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Chapter 1 Protein Contents 1. Chemical components 2. Molecular structures 3. Biological functions 4. Structure-function relationship 5. Physical and chemical properties 6. Exploration of proteins 7. Proteomics: a new frontier What are proteins? Proteins are macromolecules composed of amino acids linked together through peptide bonds. How are about proteins? • the most widely distributed biomolecules • the most abundant biomolecules (45% of human body) • the most complex biomolecules • the most diversified biological functions What do proteins do? Section 1 Chemical Components of Proteins Components of proteins • major elements C (50~55%), H (~7%), O (19~20%), N (13~19%), S (~4%) • trace elements P, Fe, Cu, Zn, I, … • The average nitrogen content in proteins is about 16%, and proteins are the major source of N in biological systems. • The protein quantity can be estimated. protein in 100g sample = N per gram x 6.25 x 100 §1.1 Amino Acids • The basic building blocks of proteins • About 300 types of AAs in nature, but only 20 types are used for protein synthesis in biological systems. • A amino group, a carboxyl group, a H atom and a R group are connected to a C atom. • The C atom is an optically active center. L-Amino acid + - H3N OOC C R H Molecular weight Dalton: A unit of mass nearly equal to that of a hydrogen atom Gly Ala Val Leu Ile C2NO2H5 C3NO2H7 C5NO2H11 C6NO2H13 C6NO2H13 75 89 117 131 131 §1.1.a Classification • The R groups, also called side chains, make each AA unique and distinctive. • R groups are different in their size, charge, hydrogen bonding capability and chemical reactivity. • Aas are grouped as (1) non-polar, hydrophobic; (2) polar, neutral; (3) basic; and (4) acidic. Non-polar and hydrophobic AAs • R groups are non-polar, hydrophobic aliphatic or aromatic groups. • R groups are uncharged. • AAs are insoluble in H2O. Polar and uncharged AAs • R groups are polar: -OH, -SH, and -NH2. • R groups are highly reactive. • AAs are soluble in H2O, that is, hydrophilic. Basic AAs • R groups have one -NH2. • R groups are positively charged at neutral pH (=7.0). • AAs are highly hydrophilic. Acidic AAs • R groups have –COOH. • R groups are negatively charged at physiological pH (=7.4). • AAs are soluble in H2O. Aspartic acid (Asp or D) glutamic acid (Glu or E) Nomenclature Starting from the carboxyl group, and naming the rest carbon atoms sequentially in Greek letters. NH CH3 CH COO- NH3+ -amino-propionic acid (alanine) NH2 C NH CH2 CH2 CH2 CH COONH3+ -amino--guanidinovaleric acid (arginine) Special amino acids - Gly • optically inactive + - H3N OOC C H H Special amino acids - Pro • Having a ring structure and imino group CH2 CHCOO- CH2 CH2 NH2+ Special amino acids - Cys • active thiol groups to form disulfide bond §1.2 Peptide §1.2.a Peptide and peptide bond A peptide bond is a covalent bond formed between the carboxyl group of one AA and the amino group of its next AA with the elimination of one H2O molecule. Peptides can be extended by adding multiple AAs through multiple peptide bonds in a sequential order. dipeptide, tripeptide, oligopeptide, polypeptide AAs in peptides are called as residues. §1.2.b Biologically active peptides Glutathione (GSH) Glutamic acid cystein glycine H2O2 2GSH GSH peroxidase 2H2O GSSG NADP+ GSH reductase NADPH+H+ As a reductant to protect nucleic acids and proteins from toxin by discharging free radical or H2O2 Peptides • Peptide hormones secreted from peptidergic neurons or – Somatostatin, Noacosapeptide, Octapeptide, – Thyrotropin-release hormone, Antidiuretic hormone • Neuropeptides responsible for signal transduction – Enkephalin, Endorphin, Dynorphin, Substance P, Neuropeptide Y thyrotropin-release hormone Pyroglutamic acid histidine prolinamide Neuropeptide name amino acid sequence oxytocin Cys-Tyr-Ile-Gln-Asn-Cys-Pro-Leu-Gly-NH2 └──S───S──┘ Vasopresin Cys-Tyr-Phe-Gln-Asn-Cys-Pro-Arg-Gly-NH2 └──S────S──┘ Met-enkephalin Tyr- Gly-Gly-Phe-Met Leu-enkephalin Tyr- Gly-Gly-Phe-Leu Atrial natriuetic factor Ser-Leu-Arg-Arg-Ser-Ser-Cys-Phe-Gly-Gly-ArgMet-Asp-Arg-Ile-Gly-Ala-Gln-Ser-Gly-Leu-Gly-CysAsn-Ser-Phe-Arg-Tyr Substance P Arg-Pro-Lys-Pro-Bln-Phe-Phe-Gly-Leu-Met-NH2 Bradykinin Arg-Pro-Pro-Gly-Phe-Ser-Pro-Phe-Arg Section 2 Molecular Structures of Proteins Overview • Proteins are composed of AAs. • Distinctive properties of proteins are determined by AA compositions, AA sequences as well as the relative positions of AAs in space. • Proteins need well defined structures to function properly. Their structures are organized in a hierarchy format, that is, primary, secondary, tertiary and quaternary structure. §2.1 Primary Structure • The primary structure of proteins is defined as a linear connection of AAs along the protein chain. It is also called amino acid sequence. • The AA sequence must be written from the N-terminus to the C-terminus. • Peptide bonds are responsible for maintaining the primary structure. Primary structure of insulin • Two peptides of 21 and 30 AAs • Two inter-chain -S-S- bonds • One intra-chain -S-S- bond §2.2 Secondary Structure The secondary structure of a protein is defined as a local spatial structure of a certain peptide segment, that is, the relative positions of backbone atoms of this peptide segment. • Repeating units of N(-H), C, and C(=O) constitute the backbone. • H-bonds are responsible for stabilizing the secondary structure. • The side chains are not considered. • -helix -pleated sheet -turn (-bend) random coil Peptide unit • Six atoms, C-C(=O)-N(-H)-C, constitute a planer peptide unit. • The peptide unit is rigid due to the partial double bond property. • C=O and N-H groups are in trans conformation and cannot rotate around the peptide bond. Resonant conjugation O H O O- C C N N+ H H R2 0.124 5 0. 1 C 1 C C 0.1 32 N 46 0.1 C-N: 0.149nm C=N: 0.127nm H R1 H Rotation of peptide unit Peptide units can rotate freely around C-C and C-N bonds to form two torsion angles and . “Beads on a string” N-terminus C Peptide unit Backbone C-terminus Linus Carl Pauling • b. 1901, d. 1994 • California Institute of Technology, CA • The Nobel Prize in Chemistry (1954), “for his research into the nature of the chemical bond and its application to the elucidation of the structure of complex substances” • The Nobel Peace Prize (1962) §2.2.a -helix • A helical conformation is right-handed. • 3.6 AAs per turn and a 0.15 nm vertical distance, creating a pitch of 0.54 nm. • Side chains of AA residues protrude outward from the helical backbone. • The hydrogen-bonds are parallel to the helical axis. Left-hand versus right-hand 0.54 nm 3.6 个残基 C原子 O原子 N原子 第n+3个肽键的H原子 H原子 第n个肽键的O原子 肽链走向 0.5 nm (a) (b) The -CO group of residue n is H-bonded to the -NH group of residue (n+4). §2.2.b -pleated sheet • An extended zigzag conformation of protein backbones • Protein backbones are arranged sideby-side through H-bonds. • H-bonds are perpendicular to the backbone direction. • The side chains of adjacent AAs protrude in opposite directions. • The adjacent protein backbones can be either parallel or anti-parallel. §2.2.c -turn • One -turn involves four AAs. The -CO and -NH groups of the first AA are hydrogen bonded to the -NH and -CO groups of the fourth AA, respectively. • The -turn reverses abruptly the direction of a protein backbone. • H-bonds are perpendicular to the protein backbone. §2.2.d Random coil • There is no consistent relationship between planes. §2.2.e Motif When several local peptides of defined secondary structures are close enough in space, they are able to form a particular “super-secondary” structure. • Zinc finger HLH (helix-loop-helix) HTH (helix-turn-helix) Leucine zipper §2.2.f Side chains effect • Shape: Pro having a rigid ring (– helix disrupter) • Size: -sheet needs AAs of small side chain. Leu, Ile, Trp, and Asn having bulky sides (hard to form –helix) • Charge: Too many charged AAs in a short region of one peptide is hard to form –helix. §2.3 Tertiary Structure The tertiary structure is defined as the spatial positions of all atoms of a protein, i.e., the three-dimensional (3D) arrangement of all atoms. Four types of interactions stabilize the protein tertiary structure. • hydrophobic interaction • ionic interaction • hydrogen bond • van der Waals interaction §2.3.a Hydrophobic interaction Nonpolar molecules tend to cluster together in water, that is, aqueous environment tends to squeeze nonpolar molecules together. §2.3.b Ionic interaction • A charged group is able to attract another group of opposite charges. • The force is determined by Coulomb’s law. §2.3.c Hydrogen bond • A hydrogen atom is shared by two other atoms. • H-donor: the atom to which H atom is more tightly attached, and the other is H-acceptor. §2.3.d van der Waals force • An asymmetric electronic charge around an atom causes a similar asymmetry around its neighboring atoms. • The attraction between a pair of atoms increases as they come closer, until they are repelled by van der Waals contact distance. Interactions stabilizing proteins Myoglobin (Mb) • Located in muscle to supply O2 • 1st protein in high resolution • 153 AAs • 75% of structure is -helix in 8 regions. • the interior almost entirely nonpolar residues Ribonuclease • A pancreatic enzyme that hydrolyzes RNA • 124 AAs • Mainly -sheet • Highly compact and nonpolar interior • 4 disulfide bonds Rhodopsin • Photoreceptor protein • 7 transmembrane helices • 11-cis-retinal chromophore in the pocket • Residues are modified. §2.3.e Domain Large polypeptides may be organized into structurally close but functionally independent units. Fiberousis protein Methyl-accepting chemotaxin • Highly conservative cytosolic domain • Divergent periplasmic domain serving as a chemosensor • Transducing the external singles into the cell §2.3.f Chaperon Chaperones are large, multisubunit proteins that promote protein foldings by providing a protective environment where polypeptides fold correctly into native conformations or quaternary structures. How does chaperon work? • Reversibly bind to the hydrophobic portions to advance the formation of correct peptide conformations • Bind to misfolded peptides to induce them to the proper conformations • Assist the formation of correct disulfide bonds §2.4 Quaternary Structure The quaternary structure is defined as the spatial arrangement of multiple subunits of a protein. • Proteins need to have two or more polypeptide chains to function properly. • Each individual peptide is called subunit. • These subunits are associated through H-bonds, ionic interactions, and hydrophobic interactions. • Polypeptide chains can be in dimer, trimer .., as well as homo- or heteroform. Hemoglobin(Hb) • O2 transporter in erythrocyte • 2 subunits, 141 AAs 2 subunits, 146 AAs • 4 subunits are maintained together by 8 pairs of ionic interactions. • Each subunit contains one heme group. • The conserved hydrophobic core stabilizes the 3D structure. Structure of hemoglobin Ionic forces among Hb subunits From primary to quaternary structure §2.5 Protein classification • Constituents simple protein conjugated protein = protein + prosthetic groups Prosthetic group is non-protein part, binding to protein by covalent bond. This group can be carbohydrates, lipids, nucleic acids, phosphates, pigments, or metal ions. • Classification based on the overall shape • Globular protein: long/short < 10,soluble in water; including enzymes, transportors, receptors, regulators, … • Fibrous protein: highly elongated; insoluble in water; including collage, elastin, αkeratin, … Section 3 Biological Functions of Proteins §3.1 Hemoglobin • Hb can bind O2 reversibly, just like Mb. • Both and chains are strikingly similar to that of Mb. • Although only 24 of 146 AAs of their sequences are identical, 9 critical residues are conserved in sixty species. • Residues on the surface are highly variable, but the nonpolar core is conserved. Structural similarity of Mb and Hb Fe-porphyrin complex Fe lies at the center of picketfence porphyrin to form 4 coordinate bonds with 4 N atoms. Heme group The 5th coordinate of Fe is formed with histidine F8, and the 6th one is for either histidine