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Download Primary structure: the sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain
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Proteins serve many functions, including the following. Given are examples of each. Structure: collagen and keratin are the chief constituents of skin, bone, hair, and nails Catalysts: virtually all reactions in living systems are catalyzed by proteins called enzymes Movement: muscles are made up of proteins called myosin and actin Transport: hemoglobin transports oxygen from the lungs to cells; other proteins transport molecules across cell membranes Hormones: many hormones are proteins, among them insulin, oxytocin, and human growth hormone See p 525 - 526 Storage: casein in milk and ovalbumin in eggs store nutrients for newborn infants and birds; ferritin, a protein in the liver, stores iron Regulation: certain proteins not only control the expression of genes, but also control when gene expression takes place Proteins are divided into two types: fibrous proteins Protection: blood clotting involves the protein fibrinogen; the body used proteins called antibodies to fight disease globular proteins Amino Acids • Amino acid: a compound that contains both an amino group and a carboxyl group -amino acid: an amino acid in which the amino group is on the carbon adjacent to the carboxyl group – although -amino acids are commonly written in the un-ionized form, they are more properly written in the zwitterion (internal salt) form O R-CH-COH O R-CH-CO- NH2 Un-ionized form NH3 + Zwitterion Chirality of Amino Acids • With the exception of glycine, all proteinderived amino acids have at least one stereocenter (the -carbon) and are chiral – the vast majority of -amino acids have the Lconfiguration at the -carbon COOH N H3 + CH3 D-Alanine COO+ H 3N H CH3 L-Alanine (Fischer projections) Chirality of Amino Acids • A comparison of the stereochemistry of Lalanine and D-glyceraldehyde - - COO H NH3 + COO + H3 N CH3 D-Alanine the naturally H occurring form CH2 OH D-Glyceraldehyde H CH3 L-Alanine CHO OH the naturally occurring form CHO HO H CH2 OH L-Glyceraldehyde 20 Protein-Derived AA • Nonpolar side chains (at pH 7.0) COONH3 + COONH3 + - + - COO NH3 + S COO- Phenylalanine (Phe, F) + NH3 Glycine (Gly, G) COONH3 + Table 21-2 p 527 Isoleucine (Ile, I) Leucine (Leu, L) Methionine (Met, M) - Proline (Pro, P) - Tryptophan (Trp, W) COO N H COO NH3 Alanine (Ala, A) H COO N H NH3 + COO- Valine (Val, V) + NH3 20 Protein-Derived AA • Polar side chains (at pH 7.0) COO- H2 N O NH3 + - Asparagine (Asn, N) COO HS NH3 O - H2 N COO NH3 + Glutamine (Gln, Q) HO NH3 + COO- HO NH3 + Serine (Ser, S) OH - COO + Cysteine (Cys, C) Tyrosine (Tyr, Y) COO- Threonine (Thr, T) NH3 + 20 Protein-Derived AA • Acidic and basic side chains (at pH 7.0) acidic - basic COO- O O NH3 + Aspartic acid (Asp, D) NH2 + H2 N O - COO N H NH3 + Arginine (Arg, R) - - O COO Glutamic acid + (Glu, E) NH N 3 N H + H3 N COONH3 + Histidine (His, H) - COO NH3 + Lysine (Lys, K) 20 Protein-Derived AA 1. All 20 are -amino acids 2. For 19 of the 20, the -amino group is primary; for proline, it is secondary 3. With the exception of glycine, the -carbon of each is a stereocenter 4. Isoleucine and threonine contain a second stereocenter isoleucine threonine Electrophoresis • Electrophoresis: the process of separating compounds on the basis of their electric charge – electrophoresis of amino acids can be carried out using paper, starch, agar, certain plastics, and cellulose acetate as solid supports • In paper electrophoresis – a paper strip saturated with an aqueous buffer of predetermined pH serves as a bridge between two electrode vessels Electrophoresis – a sample of amino acids is applied as a spot on the paper strip – an electric potential is applied to the electrode vessels and amino acids migrate toward the electrode with charge opposite their own – molecules with a high charge density move faster than those with low charge density – molecules at their isoelectric point remain at the origin – after separation is complete, the strip is dried and developed to make the separated amino acids visible Isoelectric Point • Isoelectric point, pI: the pH at which the majority of molecules of a compound in solution have no net charge Nonpolar & polar side chains alanine asparagine cysteine glutamine glycine isoleucine leucine methionine phenylalanine proline serine threonine tyrosine tryptophan valine pI 6.02 5.41 5.02 5.65 5.97 6.02 6.02 5.74 5.48 6.30 5.68 6.53 5.63 5.89 5.97 Acidic Side Chains pI aspartic acid 2.98 glutamic acid 3.08 Basic Side Chains arginine