Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the work of artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
蛋白質體學 Proteomics 2012 Amino acids, Peptides and Proteins 陳威戎 2012. 09. 17~ 10. 01 Outline 1. Amino Acids 2. Peptides and Proteins 3. Covalent Structure of Proteins Amino Acids Proteins are polymers of amino acids, with each amino acid residues joined to its neighbor by a specific covalent bond. Twenty different amino acids are commonly found in proteins. First: asparagine (1806) ; last: threonine (1938). Names derived from the sources: Asparagine – asparagus Glutamate – wheat gluten Tyrosine – cheese Glycine – sweet taste Amino acids share common structural features Two conventions used to identify the carbons in an amino acid The α-carbon atom is a chiral center. L-Form Amino Acid Structure Carboxylic group Amino group + H3 N R group COO a - H H = Glycine CH3 = Alanine Juang RH (2007) BCbasics Northwest line Chung-San line -C-C-C-N-C-N = Aromatic N+ Trp W Arg R -C- Basic -OH Tyr Y Lys K + -CN Nan-Kan line -C-CONH2 -C-C-CONH2 Asn N Gln Q Amide Asp D Glu E Acidic -C-COOH -C-C-COOH -C- -C-C C N N+ His H Central line Gly G Phe F Ala A A Val V Ile I -CH3 C C -C C -C-C-C -H -C-OH Ser S Cys C -C-SH Circular line South line Non-polar Polar -C-C OH Thr T Met M Hydroxy Sulfur -C-C-S-C Aliphatic Leu L C -C-C-C C C C HN C-COOH a Pro P Imino, Circular Juang RH (2007) BCbasics -C-C-C-C-NH3 Amino Acid Subway Map Absorption of ultraviolet light by aromatic amino acids Reversible formation of the disulfide bond Classification of Amino Acids by Polarity NONPOLAR POLAR Acidic Neutral Basic Asp Asn Ser Arg Cys Tyr His Gln Thr Lys Glu Gly Ala Ile Phe Trp Val Leu Met Pro Polar or non-polar, it is the bases of the amino acid properties. Juang RH (2007) Biochemistry Uncommon amino acids also have important functions Uncommon amino acids also have important functions Hydride, Hydrogen and Proton hydride 1s - - Proton + + - - + - Hydrogen atom 1 H 1.008 Juang RH (2007) BCbasics Proton Is Adsorbed or Desorbed Proton: abundant and small, affects the charge of a molecule lone pair electrons Amino High pKa Low N H H+ H+ N H H H Low pKa High Carboxylic C O H O O C O H+ Ampholyte contains both positive and negative groups on its molecule Juang RH (2007) BCbasics Amino acids can act as acids and bases Acidic environment Neutral environment Alkaline environment pK2 ~ 9 NH2 H+ R-C-H COOH NH2 H+ R-C-H COOpK1 ~ 2 +1 NH2 R-C-H COO- 5.5 0 Isoelectric point -1 Juang RH (2007) BCbasics Amino Acids Have Buffering Effect pH 12 ★ pK2 Isoelectric point = pI 9 NH2 H+ 6 H-C-R COO- 3 ★ pK1 + pK2 2 pK1 0 [OH] → Juang RH (2007) BCbasics Environment pH vs Protein Charge Buffer pH 10 9 8 7 Isoelectric point, pI + 6 5 4 3 0 - - Net Charge of a Protein Juang RH (2007) BCbasics pKa of Amino Acid Residues Residues on amino acids can release or accept protons a -COOH R -COOH His -Imidazole·H+ Cys -SH Tyr -OH a -NH3+ R -NH3+ a -COOR -COO- + H+ pKa = 1.8~2.4 + H+ pKa = 3.9~4.3 His -Imidazole + H+ pKa = 6.0 + H+ pKa = 8.3 Cys -S+ H+ pKa = 10 Tyr -Oa -NH2 R -NH2 + H+ pKa = 8.8~11 + H+ pKa = 10~12.5 Smaller pKa releases proton easier Only His has the residue with a neutral pKa (imidazole) pKa of a carboxylic or amino groups is lower than pKa of the R residues Juang RH (2007) BCbasics pKa of Amino Acids Amino acids -COOH -NH2 Gly Ala Val Leu Ile