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CHAPER 24 AMINO ACIDS AND PROTEINS 24.1 INTRODUCTION Of the three groups of biopolymers, protein have the most diverse function. Most of its molecular weights are much larger. Their shaps cover a range from the globular protein to the helical coils of a α–keratin. But all proteins have common features. Proteins are polyamides and their monomeric units are about 20 different α-amino acids. Amide links H R R CH CH N C H O OH An -amino acid R'' R' N C N H O H R''' CH CH R'''' CH CH C N C N C N C O H O H O H O A portion of a protien molecular Primary structure: the exact sequence of the different α-amino acids along the protein chain. Second and tertiary structure: the folding of the polyamide chain which give rise to higher levels of complexity. Although hydrolysis of natural occurring proteins may yield as many as 22 different amino acids, the amino acids have an important structural feature in common. 24.2 AMINO ACIDS 24.2A STRUCTURES AND NAMES CO2H H2N H R R NAME ABBREVIATION -H Glycine Gly 6.0 -CH3 Alanine Ala 6.0 -CH(CH3)2 Valinee Val 6.0 -CH2CH(CH3)2 Leucinee Leu 6.0 -CH(CH3)CH2CH3 Isoleucinee Ile 6.1 pI R NAME ABBREVIATION pI Phenylalaninee Phe 5.5 -CH2 CONH2 Asparagine Asn 5.4 -CH2CH2CONH2 Glutamine Gln 5.7 Tryptophane Trp 5.9 HOOC CH CH2 HN CH2 C H2 Proline Pro 6.3 -CH2OH Serine Ser 5.7 H2C CH2 N H (complete structure) ABBREVIATION pI Threoninee Thr 6.5 Tyrosine Tyr 5.7 HOOC CH CH2 HN CH C OH H2 Hyroxyproline Hyp 6.3 -CH2SH Cysteine Cys 5.0 Cystine Cys-Cys 5.1 -CH2 CH2SCH3 Methioninee Met 5.8 -CH2COOH Aspartic acid Asp 3.0 NAME R -CH(CH3 )OH H2C OH (complete structure) H2 C S H2 C S R NAME ABBREVIATION pI -CH2CH2CO2H Glutamic acid Glu 3.2 -CH2(CH2)3NH2 Lysinee Lys 9.8 -CH2(CH2)2NHCNHNH2 Arginine Arg 10.8 Histidien His 7.6 H2 C N N H The conversion of cysteine to cystine requires addition comment. it can be reversed by mild reducing agents. 2HO2 CCHCH2SH NH2 [0] [H] HO2CCHCH2S_SCH2CHCO2H NH2 NH2 Cysteine Cystine (°ë ë×°±Ëá) (ë×°±Ëá) 24.2B ESSENTIAL AMINO ACIDS For adult humans there are eight essential amino acids. These are designated with the superscript e in above table. 24.2C AMINO ACIDS AS DIPOLAR IONS Since amino acids contain both a basic group (-NH2) and an acidic group (-COOH) , they are amphoteric. H3N+CHCO2H R Cationic form (ÑôÀë×ÓÐÎʽ£© - H+ + H+ H3N+CHCO2R Dipolar ion (Á½ ¼«Àë×Ó£© - H+ + H+ H2NCHCO2R Anionic form (ÒõÀë×ÓÐÎʽ£© In strongly basic solutions all amino present as anions, in acidic solutions they are present as cations. At some intermediate Ph, called isoelectric point(pI) the concentration of the dipolar ion is at its maximum and the concentrations of the anions and cations are equal. H3CCHCO2H CH3 Cationic form (pKa1 = 2.3£© OHH+ H3CCHCO2 - CH3 Dipolar ion (pKa2 = 9.7£© OHH+ H3CCHCO2CH3 Anionic form As the acidity reaches pH 2.3, one half of the cationic form will be converted to the dipolar ion. As the pH increase to2.3- 9.7 the predominant form will be the dipolar ion. When pH rise to 9.7,the dipolar ion will be half-converted to the anionic form. As pH approached to 14,the anionic form becomes predominant form. If the side chain of an amino acid contains an extra acidic or basic group, then the equilibria are more complex. The isoelectric point (pI) of an amino such as the alanine is the average of pKa1 and pKa2. pI = 2.3 +9.7 2 = 6.0 24.3 LABORATORY SYNTHESIS OF α-AMINO ACIDS A variety of methods have been developed for the laboratory synthesis of α-amino acids. We shall describe here three general methods. 