* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download The Chemistry of the cell
Fatty acid metabolism wikipedia , lookup
Paracrine signalling wikipedia , lookup
G protein–coupled receptor wikipedia , lookup
Artificial gene synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Expression vector wikipedia , lookup
Gene expression wikipedia , lookup
Ancestral sequence reconstruction wikipedia , lookup
Magnesium transporter wikipedia , lookup
Signal transduction wikipedia , lookup
Ribosomally synthesized and post-translationally modified peptides wikipedia , lookup
Interactome wikipedia , lookup
Peptide synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Point mutation wikipedia , lookup
Homology modeling wikipedia , lookup
Western blot wikipedia , lookup
Metalloprotein wikipedia , lookup
Genetic code wikipedia , lookup
Amino acid synthesis wikipedia , lookup
Two-hybrid screening wikipedia , lookup
Protein–protein interaction wikipedia , lookup
Nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of proteins wikipedia , lookup
Biosynthesis wikipedia , lookup
The Chemistry of the cell M. Saifur Rohman, MD. PhD. FIHA. FICA Chemical Component of The Cell • Cell Chemistry Is based on Carbon Compounds . • A living cell is composed of C, H, N, and O make up nearly 99% of its weight. • The most abundant substance of the living cell is water. (70% of a cell's weight), and most intracellular reactions occur in an aqueous environment. • All organisms have been designed around the special properties of water, such as its polar character, its ability to form hydrogen bonds, and its high surface tension. Percentage Component of The Cell The Carbon • If we disregard water, nearly all of the molecules in a cell are carbon compounds • The carbon atom, because of its small size and four outer-shell electrons, can form four strong covalent bonds with other atoms. • Most important, it can join to other carbon atoms to form chains and rings and thereby generate large and complex molecules with no obvious upper limit to their size. • The other abundant atoms in the cell (H, N, and O) are also small and able to make very strong covalent bonds Covalent bond Covalent bonds - form when atoms share electron pairs. – strongest type of bond – tend to form when atoms have 3, 4 or 5 valence electrons – can be nonpolar or polar Cells Use Four Basic Types of Small Molecules • Certain simple combinations of atoms - such as the methyl (-CH3), hydroxyl (-OH), carboxyl (-COOH), and amino (-NH2) groups - recur repeatedly in biological molecules. • The small organic molecules of the cell have molecular weights in the range 100 to 1000 and contain up to 30 or so carbon atoms. • They are usually found free in solution, where some of them form a pool of intermediates from which large polymers, called macromolecules, are made. • They are also essential intermediates in the chemical reactions that transform energy derived from food into usable forms Sugars, Fatty Acid, Amino Acid and Nucleotide • All biological molecules are synthesized from and broken down to the same simple compounds. • Biochemical Energetics for cellular reaction and function • Broadly speaking, cells contain just four major families of small organic molecules: the simple sugars, the fatty acids, the amino acids, and the nucleotides. • Although some cellular compounds do not fit into these categories, the four families, and especially the macromolecules made from them, account for a surprisingly large fraction of the mass of every cell Suggested reading topics • Lodish et al. Chemical foundations in 4th edition Molecular Cell Biology. WH Freeman and Company 2000. Pp 14-49. • Cooper GM. The chemistry of the cell in The cell: A molecular Approach. ASM PRESS. 