E7 or O2. Heme group Oxygen-disassociation curve • The saturation Y is defined as the fractional occupancy of all O2-binding sites. • Y varies with the concentration of O2 . The equilibrium constants for Hb subunits are different. Binding behavior of Hb • Hb has a lower affinity for O2 than Mb (lower P50). • The O2–binding to the 1st subunit enhances the O2–binding to the 2nd and 3rd subunits. Such process further enhances the O2–binding to the 4th subunit significantly. • Hb binds O2 in a positive cooperative manner, which enhances the O2 transport. Local structural change Upon oxygenation, the Fe atom is moved into the porphyrin plane, leading to the formation of a strong bond with O2. CO and O2 binding Hb forces CO to bind at an angle due to steric hindrance of His E7, which weakens the binding of CO with the heme. Conformational changes The quaternary structure of Hb changes markedly upon oxygenation ( subunit shifts by 0.6nm and rotates by 15°). Global structural change The quaternary structure of Hb changes markedly for the tense (T) form to the relaxed (R) form upon oxygenation. Allosteric effect • The behavior that the lignad-binding to one subunit causes structural changes and stimulate the further binding to other subunits is termed as allosteric effect. • The protein is allosteric protein, and the substrate is allosteric effector. • Allosteric effect can be influenced by activators as well as inhibitors. Concerted versus sequential 1 non-oxygenized Hb (T conformation) oxygenized Hb (R conformation) §3.2 Collagen • insoluble fibers that have high tensile strength • 25% of total protein weight of human body • consisting of three chains of same size (285kd) Collagen in different organisms Tissue Content Bone 88.0 Calcaneal tendon 86.0 Skin 71.9 Cornea 68.1 Cartilage 46-63 Ligament 17.0 Aorta 12-24 Liver 3.9 Unusual components • AA components Gly (1/3), proline (1/4), 4-hydroxyproline (1/10), 5-hydroxylysine (1%) • AA sequences (Gly-Pro-Y)n or (Gly-X-Hyp)n X and Y can be any AAs. n can be as high as a few hundreds. Unusual triplex • Each helix is Lhanded and 3 AAs per turn. • Three helixes wind together through Hbonds in the righthanded form. • Unusual helical conformation (0.312 nm versus 0.15nm) Intermolecular cross-link • Lys at N- and C-termini and Hly in helical regions are responsible for the cross-link. • The linkage varies with the physiological function and the tissue age. • 30 genes encode for collagens, and 8 posttranslational modifications are needed collagen maturation. Type of collagens Diseases and collagen pK curve Structure of hemoglobin Concerted versus sequential Model comparison Concerted Model Sequential Model The symmetry is essential Subunits can interact for the subunit interaction. even if they are in different forms. T and R forms are in T to R is induced by the equilibrium in the absence binding of substrate. of substrate Homotropic interaction is positive. Homotropic interaction can be positive and negative. Section 4 Structure-Function Relationship of Proteins §4.1 Primary Structure and Function • Primary structure is the fundamental to the spatial structures and biological functions of proteins. • For a protein of particular sequence, many conformers are possible, but only the correct one has the biological functions. 1. Proteins having similar amino acid sequences demonstrate the functional similarity. 2. Proteins of incorrect structures have no proper biological functions, even their amino sequences are remained in a right order. 