Ser Thr Met Phe Trp Asn Gln Pro Asp Glu His Cys Tyr Lys Arg 2.34 2.34 2.32 2.36 2.36 2.21 2.63 2.28 1.83 2.38 2.02 2.17 1.99 2.09 2.19 1.82 1.71 2.20 2.18 2.17 G A V L I S T M F W N Q P D E H C Y K R 9.60 9.69 9.62 9.68 9.68 9.15 10.4 9.21 9.13 9.39 8.80 9.13 10.6 9.82 9.67 9.17 10.8 9.11 8.95 9.04 -R pH two pKa pK2 pI pK1 pK1 + pK2 2 three pKa pK3 3.86 4.25 6.0 8.33 10.07 10.53 12.48 pK2 pK1 ? ? pI ? [OH-] Juang RH (2004) BCbasics H first HOOC-CH2-C-COOH NH3+ +1 pK1 = 2.1 H second HOOC-CH2-C-COO- Aspartic acid Isoelectric point is the average of the two pKa flanking the zero net-charged form 2.1 + 3.9 = 3.0 2 Isoelectric point 0 NH3+ pK2 = 3.9 H -OOC-CH -C-COO2 -1 NH3+ third pK3 = 9.8 H -OOC-CH -C-COO2 NH2 -2 -2 pK3 -1 pK2 pK1 0 +1 [OH] Juang RH (2004) BCbasics Titration curves predict the charge of amino acids Isoelectric point, Isoelectric pH, pI Amino acids differ in their acid-base properties Amino acids differ in their acid-base properties Quiz 1: Net electric charge and pI of a peptide A peptide has the sequence : Glu-His-Trp-Ser-Gly-Leu-Arg-Pro-Gly 1. What is the net charge of this peptide at pH 3, 8, and 11? 2. Estimate the pI for this peptide. Peptides are chains of amino acids Formation of a peptide bond by condensation Peptides are chains of amino acids The pentapeptide serylglycyltyrosylalanylleucine, or Ser-Gly-Tyr-Ala-Leu Biologically active peptides and polypeptides occur in a vast range of sizes Peptides have characteristic amino acid compositions Some proteins contain chemical groups other than amino acids There are several levels of protein structure Proteins can be separated and purified Crude extract Fractionation Ammonium sulfate (salting out) Dialysis Column chromatography Proteins can be separated and characterized by electrophoresis The amino acid sequences of millions of proteins have been determined Frederick Sanger Short polypeptides are sequenced using automated procedures Large proteins must be sequenced in smaller segments 1. Breaking disulfide bonds 2. Cleaving the polypeptide chain: proteases 3. Sequencing of peptides 4. Ordering peptide fragments 5. Locating disulfide bonds Breaking disulfide bonds in proteins Cleaving the polypeptide chain: proteases Cleaving proteins and sequencing and ordering the peptide fragments Amino acid sequences can also be deduced by other methods 1. New methods based on mass spectrometry permit sequencing of short polypeptides (20-30 a.a.) in just a few minutes. 2. Development of rapid DNA sequencing methods. Quiz 2: Sequence determination of a nonapeptide 1. A nonapeptide was determined to have the following amino acid composition: (Lys)2, (Gly)2, (Phe)2, His, Leu, Met. 2. The native peptide was incubated with 1-fluoro-2,4-dinitrobenzene (FDNB) and then hydrolyzed; 2,4-dinitrophenylhistidine was identified by HPLC. 3. When the native peptide was exposed to cyanogen bromide (CNBr), an octapeptide and free glycine were recovered. 4. Incubation of the native peptide with trypsin gave a pentapeptide, a tripeptide, and free Lys. 2,4-Dinitrophenyl-histidine was recovered from the pentapeptide, and 2,4-dinitrophenylphenylalanine was recovered from the tripeptide. 5. Digestion with the enzyme pepsin produced a dipeptide, a tripeptide, and a tetrapeptide. The tetrapeptide was composed of (Lys)2, Phe, and Gly. The native sequence was determined to be: