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Protein Structure and Function Proteins • Have many functions in the cell – – – – – – – – – Enzymes Structural Transport Motor Storage Signaling Receptors Gene regulation Special functions Shape = Amino Acid Sequence • Proteins are made of 20 amino acids linked by peptide bonds • Polypeptide backbone is the repeating sequence of the N-C-C-N-C-C… in the peptide bond • The side chain or R group is not part of the backbone or the peptide bond Polypeptide Backbone Amino Acids Hydrophilic Figure 3-2 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Hydrophobic Protein Folding • The peptide bond allows for rotation around it and therefore the protein can fold and orient the R groups in favorable positions • Weak non-covalent interactions will hold the protein in its functional shape – these are weak and will take many to hold the shape Non-covalent Bonds in Proteins Figure 3-4 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Globular Proteins • The side chains will help determine the conformation in an aqueous solution Figure 3-5 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Hydrogen Bonds in Proteins • H-bonds form between 1) atoms involved in the peptide bond; 2) peptide bond atoms and R groups; 3) R groups Protein Folding • Proteins shape is determined by the sequence of the amino acids • The final shape is called the conformation and has the lowest free energy possible • Denaturation is the process of unfolding the protein – Can be down with heat, pH or chemical compounds – In the chemical compound, can remove and have the protein renature or refold Refolding • Molecular chaperones are small proteins that help guide the folding and can help keep the new protein from associating with the wrong partner Figure 3-6a Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Protein Folding • 2 regular folding patterns have been identified – formed between the bonds of the peptide backbone • -helix – protein turns like a spiral – fibrous proteins (hair, nails, horns) • -sheet – protein folds back on itself as in a ribbon –globular protein -helix Figure 3-7a,b,c Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) -sheet Figure 3-7d,e,f Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Sheets • Core of many proteins is the sheet • Form rigid structures with the H-bond • Can be of 2 types – Anti-parallel – run in an opposite direction of its neighbor (A) – Parallel – run in the same direction with longer looping sections between them (B) Figure 3-8 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Helix • Formed by a H-bond between every 4th peptide bond – C=O to N-H • Usually in proteins that span a membrane • The helix can either coil to the right or the left • Can also coil around each other – coiled-coil shape – a framework for structural proteins such as nails and skin Figure 3-9 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Levels of Organization • Primary structure – Amino acid sequence of the protein • Secondary structure – H bonds in the peptide chain backbone • -helix and -sheets • Tertiary structure – Non-covalent interactions between the R groups within the protein • Quanternary structure – Interaction between 2 polypeptide chains Protein Structure Domains • A domain is a basic structural unit of a protein structure – distinct from those that make up the conformations • Part of protein that can fold into a stable structure independently • Different domains can impart different functions to proteins • Proteins can have one to many domains depending on protein size Domains Useful Proteins • There are thousands and thousands of different combinations of amino acids that can make up proteins and that would increase if each one had multiple shapes • Proteins usually have only one useful conformation because otherwise it would not be efficient use of the energy available to the system • Natural selection has eliminated proteins that do not perform a specific function in the cell Protein Families • Have similarities in amino acid sequence and 3-D structure • Have similar functions such as breakdown proteins but do it differently Figure 3-12 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Proteins – Multiple Peptides • Non-covalent bonds can form interactions between individual polypeptide chains – Binding site – where proteins interact with one another – Subunit – each polypeptide chain of large protein – Dimer – protein made of 2 subunits • Can be same subunit or different subunits Single Subunit Proteins Different Subunit Proteins • Hemoglobin –2 globin subunits –2 globin subunits Protein Assemblies • Proteins can form very large assemblies • Can form long chains if the protein has 2 binding sites – link together as a helix or a ring • Actin fibers in muscles and cytoskeleton – is made from thousands of actin molecules as a helical fiber Types of Proteins • Globular Proteins – most of what we have dealt with so far – Compact shape like a ball with irregular surfaces – Enzymes are globular • Fibrous Proteins – usually span a long distance in the cell – 3-D structure is usually long and rod shaped Important Fibrous Proteins • Intermediate filaments of the cytoskeleton – Structural scaffold inside the cell • Keratin in hair, horns and nails • Extracellular matrix – Bind cells together to make tissues – Secreted from cells and assemble in long fibers • Collagen – fiber with a glycine every third amino acid in the protein • Elastin – unstructured fibers that gives tissue an elastic characteristic Collagen and Elastin Stabilizing Cross-Links • Cross linkages can be between 2 parts of a protein or between 2 subunits • Disulfide bonds (S-S) form between adjacent -SH groups on the amino acid cysteine Proteins at Work • The conformation of a protein gives it a unique function • To work proteins must interact with other molecules, usually 1 or a few molecules from the