1 / 68

Amino Acids, concluded; Proteins and Protein Methods

Amino Acids, concluded; Proteins and Protein Methods. Andy Howard Biochemistry Lectures, Fall 2010 1 September 2010. Main-chain acid-base chemistry Side-chain reactivity Peptides & Proteins Ramachandran angles. Levels of protein structure Primary Secondary Tertiary Quaternary Domains

fford
Download Presentation

Amino Acids, concluded; Proteins and Protein Methods

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Amino Acids, concluded; Proteins and Protein Methods Andy HowardBiochemistry Lectures, Fall 20101 September 2010 Amino Acids & Proteins

  2. Main-chain acid-base chemistry Side-chain reactivity Peptides & Proteins Ramachandran angles Levels of protein structure Primary Secondary Tertiary Quaternary Domains Protein Topology Visualization of structures Plans for Today Amino Acids & Proteins

  3. Main-chain acid-base chemistry • Deprotonating the amine group: H3N+-CHR-COO- + OH- H2N-CHR-COO- + H2O • Protonating the carboxylate:H3N+-CHR-COO- + H+H3N+-CHR-COOH • Equilibrium far to the left at neutral pH • First equation has Ka=1 around pH 9 • Second equation has Ka=1 around pH 2 Amino Acids & Proteins

  4. Why does pKa depend on the side chain? • Opportunities for hydrogen bonding or other ionic interactions stabilize some charges more than others • More variability in the amino terminus, i.e. the pKa of the carboxylate group doesn’t depend as much on R as the pKa of the amine group Amino Acids & Proteins

  5. When do these pKa values apply? • The values given in the table are for the free amino acids • The main-chain pKa values aren’t relevant for internal amino acids in proteins • The side-chain pKa values vary a lot depending on molecular environment:a 9.4 here doesn’t mean a 9.4 in a protein! Amino Acids & Proteins

  6. How do we relate pKa to percentage ionization? • Derivable from Henderson-Hasselbalch equation • If pH = pKa, half-ionized: [HA] = [A-] • One unit below: • 91% at more positive charge state, • 9% at less positive charge state • One unit above: 9% / 91% Amino Acids & Proteins

  7. Don’t fall into the trap! • Ionization of leucine: Amino Acids & Proteins

  8. Side-chain reactivity • Not all the chemical reactivity of amino acids involves the main-chain amino and carboxyl groups • Side chains can participate in reactions: • Acid-base reactions • Other reactions • In proteins and peptides,the side-chain reactivity is more important because the main chain is locked up! Amino Acids & Proteins

  9. Acid-base reactivity on side chains • Asp, glu: side-chain COO-: • Asp sidechain pKa = 3.9 • Glu sidechain pKa = 4.1 • That means that at pH = 5.1, a glutamate will be ~90.9% charged • Lys, arg: side-chain nitrogen: • Lys sidechain –NH3+ pKa = 10.5 • Arg sidechain =NH2+ pKa = 12.5 Amino Acids & Proteins

  10. Acid-base reactivity in histidine • It’s easy to protonate and deprotonate the imidazole group Amino Acids & Proteins

  11. Cysteine: a special case • The sulfur is surprisingly ionizable • Within proteins it often remains unionized even at higher pH Amino Acids & Proteins

  12. Ionizing hydroxyls • X–O–H  X–O- + H+ • Tyrosine is easy, ser and thr hard: • Tyr pKa = 10.5 • Ser, Thr pKa = ~13 • Difference due to resonance stabilization of phenolate ion: Amino Acids & Proteins

  13. Resonance-stabilized ion Amino Acids & Proteins

  14. Other side-chain reactions • Little activity in hydrophobic amino acids other than van der Waals • Sulfurs (especially in cysteines) can be oxidized to disulfides, sulfates, sulfites, … • Nitrogens in his can covalently bond to various ligands • Hydroxyls can form ethers, esters • Salt bridges (e.g. lys - asp) Amino Acids & Proteins

