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Protein Structure 2 Protein Modification BL4010 10.03.06 Nomenclature • Domain - a particular region within a polypeptide chain (ATP binding domain) • Motif - a protein structural element (may appear more than once in a single protein or in many different types of proteins (e.g. greek key) • Subunit - a single polypeptide unit within a larger multipeptide protein • Complex - group of proteins with long-term or transient physical association Multidomain proteins Multisubunit proteins Quaternary (4°) structure What are the forces driving quaternary association? • Typical Kd for two subunits: 10-8 to 10-16M! • These values correspond to energies of 50-100 kJ/mol at 37 C • Entropy loss due to association - unfavorable • Entropy gain due to burying of hydrophobic groups - very favorable! Alcohol dehydrogenase dimer Prealbumin dimer Tyrosine kinases Packing symmetry Multiple subunits vs. multiple domains • Structural factors – – – – Stability: reduction of surface to volume ratio Bringing catalytic sites together (efficiency) Flexibility in shared binding sites Increased complexity • Genetic factors – Gene duplication = genetic freedom/economy – Multiple interactions = increased impact of mutation • Regulation – Cooperativity – Must be co-expressed Tubulin as an example • Essential component of the cytoskeleton • Dimers polymerize • Multiple sites of interaction • Dynamic • Mutations have severe effects Protein Modification Post-translational Modifications • • • • • • • • • • Cleavage of signal peptides Phosphorylation Amidation Glycosylation Hydroxylation Ubiquitination Addition of prosthetic groups Iodination Adenylation Sulfonation • Prenylation • Myristoylation • Acylation – Acetylation – Methylation • Oxidative crosslinking • N-Glutamyl cyclization • Carboxylation Table 4.1 Are disulfide bonds posttranslational modification? N-terminal modifications • N-formyl Met (by product of translation process and incomplete cleavage by deformylase) • Aminopeptidase cleavage of Met • N-terminal acetylation • N-terminal myristoylation • N-terminal glutamyl cyclization C-terminal modification • C-terminal prenylation – farnesylation – geranylation/geranyl-geranylation • C-terminal amidation Many (but not all) post-translational modifications involve parts of the secretion apparatus Phosphorylation • Hydroxyl groups - Ser, Thr, Tyr • Amide groups of His, Lys & Carboxy group Asp • Often causes changes in protein conformation and/or protein-protein interactions C-terminal Amidation • Neuropeptides and hormones • • C-terminal glycine is hydroxylated alpha-hydroxy-glycine. Glyoxylate. C-terminal amidation is essential to the biological activity of many neuropeptides and hormones. Hydroxylation and Carboxylation • Hydroxylation (previous lecture) – Lys and Pro (e.g. collagen) – Requires vitamin C • Carboxylation – Requires viatamin K Iodination • Special case: Tyr thyroxin Protein Acylation • Methylation and acetylation – acetylation of histone Lys • S-acylation (Cys) • Prenylation (C-terminus) • Myristoylation (N-terminus) Acetylation N-terminal acetylation • No simple sequence consensus • Usually accompanied by cleavage of the N-terminal Met Mass spectral analysis Methylation Can occur at carboxyls, amides, sulfhydryl, etc. SAM is the activated carbon source Multiple methylation Histones • DNA binding proteins • Chromatin structure • Affect gene expression Sulfonation • O-sulfonation of Ser/Thr discovered in 2004 by MS analysis (Mol Cell Proteomics. 3(5):429-40) N-terminal myristoylation • Consensus Gly-X-X-X-Ser/Thr myristoyl Coenzyme A methylated c-terminus C-terminal Prenylation Prenylation CAAX motif AAX cleaved and Cys methylated then prenyl group added n-terminus by thioether linkage (C-S-C). S-acylation Adenylation • Toxins frequently adenylate host target proteins to inactivate them • Glutamine synthetase is inactivated by adenylylation and activated by deadenylylation Adenylation • Adenylation of a DNA ligase Lys residue is a key step in DNA replication and repair Proteolytic cleavage All non-cytoplasmic proteins must be translocated • The leader peptide retards the folding of the protein so that molecular chaperone proteins can interact with it and direct its folding • The leader peptide also provides recognition signals for the translocation machinery • A leader peptidase removes the leader sequence when folding and targeting are assured Proteolytic processing • Proteolytic cleavage of the hydrophobic Nterminal signal peptide sequence • Proteolytic cleavage at a site defined by pairs of basic amino acid residues • Proteolytic cleavage at sites designated by single Arg residues • Signal prediction algorithms (e.g. SignalP) caution: may predict TMDs as signalPs Hormones • All secreted polypeptide hormones are synthesized with a signal sequence (which directs them to secretory granules, then out) • Usually synthesized as inactive preprohormones ("pre-pro" implies at least two processing steps) • Proteolytic processing produces the prohormone and the hormone GASTRIN • Product of preprogastrin – 101-104 residues • Signal peptide cleavage – prepropeptide propeptide 80-83 residues • Cleavage at Lys and Arg residues and C-terminal amidation leaves gastrin – propeptide peptide • N-terminal residue of gastrin is pyroglutamate • C-terminal amidation involves destruction of Gly GASTRIN GASTRIN Heptadecapeptide secreted by the antral mucosa of stomach stimulates acid secretion in stomach Glycosylation: 2 flavors N-linked GlcNAc (Asn) O-linked GalNac (Ser, Thr, Hyp) Glycosylation Protein glycosylation • Usually extracellular or at cell surface • High structural information content – molecular recognition • Occurs along the secretory pathway • Often stabilizes structure • Difficult to get crystal structure for more than one or two carbohydrate residues Protein glycosylation O-linked glycosylation • No consensus sequence for Ser and Thr • Consensus for Hyp Gly – X – Hyl – Y – Arg • Begins with GalNac transferase (N-acetylgalactosamine) • Mannose common addition to core The ABO(H) blood group determinant is an O-linked polysaccharide •In 1901, Karl Landsteiner discovered blood group antigens. •Since that time nearly 200 antigens have been identified. •Carbohydrate-dependant blood group antigens are carried by both glycoproteins and glycolipids N-linked glycosylation • Most proteins contain several potential sites but usually only a few (in any) are actually glycosylated • Many different patterns • Consensus (-N-X-T/S-) Copyright 2000-2002 IonSource.Com N-linked glycosylation begins in the cytoplasm glycosyl-dolichol-phosphate (lipid) core is transferred to protein Further processing and elaboration occurs in the ER and Golgi Carbohydrates are flexible • Variety of conformations – difficult to get good x-ray data • Structural information – H-bonding – hydrophobic patches wheat germ agglutinin GPI anchors (glycosylphosphatidyl inositol) Carbohydrates as cross-linkers Galectin-1 dimer Ubiquitination DEGRADATION Ubiquitination • Ubiquitinating enzymes E1,E2, E3 thiol ester bond • Final target - isopeptide bond between a lysine residue of the substrate (or the N terminus of the substrate) and ubiquitin • Ubiquitin first activated by adenylation • Science 2005 309:127-130 target protein ubiquitination on Cys! More about proteoglycans and ubiquitination later