thousands to 1 protein • Ligand – the molecule that a protein can bind • Binding site – part of the protein that interacts with the ligand – Consists of a cavity formed by a specific arrangement of amino acids Ligand Binding Figure 3-36 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Formation of Binding Site • The binding site forms when amino acids from within the protein come together in the folding • The remaining sequences may play a role in regulating the protein’s activity Antibody Family • A family of proteins that can be created to bind to almost any molecule • Antibodies (immunoglobulins) are made in response to a foreign molecule ie. bacteria, virus, pollen… called the antigen • Bind together tightly and therefore inactivates the antigen or marks it for destruction Antibodies • Y-shaped molecules with 2 binding sites at the upper ends of the Y • The loops of polypeptides on the end of the binding site are what imparts the recognition of the antigen • Changes in the sequence of the loops make the antibody recognize different antigens specificity Antibodies Figure 3-41 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Binding Strength • Can be measured directly • Antibodies and antigens are mixing around in a solution, eventually they will bump into each other in a way that the antigen sticks to the antibody, eventually they will separate due to the motion in the molecules • This process continues until the equilibrium is reached – number sticking is constant and number leaving is constant • This can be determined for any protein and its ligand Enzymes as Catalysts • Enzymes are proteins that bind to their ligand as the 1st step in a process • An enzyme’s ligand is called a substrate – May be 1 or more molecules • Output of the reaction is called the product • Enzymes can repeat these steps many times and rapidly, called catalysts • Many different kinds – see table 5-2, p 168 Enzymes at Work • Lysozyme is an important enzyme that protects us from bacteria by making holes in the bacterial cell wall and causing it to break • Lysozyme adds H2O to the glycosidic bond in the cell wall • Lysozyme holds the polysaccharide in a position that allows the H2O to break the bond – this is the transition state – state between substrate and product • Active site is a special binding site in enzymes where the chemical reaction takes place Lysozyme • Non-covalent bonds hold the polysaccharide in the active site until the reaction occurs Figure 3-50a Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Features of Enzyme Catalysis Figure 3-52 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Prosthetic Groups • Occasionally the sequence of the protein is not enough for the function of the protein • Some proteins require a non-protein molecule to enhance the performance of the protein – Hemoglobin requires heme (iron containing compound) to carry the O2 • When a prosthetic group is required by an enzyme it is called a co-enzyme – Usually a metal or vitamin • These groups may be covalently or non-covalently linked to the protein Regulation of Enzymes • Regulation of enzymatic pathways prevent the deletion of substrate • Regulation happens at the level of the enzyme in a pathway • Feedback inhibition is when the end product regulates the enzyme early in the pathway Feedback Regulation • Negative feedback – pathway is inhibited by accumulation of final product • Positive feedback – a regulatory molecule stimulates the activity of the enzyme, usually between 2 pathways – ADP levels cause the activation of the glycolysis pathway to make more ATP Allostery • Conformational coupling of 2 widely separated binding sites must be responsible for regulation – active site recognizes substrate and 2nd site recognizes the regulatory molecule • Protein regulated this way undergoes allosteric transition or a conformational change • Protein regulated in this manner is an allosteric protein Allosteric Regulation • Method of regulation is also used in other proteins besides enzymes – Receptors, structural and motor proteins Allosteric Regulation • Enzyme is only partially active with sugar only but much more active with sugar and ADP present Phosphorylation • Some proteins are regulated by the addition of a PO4 group that allows for the attraction of + charged side chains causing a conformation change • Reversible protein phosphorylations regulate many eukaryotic cell functions turning things on and off • Protein kinases add the PO4 and protein phosphatase remove them Phosphorylation/Dephosphorylation • Kinases capable of putting the PO4 on 3 different amino acid residues – Have a –OH group on R group • Serine • Threonine • Tyrosine • Phosphatases that remove the PO4 may be specific for 1 or 2 reactions or many be non-specific GTP-Binding Proteins (GTPases) • GTP does not release its PO4 group but rather the guanine part binds tightly to the protein and the protein is active • Hydrolysis of the GTP to GDP (by the protein itself) and now the protein is inactive • Also a family of proteins usually involved in cell signaling switching proteins on and off Molecular Switches Figure 3-71 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Molecular Switches Figure 3-75 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Motor Proteins • Proteins can move in the cell, say up and down a DNA strand but with very little uniformity – Adding ligands to change the conformation is not enough to regulate this process • The hydrolysis of ATP can direct the the movement as well as make it unidirectional – The motor proteins that move things along the actin filaments or myosin Figure 3-76 Molecular Biology of the Cell (© Garland Science 2008) Protein Machines • Complexes of 10 or more proteins that work together such as DNA replication, RNA or protein synthesis, transmembrane signaling etc. • Usually driven by ATP or GTP hydrolysis • THANK YOU • GOODLUCK FOR YOUR EXAMS