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Transcript
Building Blocks of Peptides and Proteins
(Chapter 3)
Lectures 4 and 5
Chem 464 Spring 2017
1
The Human Genome Project
• Sequencing of the human genome allows for:
– Identification and categorization of different
haplotypes
– Understanding the differences between humans
and chimpanzees
• Based on phylogenetic trees and comparison of
differences
• Especially in regulatory sequences, which may be more
important to evolution than protein changes
– Identification of genes involved in disease
– Track the path of human migration
Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs)
can distinguish human populations
You can get your genome analyzed!
The Central “Dogma” of Biochemistry:
DNA → RNA → Protein
Post-translational
modifications of
Amino Acids
The Central “Dogma” of Biochemistry:
Genetic Code
The crowded environment in an E coli cell
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2fobDHHl11c
McGuffee SR, Elcock AH (2010) Diffusion, Crowding & Protein
Stability in a Dynamic Molecular Model of the Bacterial
Cytoplasm. PLoS Comput Biol 6(3): e1000694.
doi:10.1371/journal.pcbi.1000694
Proteins mediate most physical and biochemical actions
required for cellular function.
Human genome encodes
many different protein types
Proteins:
Main Agents of Biological Function
• Catalysis
– enolase (in the glycolytic pathway)
– DNA polymerase (in DNA replication)
• Transport
– hemoglobin (transports O2 in the blood)
– lactose permease (transports lactose across the cell membrane)
• Structure
– collagen (connective tissue)
– keratin (hair, nails, feathers, horns)
• Motion
– myosin (muscle tissue)
– actin (muscle tissue, cell motility)
Amino Acids:
Building Blocks of Protein
Polythene (A chemical polymer)
Proteins are linear
hetero-polymers of
α-amino acids
Amino Acids:
Building Blocks of Protein
• Proteins are linear heteropolymers of α-amino acids
• Amino acids have properties that are well-suited to carry
out a variety of biological functions
–
–
–
–
Capacity to polymerize
Useful acid-base properties
Varied physical properties
Varied chemical functionality
Amino acids share many features,
differing only at the R substituent
Most α-amino acids are chiral
• The α-carbon always has four substituents and is
tetrahedral
• All (except proline) have:
– an acidic carboxyl group
– a basic amino group
– an α-hydrogen connected to the α-carbon
• The fourth substituent (R) is unique
– In glycine, the fourth substituent is also hydrogen
Amino Acids: Atom Naming
• Organic nomenclature: start from one end
• Biochemical designation:
– start from α-carbon and go down the R-group
All amino acids are chiral (except glycine)
Proteins only contain L amino acids
Amino Acids: Classification
Common amino acids can be placed in five basic
groups depending on their R substituents:
• Nonpolar, aliphatic (7)
• Aromatic (3)
• Polar, uncharged (5)
• Positively charged (3)
• Negatively charged (2)
These amino acid side chains absorb UV light at 270–280 nm
These amino acids side chains can form hydrogen bonds.
Cysteine can form disulfide bonds.
Amino Acid Names
Essential Amino Acids
• Essential amino acids are those
that human bodies cannot
synthesize and are obtained
from our diets.
• Nonessential amino acids are
those that can be made by
humans and other vertebrates
from simpler precursors and are
thus not required in the diet.
Uncommon Amino Acids in Proteins
• Not incorporated by ribosomes
− except for Selenocysteine
• Arise by post-translational modifications of
proteins
• Reversible modifications, especially
phosphorylation, are important in regulation and
signaling
Modified Amino Acids Found in Proteins
Reversible Modifications of Amino Acids
Ionization of Amino Acids
• At acidic pH, the carboxyl group is protonated and
the amino acid is in the cationic form.
• At neutral pH, the carboxyl group is deprotonated
but the amino group is protonated. The net charge is
zero; such ions are called Zwitterions.
• At alkaline pH, the amino group is neutral –NH2 and
the amino acid is in the anionic form.
pKa of Amino Acids
pKa ?
pKa ?
pKa ?