  15. Phosphorylation • ATP donates terminal phosphate to side-chain hydroxyl of ser, thr, tyr • Some phosphorylation of H, D, E too • ATP + Ser-OH  ADP + Ser-O-(P) • Often involved in activating or inactivating enzymes • Under careful control of enzymes called kinases and phosphatases Amino Acids & Proteins

  16. Peptides and proteins • Peptides are oligomers of amino acids • Proteins are polymers • Dividing line is a little vague:~ 50-80 aa. • All are created, both formally and in practice, by stepwise polymerization • Water eliminated at each step Amino Acids & Proteins

  17. Growth of oligo- or polypeptide Amino Acids & Proteins

  18. The peptide bond • The amide bond between two successive amino acids is known as a peptide bond • The C-N bond between the first amino acid’s carbonyl carbon and the second amino acid’s amine nitrogen has some double bond character Amino Acids & Proteins

  19. Double-bond character of peptide Amino Acids & Proteins

  20. The result: planarity! • This partial double bond character means the nitrogen is sp2 hybridized • Six atoms must lie in a single plane: • First amino acid’s alpha carbon • Carbonyl carbon • Carbonyl oxygen • Second amino acid’s amide nitrogen • Amide hydrogen • Second amino acid’s alpha carbon Amino Acids & Proteins

  21. Rotations and flexibility • Planarity implies  = 180º, where  is the rotation angle about N-C bond • Free rotations are possible about N-C and C-C bonds • Define  = torsional rotation about N-C • Define  = torsional rotation about C-C • We can characterize main-chain conformations according to ,  Amino Acids & Proteins

  22. Ramachandran angles G.N. Ramachandran Amino Acids & Proteins

  23. Preferred Values of  and  • Steric hindrance makes some values unlikely • Specific values are characteristic of particular types of secondary structure • Most structures with forbidden values of  and  turn out to be errors Amino Acids & Proteins

  24. How far from 180º can w vary? • Remember what we said about the partial double bond character of the C-N main-chain bond • That imposes planarity • In practice it rarely varies by more than a few degrees from 180º. • Aromatic amino acids are the most likely to have non-planar peptides Amino Acids & Proteins

  25. Ramachandran plot • Cf. figures in text • If you submit a structure to the PDB with Ramachandran angles far from the yellow regions, be prepared to justify them! Amino Acids & Proteins

  26. How to remember f and  • Proteins are synthesized N to C on the ribosome • Therefore the natural way to draw an amino acid is (NH-CHR-CO) • f is the first of those angles •  is the second • f is earlier in the Greek alphabet, and phi comes before psi in Roman spelling Amino Acids & Proteins

  27. Why bother with mnemonics? • Few textbooks provide memory aids like these • You’re grown-ups; you can read the actual answers in your textbook • This is intended as a study aid, which is what an instructor should be providing • We’ll do several during the semester Amino Acids & Proteins

  28. How are oligo- and polypeptides synthesized? • Formation of the peptide linkages occurs in the ribosome under careful enzymatic control • Polymerization is endergonic and requires energy in the form of GTP (like ATP, only with guanosine): • GTP + n-length-peptide + amino acid  GDP + Pi + (n+1)-length peptide Amino Acids & Proteins

  29. What happens at the ends? • Usually there’s a free amino end and a free carboxyl end: • H3N+–CHR–CO–(peptide)n–NH–CHR–COO- • Cyclic peptides do occur • Cyclization doesn’t happen at the ribosome: it involves a separate, enzymatic step. Amino Acids & Proteins

  30. Reactivity in peptides & proteins • Main-chain acid-base reactivity unavailable except on the ends • Side-chain reactivity available but with slightly modified pKas. • Terminal main-chain pKavalues modified too • Environment of protein side chain is often hydrophobic, unlike free amino acid side chain Amino Acids & Proteins

  31. iClicker question 1 What’s the net charge on ELVIS at pH 7? • (a) 0 • (b) +1 • (c) -1 • (d) +2 • (e) -2 Amino Acids & Proteins

  32. iClicker question 2 • Leucine is one of the more common amino acids in proteins. In a typical protein, I would expect the leucine content to be about: • (a) 53% • (b) 7% • (c) 5% • (d) 3% • (e) We do not have enough information to know. Amino Acids & Proteins

