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PP13

Submitted by scasimir on Thu, 04/18/2019 - 22:33

Like that of nucleic acids, the molecular structure of proteins has several levels of the organization. The primary structure of a protein is its sequence of amino acids. Through interactions between neighboring amino acids, a polypeptide chain folds and twists into a secondary structure. Two common secondary structures found in proteins are the beta (β) pleated sheet and the alpha (α) helix. Secondary structures interact and fold further to form a tertiary structure, which is the overall, three-dimensional shape of the protein. The secondary and tertiary structures of a protein are largely determined by the primary structure—the amino acid sequence—of the protein. Finally, some proteins consist of two or more polypeptide chains that associate to produce a quaternary structure. Many proteins have an additional level of organization defined by domains. A domain is a group of amino acids that forms a discrete functional unit within the protein. For example, there are several different types of protein domains that function in DNA binding.

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Comments

You don't need the "the" before organization in the first sentence. I also don't believe you need to italicize the levels of protein structure, typically only scientific names (like Genus species) are italicized in scientific writing.

I'd also talk about the types of bonds associated with each level of structure. 

Maybe instead of italicizing the terms, maybe bold font or just plain font