3. The alternation of key AAs in a protein will cause the lose of its biological functions. Sequences of Cytochrome C ________10 ________20 ________30 ________40 ________50 ________60 ________70 ________80 ________90 _______100 ____ Human GDVEKGKKIF IMKCSQCHTV EKGGKHKTGP NLHGLFGRKT GQAPGYSYTA ANKNKGIIWG EDTLMEYLEN PKKYIPGTKM IFVGIKKKEE RADLIAYLKK ATNE Chimpanzee GDVEKGKKIF IMKCSQCHTV EKGGKHKTGP NLHGLFGRKT GQAPGYSYTA ANKNKGIIWG EDTLMEYLEN PKKYIPGTKM IFVGIKKKEE RADLIAYLKK ATNE Monkey GDVEKGKRIF IMKCSQCHTV EKGGKHKTGP NLHGLFGRKT GQASGFTYTE ANKNKGIIWG EDTLMEYLEN PKKYIPGTKM IFVGIKKKEE RADLIAYLKK ATNE Macaque GDVEKGKKIF IMKCSQCHTV EKGGKHKTGP NLHGLFGRKT GQAPGYSYTA ANKNKGITWG EDTLMEYLEN PKKYIPGTKM IFVGIKKKEE RADLIAYLKK ATNE Cow GDVEKGKKIF VQKCAQCHTV EKGGKHKTGP NLHGLFGRKT GQAPGFSYTD ANKNKGITWG EETLMEYLEN PKKYIPGTKM IFAGIKKKGE RADLIAYLKK ATNE Dog GDVEKGKKIF VQKCAQCHTV EKGGKHKTGP NLHGLFGRKT GQAPGFSYTD ANKNKGITWG EETLMEYLEN PKKYIPGTKM IFAGIKKKGE RADLIAYLKK ATKE Grey whale GDVEKGKKIF VQKCAQCHTV EKGGKHKTGP NLHGLFGRKT GQAVGFSYTD ANKNKGITWG EETLMEYLEN PKKYIPGTKM IFAGIKKKGE RADLIAYLKK ATNE Horse GDVEKGKKIF VQKCAQCHTV EKGGKHKTGP NLHGLFGRKT GQAPGFSYTD ANKNKGITWK EETLMEYLEN PKKYIPGTKM IFAGIKKKTE RADLIAYLKK ATNE • Cytochrome C is a protein which can be found in all aerobic organisms. Structures of Cytochrome C tuna-heart mitochondria photosynthetic bacterium denitrifying bacterium 1. Proteins having similar amino acid sequences demonstrate the functional similarity. 2. Proteins of incorrect structures have no proper biological functions, even their amino acid sequences are remained in a right order. 3. The alternation of key AAs in a protein will cause the lose of its biological functions. Bovine nuclease • 124 AAs, 4 disulfide bonds (105 possibilities) • The denatured protein remains its primary structure, but no biological function. • Only the correct form has the enzymatic activity. The renatured protein will restore its functions partially or fully depending upon the correctness of the refolded structure. 1. Proteins having similar amino acid sequences demonstrate the functional similarity. 2. Proteins of incorrect structures have no proper biological functions, even their amino sequences are remained in a right order. 3. The alternation of key AAs in a protein will cause the lose of its biological functions. Sickle-cell of anemia Patient’s symptoms: Cough, fever and headache, a tinge of yellow in whites of eyes, visible pale mucous membrane, enlarged heart, well developed physically, anemic, much less RD cells clinical test: The shape of the red cells was very irregular, large number of thin, elongated, sickle-shaped and crescent-shaped forms. Identifying the cause • pI of sickle-cell Hb was higher than normal one by 0.23, which is equivalent to 2 to 4 net positive charges per Hb molecule. (1949, Pauling) • 2-D electrophoresis showed only one peptide of 28 digested Hb peptides is different (1954, Ingram). Identifying the cause Difference in primary structure of Hb • Sequence analysis showed the difference in AA sequence. Hb A : Val-His-Leu-Thr-Pro-Glu-Glu-LysHb S : Val-His-Leu-Thr-Pro-Val -Glu-Lys- • This is the first case of molecular disease identified in history. Further studies showed that the AA variation is due to the gene mutation. §4.2 Spatial Structure and Function • Proteins will experience multiple processed to become correctly folded, that is, having a correct structure. • The incorrect protein structure may lead to function alternation or diseases. • A particular spatial structure of a protein is strongly correlated with its specific biological functions. Mad cow disease and prion proteins • A transmissible, inheritable neural disease, destroying brain tissues by converting them to a spongy appearance • the conformational changes of prion protein (PrP) – PrPc: -helix, water soluble – PrPsc: -sheet, water insoluble Structural changes of prion protein PrPc PrPsc Section 5 Physical and Chemical Properties of Proteins §5.1 Amphoteric Isoelectric point • AAs in solution at certain pH are predominantly in dipolar form, fully ionized but without net charge due to -COO- and NH3+ groups. • This characteristic pH is called isoelectric point, designated as pI. • pI is determined by pK, the ionization constant of the ionizable groups. R CH COOH NH2 +OH- R CH COOH +H+ NH3+ +OH R CH COOR CH COO- NH3+ +H+ NH2 pH<pI pH=pI pH>pI cation amphoteric anion Amino acid pI M.W. Glycine 5.97 75 Alanine 6.00 Valine Amino acid pI M.W. cystein 5.07 121 89 methionine 5.74 149 5.96 117 asparagine 5.41 132 Leucine 5.98 131 glutamine 5.65 146 Isoleucine 6.02 131 