The backbone of a protein is a polypeptide chain made up by linking
amino acids together with the removal of water, as we saw in Chapter
20. In globular proteins these chains typically are 60 to 600 amino
acids long, and several chains may be present in one molecule.
The exact sequence of 20 different amino acids at each position
along a protein chain is coded originally in DNA (in the way that
we will see at the end of this chapter), and a few of these amino
acids then are modified chemically in some proteins after they are
built into the polypeptide chain. But this sequence of amino acids
is all that is coded by the DNA. The way that the protein chain
folds in three dimensions, the molecular structure that results,
and all of the chemical properties of the folded protein must be
contained in the amino acid sequence alone. There are no magic templates
for a new polypeptide chain, and nothing else to tell the new protein
how to construct itself in three dimensions.
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A polypeptide chain of a protein contains important internal constraints
on its own geometry. The carbon atom from which an amino acid side
chain branches off is called the alpha carbon (Ca),
and the connection between alpha carbons along the chain is the
peptide group or amide group:
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