24.3A DIRECT AMMONOLYSIS OF AN α-HALO ACID (1) X , P R CH2CO2H (2) H2O 4 2 RCHCO2H X NH3 (excess) RCHCO2NH3+ This method is probably used least often because yields tend to be poor. 24.3B FROM POTASSIUM PHTHALIMIDE This method is a modification of the Gabriel synthesis of amines. the yields are usually high and the products are easily purified. O N-K+ O + ClCH2CO2C2H5 O N CH2CO2C2H5 O Ethyl chloroacetate Potassium phthalimide (ÂÈ́ú ´× ËáÒÒõ¥£© (±½ÁÚ¶þ¼×õ£ÑÇ°· ¼Ø£© (1) KOH / H2O (2) HCl CH2CO2 NH3 + Glycine (°±»ùÒÒËá) COOH + + C2H5OH COOH Phthalic acid (ÁÚ±½¶þ¼×Ëá) 24.3C THE STRECKER SYNTHESIS Treating an aldehyde with ammonia and hydrogen cyanide produces an α-amino nitrile. Hydrolysis of the nitrile group of the α-amino nitrile converts the latter to an α-amino acid. RCHO + NH3 + HCN RCHCN H3O+, heat RCHCO2NH3+ NH2 ¦Á-Amino nitrile ¦Á-Amino acid Mechanism of the first step: O RCH + NH3 O- OH RCHNH3+ CN RCH=NH RCHNH2 -H2O CN + - H RCHNH RCHNH2 24.3D RESOLUTION OF DL-AMINO ACIDS One interesting method for resolving amino acids is based on the use of enzymes called deacylases. DL RCHCO2- (CH3CO)2O NH3+ DL RCHCO2H deacylase CH3COOH NHCOCH3 CO2+H3N CO2- H + H3COCHN R L-Amino H R acid (L-°±»ùËᣩ D-N-Acylamino acid (D-N-õ£°±»ùËᣩ Easily separated 24.3E STEREOSELECTIVE SYNTHESIS OF AMINO ACIDS Producing only the naturally occurring L-amino acid has been realized through the use of chiral hydrogenation catalysts from transition metals. One of which is called “(R)-prophos”. H3 C H CH2 (C6H5)2P P(C6H5)2 (R)-Prophos [Rh(NBD)2]ClO4 + (R)-prophos [Rh((R)-prophos)(NBD)]ClO4 + NBD Chiral rhodium complex (ÊÖÐÔîî ÅäºÏ Îï £© Hydrolysis of N-acetyl group under this chiral rhodium complex yields L-alanine. Because the hydrogenation catalyst is chiral, it transfers its hydrogen atoms in a stereoselective way. This type of reaction is called asymmetric synthesis. CH2=C_CO2H [Rh((R)-prophos)(H2)(solvent)2]+ H2 NHCOCH3 H3C COOH H3COCHN 2-Acetylaminopropenoic acid N-Acetyl-L-alanine (2-ÒÒõ£°·»ù±ûÏ©Ëᣩ (1) OH-, H2O, heat, (2) H3O+ H (N-ÒÒõ£»ù-L-±û°· Ëá) H H3C CO2- +H3N L-alanine (L-±û°· Ëá) 24.4 ANALYSIS OF AMINO ACID MIXTURES Enzymes can cause α-amino acids to polymerize through the elimination of water: O +H N 3 H C R C O O- + +H N 3 H C R' C O O- H2O +H N 3 H C R C O HN H C C O- R A Dipeptide (¶þëÄ£© The –CO-NH- linkage between the amino acids is called a peptide bond. Amino acid when joined in this way, are called amino acid residues. The polymers that contains 2,3, a few, or many amino acid residues are called dipeptides, tripeptides, oligopeptides, and polypeptides, respectively. Polypeptides are linear polymers. The free NH3+ group and the free CO2-group are called the N-terminal and the C-terminal Residues respectively. O +H 3N H C C R O HN H C R¡® O *HN H C n R¡¯¡® C C O- C-Terminal N-Terminal RCHCO2 H The automatic amino acid analyzers are based on the use of insoluble polymers containing sulfonate groups, called cation-exchange resins. CH SO3- CH2 CH SO3- CH2 CH2 SO3- R'CHCO2H NH3 + R''CHCO2H NH3+ CH2 HC NH3 + SO3- R'''CHCO2H NH3+ If the mixture of amino acids pass through a column which is washed with a buffered solution at a given pH, The individual amino acids will move down the column at different rates and ultimately separated. 