Cation  Zwitterion  Anion
Amino acids can act as buffers
Amino acids with uncharged side chains, such as glycine,
have two pKa values:
The pKa of the α-carboxyl group is 2.34
The pKa of the α-amino group is 9.6
It can act as a buffer in two pH regimes.
Amino acids carry a net charge of zero
at a specific pH (the pI)
• Zwitterions predominate at pH values between the pKa values of
the amino and carboxyl groups
• For amino acids without ionizable side chains, the Isoelectric Point
(equivalence point, pI) is
pK1 + pK 2
pI =
2
• At this point, the net charge is zero
– Amino Acid is least soluble in water
– Amino Acid does not migrate in electric field
Ionizable side chains can show up
in titration curves
• Ionizable side chains can be also titrated
• Titration curves are now more complex
• pKa values are discernable if two pKa values are more
than two pH units apart
Histidine pKa = 6.0
Understanding of ionizable amino acids as a basis
for explaining many cellular and life processes
• pKa of Histidine near physiological pH acts as a buffer to reduce
large changes in pH.
– The pH of blood is tightly controlled by the histidines in
Hemoglobin (and phosphate molecules in the blood to a small
extent).
• pKa of Histidine leads to pH-dependent conformational change
in proteins.
• pKa of ionizable residues changes based on their environment,
which can:
– affect enzyme kinetics
– enable specific protein functions
Chemical Environment Affects pKa Values
α-carboxy group is much more acidic than in carboxylic acids
α-amino group is slightly less basic than in amines
Active Sites of Enzymes Can Strongly Affect pKa
of Ionizable Amino Acids
Enzyme
Residue
Lysozyme
Glu-35
Lysozyme – glycolchitin
Glu-35
Acetoacetate decarboxylase Lys-43
Papain
His-159
pKa in
solution
4.2
4.2
10.0
6.0
pKa in
enzyme
6.5
8.2
5.9
3.4
Fersht, A. (1999). Structure and Mechanism in Protein Science (Freeman, NY)
Glutamate residues buried in a membrane
can facilitate a proton channel
Glutamate
Position
pKa of Glu
Side-chain
Exposed
4.1
Buried
̴6.5-7.5
Electrostatics, hydration, and proton transfer dynamics in the membrane domain of respiratory complex I.
Kaila VR, Wikström M, Hummer G. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2014;111:6988. [PMID: 24778264]
Group Discussion: How to Calculate the
pI When the Side Chain is Ionizable
• Identify species that carries a net zero charge
• Identify pKa value that defines the acid strength of this
zwitterion: (pK2)
• Identify pKa value that defines the base strength of this
zwitterion: (pK1)
• Take the average of these two pKa values
What is the pI of histidine?
Detour: Amino acid representations
Fischer
Projection
Isoelectric point: Alternate view
Neutral side chains
CO2
CO2
CO2H
pKa2
pKa1
H 3N
H
2.34
H 3N
H
9.6
H 2N
R
R
R
acidic media
low pH
(positively charged)
neutral form
H
basic media
high pH
(negatively charged)
Increasing pH
1
1
𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑝 = 𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑎𝑎1 + 𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑎𝑎2 = 2.34 + 9.6 = 6.0
2
2
Isoelectric point: Alternate view
Acidic side chains
CO2H
H 3N
CO2
pKa1
H
1.88
CH2CO2H
acidic media
low pH
(positively charged)
H 3N
CO2
pKa3
H
3.65
H 3N
pKa2
H
9.68
H 2N
(negatively charged)
H
CH2CO2
CH2CO2
CH2CO2H
neutral form
CO2
basic media
high pH
(double negatively charged)
Increasing pH
pI is the average of the pKas around the neutral form.