1997. pp. 39-85. Amino Acid M. Saifur Rohman, MD. PhD. FIHA Amino Acid • • • • Structure Classification Peptide Bond Force Amino Acid • Amino acids are molecules containing an amine group, a carboxylic acid group and a side chain that varies between different amino acids. • These molecules contain the key elements of carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen. • Particularly important in biochemistry, where this term usually refers to alpha-amino acids with the general formula H2NCHRCOOH, where R is an organic substituent. Amino Acids amino group alpha carbon O H3N+ O H R side chain group Lecture 6.3 • The general formula for an amino acid • R is commonly one of 20 different side chains • At pH 7 both the amino and carboxyl groups are ionized carboxyl group 13 Families of Amino Acids • The common amino acids are grouped according to whether their side chains are: – – – – acidic D, E basic K, R, H uncharged polar N, Q, S, T, Y nonpolar G, A, V, L, I, P, F, M, W, C • Hydrophilic amino acids (uncharged polar) are usually on the outside of a protein whereas nonpolar residues cluster on the inside of protein • Basic or acidic amino acids are very polar and are generally found on the outside of protein molecules Protein AA : Polymerization • As both the amine and carboxylic acid groups of amino acids can react to form amide bonds, one amino acid molecule can react with another and become joined through an amide linkage. • This polymerization of amino acids is what creates proteins. This condensation reaction yields the newly formed peptide bond and a molecule of water. An illustration of Polymerization Peptide Bonds • Amino acids are joined together by an amide linkage called a peptide bond. • The two bonds on either side of the rigid planar peptide unit exhibit a high degree rotation peptide bonds O H H3N+ H rotation occurs here R1 N H R2 H N O H O H R3 N H R4 O O Peptide bond • Protein is a chain of amino acids linked by peptide bonds • Peptide bond – Type of covalent bond – Links amino group of one amino acid with carboxyl group of next – Forms through condensation reaction Protein Sequence Features • Proteins exhibit far more sequence and chemical complexity than DNA or RNA • Properties and structure are defined by the sequence and side chains of their constituent amino acids • The “engines” of life • >95% of all drugs target proteins • Favorite topic of post-genomic era Protein Sequence Databases • Where does protein sequence information reside? – Entrez Cross Database Search • http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/gquery/gquery.fcgi – Swissprot & TrEMBL • http://ca.expasy.org/sprot/ – PIR • http://pir.georgetown.edu/ • As of December 2003, all of this information is integrated into unified protein database called Uniprot. – Uniprot • http://www.pir.uniprot.org/ Protein Structure & Function • Protein structure - primarily determined by sequence • Protein function - primarily determined by structure • Globular proteins: compact hydrophobic core & hydrophilic surface • Membrane proteins: special hydrophobic surfaces • Folded proteins are only marginally stable • Some proteins do not assume a stable "fold" until they bind to something = Intrinsically disordered Predicting protein structure and function can be very hard -- & fun! D Dobbs ISU - BCB 444/544X: Protein Structure & Function 22 4 Basic Levels of Protein Structure D Dobbs ISU - BCB 444/544X: Protein Structure & Function Basics of Protein Structure • Primary • Secondary • Tertiary primary structure ACDEFGHIKLMNPQRSTVWY Primary structure • Sequence of amino acids • Unique for each protein • Two linked amino acids = dipeptide • Three or more = polypeptide • Backbone of polypeptide has N atoms: -N-C-C-N-C-C-N-C-C-N- Primary Structure & Protein Shape • Primary structure influences shape in two main ways: – Allows hydrogen bonds to form between different amino acids along length of chain – Puts R groups in positions that allow them to interact Secondary Structure – Local spatial arrangement of amino acids – Description of short-range non-covalent interactions – Hydrogen bonds form between different parts of polypeptide chain – These bonds give rise to coiled or extended pattern – Periodic structural patterns: -helix, b-sheet D Dobbs ISU - BCB 444/544X: Protein Structure & Function Common Secondary Structure Elements • The Alpha Helix The a-helix is a common secondary structure element acidic nonpolar • A helical wheel is a representation of the 3D structure of the a-helix. • Projection of aa side chains onto a plane perpendicular to axis of helix • Hydrophobic arcs stabilize helical interactions • Amphipathic helices are common Common Secondary Structure Elements • The Beta Sheet Secondary Structure & Protein Folding • Understanding the forces of hydrophobicity: nonpolar side chains Hydrogen bonds can form with polar side chains on outside of the protein polar