24.5 AMINO ACID SEQUENCE OF POLYPEPTIDES AND PROTEINS The different amino acid sequences of a protein which compose of 20 different amino acids in a single chain of 100 residues are Amazing large. They are 1.27 X 10130 The methods of determining the amino acid sequence include Terminal residue analysis, partial hydrolysis and so on. 24.5A TERMINAL RESIDUE ANALYSIS One very useful method for determining the N-terminal amino acid residue, called the Sanger method, is based on the use of 2,4dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB). O2N F + NH2CHCO-NHCHCO R NO2 2,4-Dinitrofluorobenzene (DNFB) etc HCO3(-HF) R' Polypeptide (¶à ëÄ£© (2,4-¶þÏõ »ù·ú ±½£© O2N NHCHCO-NHCHCO R NO2 Labeled polypeptide (ÓбêÖ¾µÄ¶à ëÄ£© R' etc H3O+ O2N NHCHCO2H + H3N+CHCO2R NO2 R' Labeled N-terminal amino acid Mixture of amino acids (ÓбêÖ¾µÄN-¶Ë°±»ùËᣩ (»ì ºÏ °±»ùËᣩ Separated and identify A second method of N-terminal analysis is the Edman degradation. This method offers an advantage over the Sanger method in that it Moves the N-terminal residue and leaves the remainder of the peptide Chain intact. N=C=S + NH2 CHCO-NHCHCO R R' NHCSNHCHCO_NHCHCO R C N N H H Unstable intermediate + H3 N+CHCOH R' Polypeptide with one less than amino acid residue etc H+ R' O CH R -, etc OH pH 9 S rearrangement heat C N C NH CH R O Phenylthiohydantoin C-terminal residues can identified through the use of digestive enzymes called carboxypeptidases. These enzymes specifically catalyze the hydrolysis of the amide bond of the amino acid residue containing a free –COOH group, liberating it as a free amino acid. 24.5B PARTIAL HYDROLYSIS Break the polypeptide chain into small fragments, then examine the structure of these smaller fragments to determine the original polypeptide. For example: We are given a pentapeptide known to contain valine(two residues), lucine, Histidine, and phenylalanine. Then the molecular formular: Val2, Leu, His, Phe By using DNFB and carboxypeptidase we discover that valine and leucine are the N-terminal and C-terminal, respectively. Val ( Val, His, Phe) Leu We then subject the pentapeptide to partial acid hydrolysis and obtain the following dipeptides. Val·His + His·Val + Val·Phe + Phe·Leu The points of overlap of the dipeptides tell us that the original Pentapeptide must have been the following: Val· His· Val· Phe· Leu 24.6 PRIMARY ATRUCTURES OF POLYPEPTIDES AND PROTEINS The covalent structure of a protein or polypeptide is called primary structure. Chemists have had remarkable success in determining the primary structure. 24.6A OXYTOCIN AND VASOPRESSIN Oxytocin and vasopressin are two rather polypeptides with strikingly similar structures. But these two polypeptides have quite different physiological effects. Oxytocin occurs only in the female of a species and stimulates uterine contraction during childbirth. Vasopressin occurs in male and female. Its major function is as an antidiuretic. 24.6B INSULIN Insulin, a hormone secreted by the pancreas, regulates glucose metabolism. Bocine insulin has a total of 51 amino acid residues in two polypeptide chains, called A and B chains. These chains are joined by two disulfide linkage. Human insulin differs from bovine insulin at only three amino acids residues. Insulin from most mammals has a similar structure. 24.6C OTHER POLYPEPTIDES AND PROTEINS Successful sequential analyses have now been achieved with hundreds of other polypeptides and proteins including the following: (1) Bovine ribonuclease. (2) human hemoglobin. (3) bovine trypsinogen and chymotrypsinogen. (4) gamma globulin. 24.7 POLYPEPTIDE AND PROTEIN SYNTHESIS We must first “activate” the carboxyl group of an acid by converting it to an anhydride or acid chloride and then allow it react with an amine. But when both the acid group and the amino group are present in the same molecular, the problem becomes more complicate. 