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Twice Nobel Prize Winner

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Title: Basic Principles of Protein Chemistry Author: Murthy Last modified by: Murthy Created Date: 11/26/2003 5:50:16 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Twice Nobel Prize Winner


1
Twice Nobel Prize Winner
  • FREDERICK SANGER
  • HARD WORK IS PAID IN FORM OF AWARDS
  • Prasanna Khandavilli

2
Curiosity is the key for Scientific Discovery
3
Frederick Sanger
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1958
  • "for his work on the structure of proteins,
    especially that of insulin

4
The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1980
for their
contributions concerning the determination of
base sequences in nucleic acids
Walter Gilbert
Frederick Sanger
5
Frederick Sanger
  • Born August 13, 1918
  • Place of Birth Rendcombe, Gloucestershire,
    England
  • Residence U.S.A./Great Britain
  • Affiliation MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology,
    Cambridge

6
Basic Principles of Protein Chemistry
  • Proteins - Amino Acid residues
  • Physical and Biological Properties-
  • Arrangement of the Amino Acid residues

7
Bergmann and Niemann
  • Periodic arrangement of Amino Acids
  • Pure protein A random mixture of similar
  • individuals

8
Chibnall
  • Studies on Insulin
  • Simpler composition
  • Tryptophan and Methionine absent
  • Accurate analysis

9
Van Slyke Procedure
  • High content of free a-amino groups
  • Short Polypeptide chains
  • Jensen Evans
  • Phenylalanine at the end of one of the chains

10
Molecular weight of Insulin
  • Physical methods 36,000 to 48,000
  • Gutfreund 12,000
  • Harfenist Craig 6,000

11
Dinitrophenyl (DNP) method
  • 124 flourodinitrobenzene (FDNB)

Alkaline conditions
12
DNP method contd.
  • Hydrolysis of DNP protein with Acid

13
DNP method contd.
  • Extraction with Ether
  • Fractionation (Partition Chromatography)
  • Comparison of Chromatographic rates (Silica-gel
    Chromatography or Paper Chromatography)
  • Identification and Estimation Calorimetrically

14
DNP labeling of Insulin
  • Three yellow DNP-derivatives
  • e-DNP-lysine (not extracted with Ether)
  • DNP-phenylalanine
  • DNP-glycine

15
Edman phenyl isothiocyanate method
  • Standard method for studying N-terminal
    residues

16
Disulphide bridges
  • Cystine residues
  • Reduction to SH derivatives
  • Polymerization gave insoluble products
  • How to break these Disulfide bridges?

17
Oxidation with Performic Acid
18
Precipitation of Oxidized Insulin
  • Fraction A
  • N-terminal residue Glycine
  • Acidic
  • Simpler composition (Lys, Arg, His, Phe,
  • Thr, Pro were absent)
  • Fraction B
  • N-terminal residue Phenylalanine
  • Basic Amino acids

19
Acid hydrolysis of DNP-Phenylalanine
20
Conclusions
  • Position of residues
  • Only two types of chains
  • Molecular weight 12,000

21
Fractionation
  • Paper Chromatography for Fractionation of
  • small peptides
  • Consden, Gordon, Martin Synge worked on
  • pentapeptide Gramicidin-S

22
Fraction B studies
  • Ionophoresis, Ion-exchange Chromatography,
  • Adsorption on Charcoal
  • 5-20 peptides
  • Paper Chromatography
  • Analysis of the constituent Amino Acids

23
Results
24
Conclusions
  • Five sequences present in Phenylalanine Chain

25
Problems
  • How the 5 sequences are joined ?
  • Hurdles in solving this mystery
  • Technical difficulty in fractionating peptides
    with non-polar residues (Tyr Leu)
  • Acid lability of the bonds involving Serine and
    Threonine

26
Solution is
  • Enzymatic Hydrolysis
  • Use of Proteolytic enzymes
  • More specific than acid hydrolysis

27
Proteolytic Enzymes
  • Pepsin Peptide Bp3 fragment
  • Phe (CySO,H, Asp, Glu, Ser, Gly, Val, Leu,
    His)
  • Trypsin, Chymotrypsin studies

