Repeated protein folding processes both in vivo and in vitro leading to the same structure for a specific amino acid sequence prove that the amino acid sequence determines protein structuring. This is also evidenced by the variability of structuring, dependent on the introduced mutations. An important phenomenon in this regard is the presence of a differentiated secondary structure for chain fragments of identical sequence representing distinct forms of the secondary-order structure. Proteins termed chameleon proteins contain polypeptide chain fragments of identical sequence (length 6-12 aa) showing structural differentiation: helix versus β-structure. In the present paper, it was shown that these fragments represent components matching the structural status dictated by the physicochemical properties of the entire structural unit. This structural matching is related to achieving the goal of the biological function of the structural unit. The corresponding secondary structure represents a means to achieving this goal, not an end in itself. A selected set of proteins from the ChSeq database have been analyzed using a fuzzy oil drop model (FOD-M) identifying the uniqueness of the hydrophobicity distribution taken as a medium for recording the specificity of a given protein and a given chameleon section in particular. It was shown that in the vast majority, the status of chameleon sections turns out to be comparable regardless of the represented secondary structure.