24.7A PROTECTING GROUPS We must “protect” the amino group by converting it to some other group of low nucleophilicity-one that will not react with a reactive acyl derivative. Then remove the protecting group. The reagents are benzyl chloroformate and di-tert-butyl carbonate: C6H5CH2OCOCL (CH3)3COCOOC(CH3)3 Benzyl chloroformate Di-tert-butyl carbonate (ÜлùÂȼ×Ëáõ¥£© (¶þÊ嶡 »ù̼ËáÑΣ© Both reagents react with the following amino group to form derivatives that are unreactive toward further acylation. OH25¡æ CH2OCOCl + H2NR Benzyl chloroformate CH2OCONHR + Cl- Benzyloxycarbonyl or Z group HBr acetic acid (cold) H2 / Pd CH3 + CO2 +H2NR CH2Br + CO2 +H2NR O (CH3)3COCOC(CH3)3 + H2NR O base 25¡æ (CH3 )3COCNHR + (CH3)3 CHO tert-Butyloxycarbonyl or boc group HCl or CF3CO2H acetic acid, 25¡æ (CH3 )2C=CH2 + CO2 +H2NR Remove of the benzyl group with hydrogen and a catalyst depends on the fact that benzyl-oxygen bonds are weaker and are subject to hydrogenolysis at low temperatures. O C6H5CH2OCR O H2 / Pd 25¡æ C6H5CH3 + HOCR 24.7B ACTIVATION OF THE CARBOXYL GROUP A much better method is to convert the carboxyl group of the “protected” amino acid to a mixed anhydride using ethyl chloroFormate. O Z_NHCHC_OH R O (1) (C2H5)3N (2)ClCO2C2H5 O Z_NHCH_C_O_C_OC2H5 R Mixed anhydride (»ì ºÏ ôû£© The mixed anhydride can be used to acylate another amino acid and form a peptide linkage. O O + Z_NHCH_C_O_C_ OC2H5 H3N CHR'CO2 R O Z_NHCH_C_NHCHCO2H R R' + CO2 +C2H5 OH Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide can also be used to activate the carboxyl group of an amino acid. 24.7C PEPTIDE SYNTHESIS The principle involve here can,of course, be extended to the synthesis of much longer polypeptide chains. O CH3CHCO2 - + C6H5CH2OC OH25¡æ Cl CH3CH NH NH3+ C benzyl chloroformate Ala (Âȱ½¼×Ëáõ¥) Z-Ala O OCH2C6H5 NH3+ CH3CHCOOCOOC2H5H NH O (CH3)2CHCH2CHCO2CO2 + C2H5OH C O (1) (C2H5)3N (2) ClCO2C2H5 CO2H CH3CH C CH2 NH C OCH2C6H5 NHCHCH2O2 H O CH H3C OCH2C6H5 O H2 / Pd CH3CH C NHCHCO2- NH3+ CH2 H3C CH CH3 + CH3 + CO2 CH3 24.7D AUTOMATED PEPTIDE SYNTHESIS The Merrifield method for automated synthesis: O O CH2Cl + HOCCHNHCOC(CH3)3 base O Step 1 Attaches C-terminal (protect) amino acid residue to resin Step 2 Purifies resin with attached residue by washing Step 3 Removes protecting group Step 4 Purifies by washing Step 5 Adds nest (protect) amino acid residue R O CH2OCCHNHCOC(CH3)3 R CF3CO2H / CH2Cl2 O CH2OCCHNH2 R HOCOCHR'NHCOOC(CH3)3 dicyclohexylcarbodiimide O O O CH2 OCCHNHC CHNHCOC(CH3 )3 R' R Step 6 Purifies by washing Step 7 Removes protecting group Final step Detaches completed polypeptide CF3CO2H / CH2Cl2 Repetitions of step 4-7 HBr / CF3CO2H O O O CH2 Br + HOCCHNHC CHNHCCHNH R R' R'' etc 24.8 SECONDARY AND TERTIARY STUCTURES OF PROTEINS 24.8A SECONDARY STRUCTURE The secondary structure of a protein is defined by the local Conformation of its polypeptide backbone. These local conformation have come to be specified terms of regular folding patterns. Polypeptide chain of a natural protein can interact with itself two major ways: through formation of a β-pleated sheet and an α helix. H O N C crowding H R C C N C R H H O R H O H C C N C N O H C H R H O N C C N R H H crowding O R H C C C N O H Fully extended polypeptide chains could conceivably form a flatsheet structure (above). Slight rotation of bonds can transform a flat-sheet structure into the β-pleated sheet or β configuration. The α helix structure is a right-handed helix with 3.6amino acid residues per turn in naturally occurring. It is the predominant structure of the polypeptide.α Helices and pleated sheets account for only about one half of the average globular protein. The remaining polypeptide segments have what is called a coil or loop conformation. 