cystein 5.60 119 Phenylalani ne 5.48 165 aspartic acid 2.97 133 3.22 147 Proline 6.30 115 glutamic acid tryptophan 5.89 204 Lysine 9.74 146 serine 5.68 105 Arginine 10.76 174 tyrosine 5.66 181 Histidine 7.59 155 • Side-chains of a protein have many ionizable groups, making the protein either positively or negatively charged in response to the pH of the solution. • The pH at which the protein has zero net-charge is referred to as isoelectric point (pI). COO- COOH + OH- P COO+ OH- P NH3+ + H+ P NH3+ cation amphoteric pH < pI pH = pI + H+ NH2 anion pH > pI • pI of most protein is ~ 5.0, and negatively charges in body fluid (pH7.4) • pI > 7.4: basic proteins: protamine, histone • pI < 7.4: acidic proteins: pepsin §5.2 Colloid property • Diameter: 1~100nm, in the range of colloid; • Hydrophilic groups on the surface form a hydration shell; • Hydration shell and electric repulsion make proteins stable in solution. - - + + + - + - + - + + -+ + - + + - +- - Precipitation of protein colloid + + + + + + + positively charged (hydrophilic) dehydration + + + + + + + + positively charged (hydrophobic) acid base base acid isoelectric point (hydrophilic) dehydration base Instable protein (deposition) - - - - - -- - negatively charged (hydrophilic) dehydration acid - - - - - - - - negatively charged (hydrophobic) §5.3 Protein denaturation The process in which a protein loses its native conformation under the treatment of denaturants is referred to as protein denaturation. • The denatured proteins tend to - decrease in solubility; - increase the viscosity; - lose the biological activity; - lose crystalizability; - be susceptible to enzymatic digestion. • Cause of denaturation the disruption of hydration shell and electric repulsion • Denaturants physical: heat, ultraviolet light, violent shaking, … chemical: strong acids, bases, organic solvents, detergents, … • Applications sterilization, lyophilization Renaturation • Once the denaturants are removed, the denatured proteins tend to fold back to their native conformations partially or fully. • The renatured proteins can restore their biological functions. Renaturation Protein precipitation The denatured proteins expose their side chains or the inner part to the aqueous environment, which causes the proteins aggregated and separated out from the aqueous solution. Protein coagulation • When the denatured proteins become insoluble fluffy materials, heating denatured proteins will turn them into a hard solid which are not soluble even strong acids and bases are applied. • Coagulation is an irreversible process. §5.4 UV absorption • Trp, Tyr, and Phe have aromatic groups of resonance double bonds. • AAs have a strong absorption at 280nm. • Both free and incorporated AAs show this absorption. §5.5 Coloring reactions • Biuret reaction: peptide bonds and Cu2+ under the heating condition to form red or purple chelates. • Used for determine the hydrolysis of proteins since free amino acids do not react. • Amino acids can react with ninhydrin to form a chemicals having maximal adsorption at 570 nm. • Used for quantifying the free amino acids. Section 6 Exploration of Protein §6.1 Isolation and purification • Homogenization and centrifugation • Dialysis • Precipitation • Chromatography • Electrophoresis §6.1.a Homogenization • Rupture the plasma membrane to release the intracellular components into the buffered solution • Sonication, French pressure, mechanical grinding, • Chemical reagents, lysozymes Centrifugation • Because of the differences in size and shape, proteins will sediment gradually under the centrifugal force until the sedimentation force and buoyant force reach the balance. • The sedimentation behavior is described in sedimentation coefficient (S) which is proportional to the molecular weight. Differential centrifugation Differential centrifugation homogenate 600 g,3 min Pellet (nuclei) supernatant 6,000 g,8 min Pellet (mitochondria, chloroplasts, lysosomes, peroxisomes) supernatant 40,000 g,30 min Pellet supernatant (plasma membrane, fragments of Golgi and ER) 