histidine lysine pI 10.76 7.64 9.74 Values given in table 21-1 p527 Ionization vs pH – if we add a strong base such as NaOH to the solution and bring its pH to 10.0 or higher, a proton is transferred from the NH3+ group to the base turning the zwitterion into a negative O O ion + - H3 N-CH-C-O + OH R – to summarize O + H3 N-CH-C-OH R pH 2.0 Net charge +1 OH + H3 O O + H3 N-CH-C-O R pH 5.0 - 6.0 Net charge 0 - H2 N-CH-C-O R OHH3 O+ + H2 O O H2 N-CH-C-OR pH 10.0 Net charge -1 Ionization vs pH • The net charge on an amino acid depends on the pH of the solution in which it is dissolved – if we dissolve an amino acid in water, it is present in the aqueous solution as its zwitterion – if we now add a strong acid such as HCl to bring the pH of the solution to 2.0 or lower, the strong acid donates a proton to the -COO- of the amino acid turning the zwitterion into a positive ion O + + H3 N-CH-C-O + H3 O R O + H3 N-CH-C-OH + H2 O R D:\GOB.exe Go to 21 – 3 simulation Cysteine • The -SH (sulfhydryl) group of cysteine is easily oxidized to an -S-S- (disulfide) + 2 H3 N-CH-COOCH2 SH Cysteine oxidation reduction + H3 N-CH-COO CH2 a disulfide bond S S CH2 + H3 N-CH-COO Cystine Peptides • In 1902, Emil Fischer proposed that proteins are long chains of amino acids joined by amide bonds – peptide bond: the special name given to the amide bond between the -carboxyl group of one amino acid and the -amino group of another peptide bond CH3 + H3 N O- O Alanine (Ala) + + H3 N O - O CH2 OH Serine (Ser) CH3 H O + N H3 N O- + H2 O O CH2 OH Alanylserine (Ala-Ser) Peptide Bond Geometry • The four atoms of a peptide bond and the two alpha carbons joined to it lie in a plane with bond angles of 120° about C and N C C C C Fig 21.1, p.532 Peptide Bond Geometry – to account for this geometry, Linus Pauling proposed that a peptide bond is most accurately represented as a hybrid of two contributing structures – the hybrid has considerable C-N double bond character and rotation about the peptide bond is restricted •• •• O C •• C H (1) O - C N C •• •• •• + C N C H (2) Peptides – peptide: a short polymer of amino acids joined by peptide bonds; they are classified by the number of amino acids in the chain – dipeptide: a molecule containing two amino acids joined by a peptide bond – tripeptide: a molecule containing three amino acids joined by peptide bonds – polypeptide: a macromolecule containing many amino acids joined by peptide bonds – protein: a biological macromolecule containing at least 30 to 50 amino acids joined by peptide bonds Writing Peptides – by convention, peptides are written from the left, beginning with the free -NH3+ group and ending with the free -COO- group on the right – C-terminal amino acid: the amino acid at the end of the chain having the free -COO- group – N-terminal amino acid: the amino acid at the end of the chain having the free -NH3+ group + H 3N N-terminal amino acid O C6 H5 O H N N OH O OH COOSer-Phe-Asp C-terminal amino acid Fig. 22.UN, p.530 Peptides and Proteins • proteins behave as zwitterions • proteins also have an isoelectric point, pI – hemoglobin has an almost equal number of acidic and basic side chains; its pI is 6.8 – serum albumin has more acidic side chains; its pI is 4.9 – proteins are least soluble in water at their isoelectric points and can be precipitated from their solutions Fig21.2 – p 533 In acid solution solubility of polypeptide depends on pH – least soluble at isoelectric point In neutral solution In basic solution Levels of Structure • Primary structure: the sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain; read from the N-terminal amino acid to the C-terminal amino acid • Secondary structure: conformations of amino acids in localized regions of a polypeptide chain; examples are -helix, b-pleated sheet, and random coil Tertiary structure: the overall conformation of a polypeptide chain Quaternary structure: the arrangement of two or more polypeptide chains into a noncovalently bonded aggregation Levels of structure Primary secondary tertiary Primary Structure • Primary structure: the sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain • The number peptides derived from the 20 protein-derived amino acids is enormous – there are 20 x 20 = 400 dipeptides possible – there are 20 x 20 x 20 = 8000 tripeptides possible – the number of peptides possible for a chain of n amino acids is 20n – for a small protein of 60 amino acids, the number of proteins possible is 2060 = 1078, which is possibly greater than the number of atoms in the universe! Primary Structure • Just how important is the exact amino acid sequence? – human insulin consists of two polypeptide