Primary structure: this is the sequence of amino acids in the polypeptide chain and
traditionally also includes any disulphide links and post-translational modifications.
Essentially, this describes the covalent bond connectivity of the residues. It should be
noted that although amino acids have two mirror-image (chiral) forms, unless
explicitly stated, it will always be the usual, biologically abundant left-handed form
that is present.
Secondary structure: this is a regular arrangement of hydrogen bonding along the
protein backbone giving characteristic twist angles (dihedral/torsion) to the
polypeptide chain. The common secondary-structure categories are alpha-helix, beta-
sheet, turn and random coil (no regular structure). Secondary structure is often
displayed in terms of the Ramachandran angles: the twist of the backbone either side
of the alpha carbon atoms (the atom where the amino acid side chain branches). The
twist about the peptide bond is not so descriptive here because it is almost always
very flat.
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