100,000 g,90 min Pellet (ribosomal subunits) supernatant (cytosol) Rate-zone centrifugation §6.1.b Dialysis • Proteins, as macromolecules, cannot pass through the semipermeable membrane containing pores of smaller than protein dimension, thus large proteins and small molecules can be separated. • Dialysis can be used for protein purification, desalting, and condensation. §6.1.c Precipitation • Adding a large quantity of salts, such as Ammonia sulfate, into the protein solution will neutralize the surface charges and the destruct the hydration shell of proteins, causing them to precipitate. • Acetone has the similar function. • An efficient way to concentrate proteins. §6.1.d Chromatography When a protein solution (called as mobile phase) passes through a stationary phase, proteins can interact with the stationary phase due to the differences in size, charge, and affinity, making the different proteins flow through the stationary phase at different speeds. Protein mixture Elution buffer Solid phase capable of reacting with proteins to be separated Protein 2 OD280nm Protein 1 Elution volume Type of chromatography • Ion exchange: based on the ionic interactions • Affinity: based on the binding strengths • Filtration: based on the protein sizes • Hydrophobicity: based on the hydrophobic forces Ion-exchange chromatography More negatively charged proteins bind to the solid phase tightly, and stronger elution buffer is needed to elute them out the column - = + - + = = + + + + = = = + - = = - + + + = + - - + + = = - - - Less negatively charged proteins bind to the solid phase loosely, and weak elution buffer can be used to elute them out the column + + - = + Ionic exchange column with positive charge Affinity chromatography Exchange column with the ligands for binding special proteins Proteins having weak binding affinity with the ligads Proteins having strong binding affinity with the ligads Gel filtration Proteins are separated based on their sizes and shapes. The stationary phase is of semi-uniform pores. When the protein solution flows through porous beads, smaller proteins can enter the pores and stay there for a longer period, but larger proteins flow directly through the column, resulting in the separation of proteins. It is also called molecular sieve or size exclusion. Gel filtration Small proteins can enter the porous beads, and have a longer stationary time Large proteins that are unable to enter the porous beads will pass by and flow out directly Porous beads allow the small proteins enter §6.2 Electrophoresis Analysis Used mainly for determination of proteins • SDS-PAGE = Sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis • IEF = isoelectric focusing electrophoresis • 2D = two dimensional electrophoresis §6.2.a SDS-PAGE • Sodium dodecyl sulfate is a kind of detergent to denature the proteins • Anionic SDS bind to protein in the ratio of 1 SDS per 2 AAs. • The protein-SDS complex is roughly charged proportional to the mass. • The smaller the protein, the faster the moving speed in the electric field. • The gel polymer material for protein discrimination is composed of methylenebisacrylamide and acrylamide. • The pore size can be controlled by changing the concentration of crosslinking reagent. • The gel with different concentration of cross-linking reagent can be used for different size proteins. § 6.2.b Isoelectric focusing • Depend upon the electric properties of proteins • The charged proteins, either positively or negatively, will migrate in the electric field. • The proteins having net zero charges stop moving in the electric field. Principle of IFE §6.2.c 2D electrophoresis • 1st dimension: isoelectric focusing electrophoresis • 2nd dimension: SDS-PAGE • A high throughput approach to identify proteins §6.3 Composition and Sequence • Composition • Determination of terminal residues • Edman degradation • Sequencing strategy • Mass spectroscopy • Deduction form DNA sequences §6.3.a Composition analysis • Hydrolyzing the purified protein samples in an evacuated and sealed tube by heating it in 6 M HCl at 100°C • Analyzing the AA components using chromatography • (Alaa, Argb, Asnc, Aspd, … Valz) Chromatography of AA §6.3.b Terminal residues • The amino-terminal residue reacts with fluorodinitrobenzene or dabsyl chloride to form a stable product which can be analyzed using chromatography. • The carboxyl-terminal residue can react with fluorodinitrobenzene or dabsyl chloride to form a stable product. N-terminal reaction §6.3.c Edman degradation 1. Labeling the N-terminal residue with a fluorophore. 