  33. Disulfides In oxidizing environments, two neighboring cysteine residues can react with an oxidizing agent to form a covalent bond between the side chains Amino Acids & Proteins

  34. What could this do? • Can bring portions of a protein that are distant in amino acid sequence into close proximity with one another • This can influence protein stability Amino Acids & Proteins

  35. Proteins have definable structures! • This isn’t intuitively obvious • Many biomolecules are much more conformationally flexible in terms of the number of conformations they actually take on in the real world • Why are protein structures definable? • They’re big enough to have an interior • Hydrophobic in, hydrophilic out imposes order Amino Acids & Proteins

  36. Levels of Protein Structure • We conventionally describe proteins at four levels of structure, from most local to most global: • Primary: linear sequence of peptide units • Secondary: main-chain H-bonds that define short-range order in structure • Tertiary: three-dimensional fold of a single polypeptide • Quaternary: Folds of multiple polypeptide chains to form a complete oligomeric unit Amino Acids & Proteins

  37. What does the primary structure look like? • -ala-glu-val-thr-asp-pro-gly- … • Can be determined by amino acid sequencing of the protein • Can also be determined by sequencing the gene and then using the codon information to define the protein sequence • Amino acid analysis means percentages; that’s less informative than the sequence Amino Acids & Proteins

  38. Components of secondary structure • , 310,  helices • pleated sheets and the strands that comprise them • Beta turns • More specialized structures like collagen helices Amino Acids & Proteins

  39. An accounting for secondary structure: phospholipase A2 Amino Acids & Proteins

  40. Alpha helix Amino Acids & Proteins

  41. Characteristics of  helices • Hydrogen bonding from amino nitrogen to carbonyl oxygen in the residue 4 earlier in the chain • 3.6 residues per turn • Amino acid side chains face outward • ~ 10 residues long in globular proteins Amino Acids & Proteins

  42. What would disrupt this? • Not much: the side chains don’t bump into one another • Proline residue will disrupt it: • Main-chain N can’t H-bond • The ring forces a kink • Glycines sometimes disrupt because they tend to be flexible Amino Acids & Proteins

  43. Other helices • NH to C=O four residues earlier is not the only pattern found in proteins • 310 helix is NH to C=O three residues earlier • More kinked; 3 residues per turn • Often one H-bond of this kind at N-terminal end of an otherwise -helix •  helix: even rarer: NH to C=O five residues earlier Amino Acids & Proteins

  44. Beta strands • Structures containing roughly extended polypeptide strands • Extended conformation stabilized by inter-strand main-chain hydrogen bonds • No defined interval in sequence number between amino acids involved in H-bond Amino Acids & Proteins

  45. Sheets: roughly planar • Folds straighten H-bonds • Side-chains roughly perpendicular from sheet plane • Consecutive side chains up, then down • Minimizes intra-chain collisions between bulky side chains Amino Acids & Proteins

  46. Anti-parallel beta sheet • Neighboring strands extend in opposite directions • Complementary C=O…N bonds from top to bottom and bottom to top strand • Slightly pleated for optimal H-bond strength Amino Acids & Proteins

  47. Parallel Beta Sheet • N-to-C directions are the same for both strands • You need to get from the C-end of one strand to the N-end of the other strand somehow • H-bonds at more of an angle relative to the approximate strand directions • Therefore: more pleated than anti-parallel sheet Amino Acids & Proteins

  48. Beta turns • Abrupt change in direction • , angles arecharacteristic of beta • Main-chain H-bonds maintained almost all the way through the turn • Jane Richardson and others have characterized several types Amino Acids & Proteins

  49. Collagen triple helix • Three left-handed helical strands interwoven with a specific hydrogen-bonding interaction • Every 3rd residue approaches other strands closely: so they’re glycines Amino Acids & Proteins

  50. Reminder re disulfides • Cysteine residues brought into proximity under oxidizing conditions can form a disulfide • Forms a “cystine” residue • Oxygen isn’t always the oxidizing agent • Can bring sequence-distant residues close together and stabilize the protein Amino Acids & Proteins

More Related