chains having a total of 51 amino acids; the two chains are connected by disulfide bonds – in the table are differences between four types of insulin Human Cow Hog Sheep A Chain positions 8-9-10 B Chain position 30 -Thr-Ser-Ile-Ala-Ser-Val-Thr-Ser-Ile-Ala-Gly-Val- -Thr -Ala -Ala -Ala Primary Structure – vasopressin and oxytocin are both nonapeptides but have quite different biological functions – vasopressin is an antidiuretic hormone – oxytocin affects contractions of the uterus in childbirth and the muscles of the breast that aid in the secretion of milk Cys S S Cys Pro Gly NH2 Tyr Asn Phe Gln Vasopressin Cys S S Cys Pro Leu NH2 Tyr Asn Ile Gln Oxytocin Secondary Structure • Secondary structure: conformations of amino acids in localized regions of a polypeptide chain – the most common types of secondary structure are -helix and b-pleated sheet -helix: a type of secondary structure in which a section of polypeptide chain coils into a spiral, most commonly a right-handed spiral b-pleated sheet: a type of secondary structure in which two polypeptide chains or sections of the same polypeptide chain align parallel to each other; the chains may be parallel or antiparallel -Helix The h-bonding in the alpha helix is between amino and acid groups in the backbone C hydrogen bonding C C C -Helix • In a section of -helix – there are 3.6 amino acids per turn of the helix – the six atoms of each peptide bond lie in the same plane – N-H groups of peptide bonds point in the same direction, roughly parallel to the axis of the helix – C=O groups of peptide bonds point in the opposite direction, also roughly parallel to the axis of the helix – the C=O group of each peptide bond is hydrogen bonded to the N-H group of the peptide bond four amino acid units away from itall R- groups point outward from the helix b-Pleated Sheet b-Pleated Sheet • In a section of b-pleated sheet – the six atoms of each peptide bond lie in the same plane – the C=O and N-H groups of peptide bonds from adjacent chains point toward each other and are in the same plane so that hydrogen bonding is possible between them – all R- groups on any one chain alternate, first above, then below the plane of the sheet, etc. Collagen Triple Helix Collagen Triple Helix – every third position is Gly and repeating sequences are X-Pro-Gly and X-Hyp-Gly – 30% of amino acids in each chain are Pro and Lhydroxyproline (Hyp); L-hydroxylysine (Hyl) also occurs – each polypeptide chain is a helix but not an -helix – the three strands are held together by hydrogen bonding involving hydroxyproline and hydroxylysine – consists of three polypeptide chains wrapped around each other in a ropelike twist to form a triple helix called tropocollagen – with age, collagen helices become cross linked by covalent bonds formed between Lys residues Fig 21.UN, p.540 Collagen – triple helix ( 3 intertwined helices ) Each helix stabilized by steric repulsions between proline rings Structure further stabilized by H-bonding between NH of glycine & CO of amino acids on other chains and by covalent cross links formed between lysine side chains. Tertiary Structure • Tertiary structure: the overall conformation of a polypeptide chain • Tertiary structure is stabilized in four ways – covalent bonds, as for example the formation of disulfide bonds between cysteine side chains – hydrogen bonding between polar groups of side chains, as for example between the -OH groups of serine and threonine – salt bridges, as for example the attraction of the -NH3+ group of lysine and the -COO- group of aspartic acid – hydrophobic interactions, as for example between the nonpolar side chains of phenylalanine and isoleucine Quaternary Structure • Quaternary structure: the arrangement of polypeptide chains into a noncovalently bonded aggregation – the individual chains are held in together by hydrogen bonds, salt bridges, and hydrophobic interactions • Hemoglobin – adult hemoglobin: two alpha chains of 141 amino acids each, and two beta chains of 146 amino acids each – each chain surrounds an iron-containing heme unit – fetal hemoglobin: two alpha chains and two gamma chains; fetal hemoglobin has a greater affinity for oxygen than does adult hemoglobin Hemoglobin D:\GOB.exe Go to 21-5 Denaturation • Denaturation: the process of destroying the native conformation of a protein by chemical or physical means – some denaturations are reversible, while others permanently damage the protein • Denaturing agents include – heat: heat can disrupt hydrogen bonding; in globular proteins, it can cause unfolding of polypeptide chains with the result that coagulation and precipitation may take place