly-Pro-Hyp-Gly-Pro-Hyp-Gly- Tm=60oC
2) -Pro-Flp-Gly-Pro-Flp-Gly-Pro-Flp-Gly-
Tm=78oC
3) -Gly-Pro-Thr-Gly-Pro-Thr-Gly-Pro-Thr- Tm=30oC
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

hydrogen bonding
inductive effect
electrostatic effect
electrostatic and Inductive effect are equal
hydrogen bonding and inductive effect are equal

Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Difficult

Section 6.1.C, Chapter Supplement: Case 6 (Note to instructor: the text does not use the term inductive, the
case does if you have not assigned the case, you may want to consider whether your students should be expected
to know the term inductive.)

Learning Objective: Secondary Structure; Chapter Supplement: Case 6


53. When considering fibrous proteins, which of the following statements is TRUE?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

Noncovalent interactions contribute to the strength of all of these proteins.


All of them consist of helix structure.
All of them require vitamin C.
Decrease in amounts of any of them cause scurvy.
All of these are true of fibrous proteins.

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Easy
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
54. In a Ramachandran diagram the region representing the angles of and that correspond
to those commonly made by an amino acid that favors a left-handed helix are different from
those angles commonly made by an amino acid that favors right-handed helix formation.
Which of the following statements provides a plausible explanation for this difference?
A) Groups which would normally undergo high steric hindrance in the right-handed
arrangement are separated maximally in the left-handed arrangement.
B) Left-handed helices have smaller pitch than right-handed helices.
C) The peptide backbone can coil tighter in the left-handed helices than in the right-handed
helices.
D) Left-handed helices exhibit cyclic symmetry, while righthanded helices are asymmetric.
E) All of the above are plausible explanations.
Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.A
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
55. Which of the characteristics of collagen structure listed below contrubute to the tensi
le strength of collagen?
I. Collagen is made up of a triplet helix where 3 left-handed helices twist together in a
right handed sense.
II. Collagen includes at repeating sequence of amino acids with glycine every 3 amino
acids in a helix with about 3 amino acids per turn.
III. The three left-handed helices are staggered to allow close packing between glycine
residues and rigidity from the bulky and inflexible proline/hydroxyproline.

A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

I
I and II
I, II, and III
II and III
I and III

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.1.C
Learning Objective: Secondary Structure
56. Native protein purifications often require multiple reaction steps in order to purify the
protein of interest from other proteins. One method used for protein separation in purification
procedures is a change from water to an organic solvent. Which of the following would be
accomplished by this solvent change?
A) Proteins with hydrophobic groups on the interior would maintain their native state.
B) Proteins with hydrophilic groups on the exterior would denature and likely precipitate.
C) Proteins with exposed hydrophobic groups would maintain their structure and remain in
solution.
D) Both A and B would occur.
E) Both B and C would occur.
Ans: E
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.4.A
Learning Objective: Protein Stability

57. When solving a protein structure using X-ray crystallography, the crystallographer generates
a 3-D grid called an electron density map based on the observed diffraction pattern. The higher
the resolution, the more detailed the electron density map and therefore the easier it is to identify
what atoms (and therefore what amino acids) are in a given position. Based on the three choices
below, in which of the following groups could the two of amino acids be the easiest to
differentiate regardless of resolution?
I. Leucine vs. Isoleucine
II. Phenylalanine vs. Alanine
III. Glutamate vs. Glutamic acid
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

Those in both groups I and II could be differentiated


Those in both groups I and III could be differentiated
Only those in group II could be differentiated
Only those in group III could be differentiated
Only those in groupI could be differentiated

Ans: C
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.2.A
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure
58. Protein dynamics is a field of study that examines the movements with in a protein. Which
type of protein structure determination would be most useful to study this type of change?
A)
B)
C)
D)
E)

X-ray crystallography
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR)
X-ray absorption spectroscopy
A and B
B and C

Ans: B
Level of Difficulty: Difficult
Section 6.2.A
Learning Objective: Tertiary Structure
59. What observation about protein refolding or renaturation helped to solidify the connection
between primary amino acid sequence and 3-D structure?
A) Spontaneous refolding of proteins into their native state under physiologic conditions.
B) Assisted refolding of proteins into their native state under laboratory conditions.
C) Identification of thermostable proteins than maintain their native state in adverse
temperatures.
D) A and B
E) B and C
Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.2.A
Learning Objective: Protein Structure
60. Molecular chaperones bind to unfolded or partially folded polypeptide chains in order to
accomplish which of the following?
A) ensure that improper aggregation of hydrophobic segments does not occur
B) engulf the protein in order to ensure that the protein is not damaged by heat denaturation
C) facilitate native folding by exposing hydrophobic segments of the protein as it is
synthesized
D) facilitate aggregation of multiple subunits of a protein during synthesis
E) All of the above are accomplished by molecular chaperones.

Ans: A
Level of Difficulty: Moderate
Section 6.4.B
Learning Objective: Protein Folding

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