24.8B TERTIARY STRUCTURE The tertiary structure of a protein is its three-dimensional shape that arises from further foldings of its polypeptide chains, foldings superimposed on the coils of the α helixes. 24.9 INTRODUCTION TO ENZYMES Enzymes have the ability to bring about vast increases in the rates of reaction. Enzymes also show remarkable specificity for their reactants and for their products. The enzyme and the substrate combine to form an enzyme-substrate complex. Enzyme + Substrate enzyme-substrate complex Enzyme + Product Almost all enzymes are proteins. Reactions catalyzed by enzymes are completely stereospecific, and this specificity comes from the way enzymes bind their substrates. Some enzymes will accept only one compound as its substrate, others will accept a range of compounds with similar groups. Inhibitor: a compound that can alter the activity of an enzyme. competitive inhibitor: a compound that competes directly with the substrate for the active site. Some enzymes require the presence of a cofactor. Others may require the presence of an organic molecule called a coenzyme. Many of the water-soluble vitamins are the precursors of coenzymes. O C N Niacin (ÄáÑÇÐÂ) OH OH H N HO O CH3 OH O CH3 Pantothenic Acid (·º Ëá) 24.10 LYSOZYME: MODE OF ACTION OF AN ENZYME Lysozyme is made up of 129 amino acid residues. Three short segments of the chain between residues 5-15, 24-34, 88-96 have the structure of an α helix; the residues between 41-45, and 50-54 form pleated sheets; and a hairpin turn occurs at residues 46-49. The remaining polypeptide segments of lysozyme have a coil or loop conformation. Lysozyme’s substrate is a polysaccharide of amino sugar that makes up part of the bacterial cell wall. 24.11 SERINE PROTEASES Serine proteases: the digestive enzymes secreted by the pancreas into the small intestines to catalyze the hydrolysis of peptide bonds. The digestive enzymes includes chymotrypsin, trypsin, and elastin. The catalytic triad of chymotrypsin cause cleavage of a peptide bond by acylation of the serine residue 195 of chymotrysin. Near the active site is a hydrophobic binding site that accommodates nonpolar side chains of the protein. His Asp 57 102 O H2C CH2 Ser C 195 O- H N N CH2 H O H Hydrophobic pocket binding site O N C R' R His Asp 57 102 O H2C CH2 Ser C O- 195 H N N+ CH2 H O H ON R' C R Tetrahedral intermediate His Asp 57 102 O H2C CH2 Ser C 195 - O H N N H CH2 H O N C R' Acetylated serine resifue O R His Asp 57 102 O H2C CH2 Ser C - O 195 H N N+ CH2 H O H O C R O- Tetrahedral intermediate His Asp 57 102 O H2C CH2 Ser C - O 195 H N N CH2 O H H + O O C R Regeneration of the active site of chymotrypsin. Water causes hydrolysis of the acyl-serine bond. Compounds such as diisopropylphosphofluoridate (DIPF) that irreversibly inhibit serine proteases. It has been shown that they do this by reacting only with Ser 195. Ser 195 CH2OH + F CH(CH3)2 CH(CH3)2 O O P Ser O 195 CH2 O P O O O CH(CH3)2 CH(CH3)2 (DIPF) DIP-Enzyme 24.12 HEMOGLOBIN: A CONJUGATED PROTEIN CH=CH2 H3C H H C C H3C CH3 N Hemoglobin: a protein can carry oxygen. N Fe N N HOOCH2CH2C CH H HOOCH2CH2C CH=CH2 C H CH3 The iron of the heme group is in the 2+ oxidation state and it forms a coordinate bond to a nitrogen of the imidazole group of histidine of the polypeptide chain. This leaves one valence of the ferrous ion combine with oxygen as follows: N O2 N Fe N N N A portion of oxygenated hemoglobin When the heme combing with oxygen the ferrous ion does not become readily oxidized to the ferric state.