2. Cleaving the labeled residue without breaking the peptide bonds of the rest part of the peptide. 3. Determining the N-terminal residue with chromatography. 4. Repeating the same procedure to the rest peptide until the whole sequence is determined. First cycle of Edman degradation N C S H2N H O H O C C N C C H R2 H O N C C H R2 R1 phenyl isothiocyanate labeling H S H H O N C N C C R1 releasing S N C C N O C H R1 H2N H H O C C R2 H O N C C H R3 Edman degradation §6.3.d Overlapping approach 1. Cleaving a protein into small peptides by chemical or enzymatic methods, and purify these peptides. 2. Sequencing each peptide using Edman degradation approach. 3. Overlapping peptide fragments to arrange them in a right order, and accomplishing the AA sequencing. Cleavage of peptides Cleavage reagent Cleavage site Cyanogen bromide Met (C) O-Iodosobenzoate Try (C) Hydroxylamine Asp-Gly Trypsin Lys and Arg (C) Clostripain Arg (C) Staphylococcal protease Asp and Glu (C) Thrombin Arg (C) Overlapping approach 1. Tryptic cleavage generates two peptides Gly-Phe-Val-Glu-Arg, Val-Phe-Asp-Lys 2. Chymotryptic cleavage generates three peptides Val-Phe, Val-Glu-Arg, Asp-Lys-Gly-Phe 3. Overlapping the sequenced peptides Tryptic peptide Tryptic peptide Val - Phe - Asp - Lys - Gly - Phe - Val - Glu - Arg Chymotryptic peptide §6.3.e Mass spectroscopy • Newly developed approach applied to biology and medicine areas • Revolutionized bioanalytical technique • Offering a fast, high accuracy, and high throughput determination for analyzing peptides and proteins. Matrix-aided ionization 1. Deposit samples on a plate. 2. Introduce a beam of laser. 3. Ionize samples. 4. Analyze ionized molecules. 5. Determine the AA sequence. Fragmentation of peptide xn+3 yn+3 xn+2 yn+2 xn+1 O O O O yn+1 O —N—C—C —N—C—C—N—C—C —N—C—C —N—C—C H Ri H Ri+1 ai+1 H Ri+2 H Ri+3 bi+1 ai+2 bi+2 ai+3 bi+3 H Ri+4 From MS to AA sequence §6.3.f Deduction from DNA sequence Isolate the genes encoding the protein DNA sequencing mRNA sequencing Determine the AA sequence according to the 3-letter genetic codons §5.4 Structure Determination • Circular dichroism spectroscopy • X-ray crystallography • Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy • Prediction based on the protein sequence homology • Computer simulation Section 7 Proteomics: A New Frontier Proteomics a comprehensive knowledge about all the proteins of a cell at a specific given time. Objectives • Biological process – • Molecular function – • The overall process toward which this protein contributes The biological activity the protein accomplishes Cellular component – The location of protein activity Proteomics approaches • • • • • • Separation Sequence determination 3D-structure Functionality Expression regulation Post-translation modification Protein chips Incorrect conformation and diseases • Proteins synthesis, post-translation modification and maturation is a very complex process. • Only the correct folding process leads to the correct conformation and the proper functions of proteins. • Incorrect folding process may lead to diseases. Structures of Cytochrome C Rice Yeast Bacterium Phylogenetic tree of cytochrome C Human, Chimpanzee Candida krusei Horse, Zebra Debaryomyces kloeckeri Macaque Pig, cow, sheep Dog Gray whale Shark Baker’s yeast Hornworm moth Penguin Turkey, chicken Duck Pigeon Turtle Tuna Alligator Kangaroo Carp Silk moth Neurospora crassa Bullfrog Monkey Rabbit Bacteria Bonito Fruit fly Screwworm fly Pacific lamprey Mungbean Pumpkin Wheat Tomato Sunflower Homology comparison