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Review: Amino Acid Side Chains Aliphatic- Ala, Val, Leu, Ile, Gly Polar- Ser, Thr, Cys, Met, [Tyr, Trp] Acidic (and conjugate amide)- Asp, Asn, Glu, Gln Basic- Lys, Arg, His Aromatic- Phe, Tyr, Trp, [His] Proline R a N vs H N a Review: Backbone Conformation f R H Ca Ca H R Ca H R Side chains collision also limit f/ combinations Backbone restricted Secondary structure limited Review: Heirarchy of Structure Primary- sequence Secondary- local Supersecondary (motifs)- intermediate Domains- independent folding units Tertiary- organization of a complete chain Quaternary- organization of multiple chains Review: Tertiary Structure Soluble proteins have an inside (core) and outside Folding driven by water- hydrophilic/phobic Side chain properties specify core/exterior Some interactions inside, others outside Specific structures result from side chain interactions Hydrophobic interactions (interior) Hydrogen bonds (interior and exterior) Ionic Interactions (exterior) Relationships Among Proteins Many sequences can give same tertiary structure Side chain pattern more important than sequence When sequence homology is high (>50%), probably same structure and function (structural genomics) Cores conserved Surfaces and loops more variable *3-D shape more conserved than sequence* *There are a limited number of structural frameworks* Relationships Among Proteins I. Homologous: conserved sequence (cytochrome c) Same structure Same function Modeling structure from homology II. Similar function- different sequence (dehydrogenases) One domain same structure One domain different III. Similar structure- different function (cf. thioredoxin) Same 3-D structure Not same function How to Tell Proteins Apart! Sequence and fold give overall properties Molecular weight Solubility Exposed hydrophobic surface Ability to bind other molecules, metals pI- the overall charge of the protein Sequence!!! *To characterize properties, separate the protein from all other cell contents* Protein Purification Techniques A. Simple solubility characteristics- precipitation Temperature pH “Salting out” *Different proteins precipitate under different solution conditions- can use soluble or insoluble fractions* Protein Purification Techniques B. Chromatography- fractionation of contents in solution based on selection by a stationary phase 1. Size- sieve effect, small molecules faster 2. Ion exchange- charge attraction at protein surface Choose “+” stationary phase for proteins with more “-” charge First bind everything, then elute with salt 3. Hydrophobic interaction- hydrophobic accessible surface 4. Affinity chromatography Antibody, binding protein Inserted tag (e.g. 6-His) Protein Purification Techniques C. Gel Electrophoresis- migration in a gel matrix (size and shape) driven by an electric field (charge) Sieving effect Relative charge Visualization- staining with dye, fluorescent antibody (Western blotting) SDS- protein denaturant, enables separation based almost exclusively on molecular weight Iso-electric focusing- method to measure pI, but also can be used for separation Chromatography and SDS-PAGE 2000 (Lanes 1, 2) 1800 M1234 56789 (Lanes 3, 4) 1600 I 1400 54.4 36.5 1200 1000 21.5 14.4 800 (Lanes 7, 8, 9) 600 400 200 0 0 20 40 60 80 Volume (ml) 100 120 140 Fusion protein GST T-ag Protein Characterization A. Sequence 1. Amino acid analysis- total digest, then count how much of each amino acid 2. Edman stepwise degradation- cleave of one residue at a time, then identify 3. Peptide mapping- cleave into fragments, then identify 4. Direct sequencing by Mass Spectrometry Exact molecular weights Characteristic fragmentation Protein Characterization B. Spectroscopic properties 1. UV-Vis- Backbone, Phe, Tyr, Trp, co-factors 2. Infrared/Raman- characteristic bond vibrations 3. Circular Dichroism (CD)- backbone conformation 4. Fluorescence Intrinsic- Trp, Tyr Attached dyes- Cys 5. Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) Metals, free radicals Attached probes 6. Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Many probes viewed simultaneously Structure and dynamic processes Protein Characterization C. Antibodies Use protein of interest to raise antibodies (rabbit) Different antibodies can recognize different regions (epitopes) Can distinguish differences as small as 1 residue Attachment of indicators- dyes, radioactivity Applications- e.g. immunoassay, ELISA