side chains hydrophobic core contains nonpolar side chains unfolded or partially folded polypeptide folded conformation Tertiary & Quaternary Structure • Tertiary – Overall 3-D "fold" of a single polypeptide chain – Spatial arrangement of 2’ structural elements; packing of these into compact "domains" – Description of long-range non-covalent interactions (plus disulfide bonds) • Quaternary – In proteins with > 1 polypeptide chain, spatial arrangement of subunits D Dobbs ISU - BCB 444/544X: Protein Structure & Function 32 Tertiary Structure Lactate Dehydrogenase: Mixed a / b Immunoglobulin Fold: b Hemoglobin B Chain: a Tertiary Structure heme group Folding as a result of interactions between R groups coiled and twisted polypeptide chain of one globin molecule Quaternary Structure Some proteins are made up of more than one polypeptide chain Hemoglobin Force important for protein structure • • • • Ionic bonds Covalent bonds Van der waals forces Hydrogen bonds Folding of a polypeptide chain Non-covalent amino acid interactions • Hydrogen bonds C=O …. HN • C=O : Glu, Asp, Gln, Asn • NH : Lys, Arg, Gln, Asn, His • OH : Ser, Thr, Glu, Asp, Tyr Folding of a polypeptide chain Non-covalent amino acid interactions • Ionic bonds COO- …. +H3N • COO- : Glu, Asp pKa < 5 • NH3 + : Lys, Arg pKa > 10 Folding of a polypeptide chain Non-covalent amino acid interactions • Van der Waals forces • electrostatic in nature, short ranges • dipole-dipole, ion-dipole etc. Folding of a polypeptide chain Levels of protein folding • Primary structure (unfolded state) • Secondary structure (a-helix, b-sheet) • Tertiary structure (domains, subunit) • Quaternary structure (several pp chains) • Intra- and intermolecular disulfide bonds Suggested reading topics • Lodish et al. Protein structure and function in 4th edition Molecular Cell Biology. WH Freeman and Company 2000. Pp 50-99. Protein Synthesis, Processing and Regulation M. Saifur Rohman, MD. PhD. FIHA Protein Synthesis Intracellular • In cells, this reaction does not occur directly; instead the amino acid is first activated by attachment to a transfer RNA molecule through an ester bond. • This aminoacyl-tRNA is then a substrate for the ribosome which catalyzes the attack of the amino group of the elongating protein chain on the ester bond. • All proteins made by ribosomes are synthesized starting at their N-terminus and moving towards their C-terminus Protein synthesis • DNA • mRNA (transcription) • Protein (translation) From DNA to Protein Mutation consequence on Protein seq Post-Translational Modification • New polypeptides usually fold themselves spontaneously into their active conformation. However, some proteins are helped and guided in the folding process by chaperone proteins • Many proteins have sugars, phosphate groups, fatty acids, and other molecules covalently attached to certain amino acids. Most of this is done in the endoplasmic reticulum. • Many proteins are targeted to specific organelles within the cell. Targeting is accomplished through “signal sequences” on the polypeptide. In the case of proteins that go into the endoplasmic reticulum, the signal seqeunce is a group of amino acids at the N terminal of the polypeptide, which are removed from the final protein after translation. Posttranslational modifications Chemical alterations after protein synthesis • May alter activity, life span or cellular location • Chemical modification • Acetylation, phosphorylation, glycosylation • Processing • Proteolytic (in)activation, selfsplicing Protein processing and regulation Protein modification : becoming a functional protein • Folding • Proteolysis • Glycosylation • Signal sequence Protein synthesis on the ER Protein folding by chaperonin AAAAAAAAAA AAAAAAAAAA BiP (HSP70) HSP40 Signal peptidase Signal peptide Membrane proteins • Complications: proteins embedded in membranes • protein contains a stop-transfer sequence which is too hydrophobic to emerge into aqueous environment of ER lumen • stop-transfer sequence therefore gets stuck in membrane • ribosome lets go of translocon, finishes job in cytoplasm • translocon dissociates, leaves protein embedded in membrane • example = LDL receptor Suggested reading topics • Cooper GM. Protein synthesis, processing and regulation in The cell: A molecular Approach. ASM PRESS. 1997. pp. 273-311. Thank You