1
1
𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑝 = 𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑎𝑎1 + 𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑝𝑎𝑎3 = 1.88 + 3.65 = 2.77
2
2
Formation of Peptides
• Peptides are small condensation products of amino acids
• They are “small” compared to proteins (Mw < 10 kDa)
Peptide ends are not the same
Numbering (and naming) starts from the amino terminus
AA1
AA2
AA3
AA4
AA5
Naming peptides:
start at the N-terminus
• Using full amino acid names
– Serylglycyltyrosylalanylleucine
• Using the three-letter code abbreviation
– Ser-Gly-Tyr-Ala-Leu
• For longer peptides (like proteins) the oneletter code can be used
– SGYAL
Peptides: A Variety of Functions
• Hormones and pheromones
– insulin (think sugar)
– oxytocin (think childbirth)
– sex-peptide (think fruit fly mating)
• Neuropeptides
– substance P (pain mediator)
• Antibiotics
– polymyxin B (for Gram – bacteria)
– bacitracin (for Gram + bacteria)
• Protection, e.g., toxins
– amanitin (mushrooms)
– conotoxin (cone snails)
– chlorotoxin (scorpions)
Proteins are:
• Polypeptides (covalently linked α-amino acids) + possibly:
•
cofactors
•
coenzymes
•
prosthetic groups
•
other modifications
− functional non-amino acid component
− metal ions or organic molecules
− organic cofactors
− NAD+ in lactate dehydrogenase
− covalently attached cofactors
− heme in myoglobin
Polypeptide size and number
varies greatly in proteins
Classes of Conjugated Proteins
What to Study about Peptides and
Proteins
What is its sequence and composition?
What is its three-dimensional structure?
How does it find its native fold?
How does it achieve its biochemical role?
How is its function regulated?
How does it interacts with other macromolecules?
How is it related to other proteins?
Where is it localized within the cell?
What are its physico-chemical properties?
A mixture of proteins can be separated
• Separation relies on differences in
physical and chemical properties
–
–
–
–
–
–
Charge
Size
Affinity for a ligand
Solubility
Hydrophobicity
Thermal stability
• Chromatography is commonly used for
preparative separation
Column Chromatography
Separation by Charge
Separation by Size
Separation by Affinity
Electrophoresis for Protein Analysis
Separation in analytical scale is commonly
done by electrophoresis
– Electric field pulls proteins according to their
charge
– Gel matrix hinders mobility of proteins according
to their size and shape
SDS PAGE: Molecular Weight
• SDS – sodium dodecyl sulfate – a detergent
• SDS micelles bind to and unfold all the proteins
– SDS gives all proteins an uniformly negative charge
– The native shape of proteins does not matter
– Rate of movement will only depend on size: small
proteins will move faster
SDS-PAGE can be used to calculate the
molecular weight of a protein
Isoelectric focusing can be used to
determine the pI of a protein
Isoelectric focusing and SDS-PAGE are
combined in 2D electrophoresis
Spectroscopic Detection of
Aromatic Amino Acids
• The aromatic amino acids absorb light in the UV region
• Proteins typically have UV absorbance maxima around
275–280 nm
• Tryptophan and tyrosine are the strongest
chromophores
• Concentration can be determined by UV-visible
spectrophotometry using Beers law: A = ε·c·l
Specific activity (activity/total protein)
can be used to assess protein purity
Protein Sequencing
• It is essential to further biochemical analysis that we know
the sequence of the protein we are studying
• Actual sequence generally determined from DNA sequence
• Edman Degradation (Classical method)
– Successive rounds of N-terminal modification, cleavage, and
identification
– Can be used to identify protein with known sequence
• Mass Spectrometry (Modern method)
– MALDI MS and ESI MS can precisely identify the mass of a
peptide, and thus the amino acid sequence
– Can be used to determine post-translational modifications
Protein Sequences as Clues to
Evolutionary Relationships
• Sequences of homologous proteins from a wide range
of species can be aligned and analyzed for differences
• Differences indicate evolutionary divergences
• Analysis of multiple protein families can indicate
evolutionary relationships between organisms,
ultimately the history of life on Earth