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Amino Acids “When you understand the amino acids, you understand everything” ©CMBI 2001 Amino Acids Proteins are macromolecules made up from 20 different amino acids. The heart of the amino acid is the so-called C. To which are bound: an amino group, a carboxyl group, a hydrogen, and the side chain. O H2N C CH OH R The C, C, N and O atoms are called backbone atoms. R denotes any one of the 20 possible side chains. ©CMBI 2001 Di-peptide Amino acids bind, to form a protein. Upon binding, two protons from the NH3 and one oxygen from the carboxyl join to form a water. So the peptide bond has at the one side a C=O and at the other side an N-H. Only the ends of the chain are NH3 or carboxylic, and thus charged. Which dipeptide is this? Where are the charges? ©CMBI 2001 Phi-Psi ©CMBI 2001 Amino Acid Sequence The amino acid sequence (also called primary structure) of a protein is the order of the amino acids in the protein chain. The sequence is always read from the N-terminus to the Cterminus of the protein. For example: +H3N-Lys-Val-Phe-Ala-Met-Cys-Leu-Leu-Arg-Val-COO- Or (in one-lettercode): KVFAMCLLRV ©CMBI 2001 The 20 Amino Acids A C D E F G H I K L M N P Q R S T V W Y Ala Cys Asp Glu Phe Gly His Ile Lys Leu Met Asn Pro Gln Arg Ser Thr Val Trp Tyr Alanine Cysteine Aspartic acid (Aspartate) Glutamic acid (Glutamate) Phenylalanine Glycine Histidine Isoleucine Lysine Leucine Methionine Asparagine Proline Glutamine Arginine Serine Threonine Valine Tryptophan Tyrosine ©CMBI 2001 20 Amino Acids The side chains, R, determine the differences in the structural and chemical properties of the 20 ‘natural’ amino acids. The 20 amino acids can, for example, be classified as follows: Aliphatic/hydrophobic Polar Alcoholic Sulfur-containing Aromatic Charged Special Ala, Leu, Ile, Val Asn, Gln Ser, Thr, (Tyr) Met, Cys Phe, Tyr, Trp, (His) Arg, Lys, Asp, Glu, (His) Gly (no R), Pro (cyclic) Several amino acids belong in more than one category. ©CMBI 2001 Amino Acid Characteristics There are many ways to characterize the properties of amino acids. The ones most useful and most commonly used are: Hydrophobicity Size Charge Secondary structure preference Alcoholicity Aromaticity And on top of that there are some special characteristics like bridge forming by cysteines, rigidity of prolines, titrating at physiological pH of histidine, flexibility of glycines, etc. ©CMBI 2001 Secondary Structure Preference Amino acids form chains, the sequence or primary structure. These chains fold in -helices, b-strands, b-turns, and loops (or for short, helix, strand, turn and loop), the secondary structure. These secondary structure elements fold further to make whole proteins, but more about that later. There are relations between the physico-chemical characteristics of the amino acids and their secondary structure preference. I.e., the b- branched residues (Ile, Thr, Val) like to sit in b-strands. For now, just remember Helix: AMELK; Strand:VITWYF; Turn: PSDNG. (Later we will find out why) ©CMBI 2001