28
Fraction A studies
  • Problems in applying fraction B studies to
  • fraction A
  • Few residues that occur only once
  • Less susceptible to enzymatic hydrolysis
  • Water soluble peptides- difficult to fractionate
    on paper chromatography

29
Paper Ionophoresis
  • pH 2.75
  • -COOH groups uncharged
  • -SO3H groups negative charge
  • -NH2 groups positive charge
  • pH 3.5
  • -COOH groups charged

30
Results of Paper Ionophoresis
31
Sequence of Fraction A
32
Acid Hydrolysis
  • Ammonia produced from Amide groups on
  • Aspartic and Glutamic acid residues
  • Position of Amide groups
  • Ionophoretic rates
  • Amide contents of peptides

33
Arrangement of Disulphide bridges
  • Assumptions and hypothesis
  • Harfenist Craig Mol Wt 6000
  • Two chains with three disulphide bridges
  • Two bridges connecting the two chains
  • One intrachain bridge in fraction A

34
Disulphide interchange reaction
35
Disulphide interchange reaction
Contd.
  • Two types of disulphide interchange reactions
  • In neutral alkaline solution catalyzed by
  • SH compounds

36
Enzymic Hydrolysis
  • Chymotrypsin action
  • -CySO3H.AspNH
  • -Leu.Val. CySO3H.Gly.Glu.Arg.Gly.Phe.Phe

37
Cystine peptide structure
38
The Structure of Insulin
39
Sequenced Insulin supports Protein chemistry
theories
  • Hofmeister Fischer Classical peptide
    hypothesis
  • No evidence of periodicity
  • Random order
  • Unique most significant order

40
Insulin from different species
41
Determination of Nucleotide Sequences
  • Smallest DNA molecule - Bacteriophage fX174
    5,000 nucleotides
  • tRNA - 75 nucleotides

42
Fractionation of 32P-labelled oligonucleotides
  • G.G.Brownlee and B.G.Barrell method
  • Partial degradation by enzymes
  • Separation of smaller products
  • Determination of sequence
  • Applied to RNA sequences

43
Disadvantages
  • Slow and tedious
  • Requires successive digestions and fractionations
  • Not easy to apply to larger DNA molecules

44
Copying Procedures
  • C.Weissmann Bacteriophage Qß
  • -Qß Replicase Complementary copy
  • -Pulse-labeling with radio actively labeled
  • nucleotides
  • DNA Polymerase substitutes Replicase
  • -Primer, Triphosphates containing 32P in a
    position - Sanger

45
Copying Procedure
46
Primer Source
  • Synthetic Oligonucleotides
  • Restriction enzymes

47
Copying procedure
  • Results
  • Short specific regions of labeled DNA were
    obtained
  • Unable to obtain individual residues for
    sequencing
  • How to obtain individual
  • nucleotide residues?

48
Solution is
  • Incorporation of ribonucleotides in DNA
  • Sequence by DNA Polymerase
  • Splitting of ribonucleotide residues later by
  • action of alkali
  • Technique put forth by Berg, Fancher
  • Chamberlin

49
The Plus and Minus method
  • a32P-dNTP labeling and sequence specific
  • termination
  • J.E.Donelson - Ionophoresis of products on
  • acrylamide gels

50
The Dideoxy method
  • Quicker and more accurate
  • fX174
  • Bacteriophage G4
  • Mammalian mitochondrial DNA

51
Dideoxynucleoside triphosphates
  • Lack 3 hydroxyl group
  • Incorporated into growing DNA chain by DNA
    polymerase
  • Chain terminating analogues

52
Dideoxy nucleotide triphosphate
53
Chain Termination with ddNTP
54
Chain-Terminating Method
55
Autoradiograph DNA sequencing gel
56
Chain terminating method
  • Problem Requires single
  • stranded DNA as template
  • Solution
  • A.J.H.Smith Exonuclease III
  • Fragments cloned in
  • plasmid vectors and Human
  • mitochondrial DNA

