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Class Business Please load your paper up on Toolkit if you haven’t already done so. Review session on Monday at 7PM in Gilmer 190 – Q&A style so come with questions You do not have to hand in problem set 5 and I will post the solutions on Toolkit by tomorrow I will handout problem set 6 at the exam 1 Review of amino acids and protein primary and secondary structure 2 MCAT Question • Dithiothreitol (Cleland’s Reagent) will reduce and break disulfide bonds. This reagent will affect which amino acid? A. B. C. D. Glutamate Cysteine Arginine Selenocysteine 3 MCAT Question Enterokinase is a protease that cleaves after lysine residues. It will sometimes cleave at other basic residues. Which of the following amino acids can also serve as a target for enterokinase? A. Proline B. Arginine C. Tryptophan D. Alanine 4 Name two secondary structural elements found in proteins? 5 Ramachandran Plot α-helix phi = -60 degrees psi = -45 degrees 6 Tertiary Structure 7 8 Hydrophobic Interactions The tertiary structures of water-soluble proteins have features in common: (1) an interior formed of amino acids with hydrophobic side chains and (2) a surface formed largely of hydrophilic amino acids that interact with the aqueous environment (3) Atoms are packed very close; however, cavities do occur and maybe functionally important Cross-sectional view Hydrophobic residues Charged residues Other residues in white 9 Myoglobin Hydrophobic effect 10 Many α helices and β strands are amphipathic; that is, the α helix or β strand has a hydrophobic face, which points into the protein interior, and a more polar face, which points into solution. An amphiphilic helix in flavodoxin: A nonpolar helix in citrate synthase: A polar helix in calmodulin: 11 Classes of Globular Proteins • • • • Jane Richardson's classification Antiparallel alpha helix proteins Parallel or mixed beta sheet proteins Antiparallel beta sheet proteins Metal- and disulfide-rich proteins 12 Antiparallel Alpha Helical Proteins • Simplest way to pack helices - short connecting loops and antiparallel packing • The helix bundle often involves a slight (15 degree) lefthanded twist • The globin proteins myoglobin and hemoglobin - are antiparallel alpha proteins 13 Coiled-coil motif – parallel or antipallel 14 Parallel or Mixed Beta Sheet Proteins • Parallel beta sheets distribute nonpolar residues on both sides of the beta sheet • This means that both faces of the sheet must be protected from solvent • Thus parallel beta sheets are core structures • Parallel beta barrels are in this class • Doubly wound parallel beta sheets also Beta-barrels 15 Parallel Beta-sheet Proteins 16 Antiparallel Beta Sheets • Antiparallel beta sheets place nonpolar residues on only one face of the sheet • Only one face must be protected from solvent • Thus antiparallel beta sheet proteins may contain as few as two layers • Possibilities: barrels, beta sandwiches and sheets covered by helices on one face only 17 Greek Key Antiparallel Beta-sheets 18 More Antiparallel Beta Sheets 19 MCAT Question Parallel and non-parallel beta-pleated sheets are stabilized by which of the following interactions? A. Covalent bonds B. Electrostatic interactions C. Hydrogen bonds D. Hydrophilic interactions 20 Metal-Rich and Disulfide-rich Proteins • Conformations usually heavily influenced by metals and/or disulfide bridges • These proteins can be unstable if the metals are removed or the disulfides are reduced: “structurally essential” • Some metals are involved in activity 21 Fibrous Proteins • Much or most of the polypeptide chain is organized approximately parallel to a single axis • Fibrous proteins are often mechanically strong • Fibrous proteins are usually insoluble • Usually play a structural role in nature 22 Alpha Keratin • • Found in hair, fingernails, claws, horns and beaks Sequence consists of 311-314 residue alpha helical rod segments capped with non-helical N- and C-termini • Primary structure of helical rods consists of 7-residue repeats: (ab-c-d-e-f-g)n, where a and d are nonpolar. Promotes association of helices! 23 Beta Keratin Proteins that form extensive beta sheets • • • • Found in silk fibers Alternating sequence: Gly-Ala/Ser-Gly-Ala/Ser.... Since residues of a beta sheet extend alternately above and below the plane of the sheet, this places all glycines on one side and all alanines and serines on other side! • This allows Glys on one sheet to mesh with Glys on an adjacent sheet (same for Ala/Sers) 24 Collagen - A Triple Helix Principal component of connective tissue (tendons, cartilage, bones, teeth) • basic unit is tropocollagen: – three intertwined polypeptide chains (1000 residues each – MW = 285,000 – 300 nm long, 1.4 nm diameter – unique amino acid composition – Class I – heterotrimer (bones, tendons, and skin) – Class II (cartilage) and III – homotrimers (blood vessels 25 Collagen • Nearly one residue out of three is Gly • Proline content is unusually high • Unusual amino acids found: – 4-hydroxyproline – 3-hydroxyproline – 5-hydroxylysine – Pro and HyPro together make 30% of res. Posttranslational modifications 26 The Collagen Triple Helix • The unusual amino acid composition of collagen is unsuited for alpha helices OR beta sheets • But it is ideally suited for the collagen triple helix: three intertwined helical strands • Much more extended than alpha helix, with a rise per residue of 2.9 Angstroms • 3.3 residues per turn • Long stretches of Gly-Pro-Pro/HyP 27 MCAT Question The collagen triple helix interior requires an amino acid with a small side chain. Which of the following would most likely be found in the interior of a collagen molecule? A. Methionine B. Aspartate C. Tryptophan D. Glycine 28 Structural basis of the collagen triple helix • Every third residue faces the crowded center of the helix - only Gly fits here • Pro and HyP suit the constraints of phi and psi • Interchain H-bonds involving HyP stabilize helix • Fibrils are further strengthened by intrachain lysine-lysine and interchain hydroxypyridinium crosslinks 29 Collagen Fibers Staggered arrays of tropocollagens • Banding pattern in EMs with 68 nm repeat • Since tropocollagens are 300 nm long, there must be 40 nm gaps between adjacent tropocollagens (5x68 = 340 Angstroms) • 40 nm gaps are called "hole regions" - they contain carbohydrate and are thought to be nucleation sites for bone formation 30 Protein Modules • • • • An important insight into protein structure Many proteins are constructed as a composite of two or more "modules" or domains Each of these is a recognizable domain that can also be found in other proteins Sometimes modules are used repeatedly in the same protein There is a genetic basis for the use of modules in nature 31 Protein Folding Cyrus Levinthal calculated that, if each residue can assume three different conformations, the total number of structures would be 3100, which is equal to 5 × 1047. If it takes 10-13 s to convert one structure into another, the total search time would be 5 × 1047 × 10-13 s, which is equal to 5 × 1034 s, or 1.6 × 1027 years. The enormous difference between calculated and actual folding times is called Levinthal's paradox. Richard Dawkins, in The Blind Watchmaker, asked how long it would take a monkey poking randomly at a typewriter to reproduce Hamlet's remark to Polonius, “Methinks it is like a weasel”. ≈ 1040 However, suppose that we preserved each correct character and allowed the monkey to retype only the wrong ones. only a few thousand keystrokes, on average, would be needed. The crucial difference between these cases is that the first employs a completely random search, whereas, in the second, partly correct intermediates are retained. The essence of protein folding is the retention of partly correct intermediates. 32 Protein Folding Energy Landscape 33 Quaternary 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! 34 What are the structural and functional advantages driving quaternary association? • Stability: reduction of surface to volume ratio • Bringing catalytic sites together • Cooperativity 35 Symmetry in Quaternary Structure 36 Quaternary Structures of Hemerythrin Monomer T. zostericola Octamer P. gouldii Trimer Siphonosoma 37 38