57
Cloning in single-stranded Bacteriophage
  • Method to prepare template DNA
  • Based on studies of bacteriophage M 13 and
    restriction fragments provided by others

58
Cloning
  • Gronenborn Messing M13 Bacteriophage
  • Insert of ß-galactosidase gene with an EcoRI
    restriction enzyme site in it
  • Heidccker 96-nucleotide long restriction fragment
    from M13 vector flanking EcoRI site

59
Cloning
60
Advantages
  • Same primer on all clones
  • Very efficient and rapid method of fractionating
  • Each clone represents progeny of a single
    molecule and is therefore pure
  • No theoretical limit to the size of DNA that
    could be sequenced

61
Bacteriophage fX174 DNA
  • First DNA sequenced by Copying procedure
  • Single-stranded circular DNA
  • 5,386 nucleotides
  • Ten genes
  • Genes are overlapping

62
Gene Map
63
Reading Frames
64
Mammalian mitochondrial DNA
  • Two ribosomal RNAs (rRNAs)
  • 22-23 transfer RNAs (tRNAs)
  • 10-13 inner mitochondrial membrane proteins
  • Transcription and translation machinery of
  • mitochondria is different from other biological
  • systems

65
The genetic code in mitochondria
  • Steffans Buse - Sequence of Subunit II of
  • Cytochrome Oxidase (COII) from bovine
  • mitochondria
  • Barrel, Bankier Drouin DNA sequence for
  • protein homologous to the above amino acid
  • sequence in human beings

66
Findings
  • TGA - Tryptophan (not termination codon)
  • ATA Methionine (not isoleucine)
  • Is it Species variation (?)
  • Young Anderson-isolated bovine mtDNA
  • - Confirmed Uniqueness of mtDNA

67
mtDNA Genetic Code
68
(No Transcript)
69
Transfer RNAs
  • Cytoplasmic tRNAs
  • Clover-leaf model
  • Invariable features
  • Mammalian mt-tRNA
  • Invariable features missing
  • Serine tRNA lacks loop of cloverleaf structure

70
Cytoplasmic Transfer RNAs
  • Wobble effect forming Family boxes

71
Mitochondrial Transfer RNAs
  • 22 tRNA genes in Mammalian mtDNA
  • For all family boxes-
  • Only one which had a T in the position
  • corresponding to the third position of the
    codon
  • One tRNA-Recognizes all codons in a family
  • box

72
Distribution of Protein genes
  • Cytochrome oxidase
  • ATPase complex
  • Cytochrome b

73
Gene Map of Human mtDNA
74
Mitochondrial DNA Conclusions
  • Very compact structure
  • Reading frames coding for proteins and rRNA genes
    are flanked by tRNA genes
  • Simple model for transcription

75
  • TRENDS AND PROGRESS
  • IN
  • SEQUENCING FIELD

76
Trends
  • 1974
  • Conventional Sequencing Method Sanger,
  • Maxam Gilbert
  • 1986
  • A regiment of scientists and technicians
  • Caltech and Applied Biosystems Inc.,invented
  • the Automated DNA Fluorescence Sequencer.

77
Trends
  • Craig Venter's Sequencing Method
  • In 1991, working with
  • Nobel laureate Hamilton Smith, Venter's
    genomic
  • research project (TIGR) created a new
    sequencing process coined shotgun technique.

Trend Setter Gene Hunter
Dr. Craig Venter
78
Automated DNA Sequencing
  • Smith et al. 1986
  • DNA molecules labeled with fluorescent dyes
  • Products of dideoxy-sequencing reactions
    separated by gel electrophoresis
  • Dye molecules are excited by laser beam
  • Fluorescent signals are amplified and detected by
    Photomultiplier tubes (CCD Camera)
  • Computer software identifies each nucleotide
    based on the distinctive color of each dye

79
Automated Sequencing (Contd)
80
Automated Sequencing (Contd)
81
Genome Projects
  • 1999
  • Celera genomics Rockville, Maryland
    Drosophila genome
  • 2000
  • Completed Human Genome Project
  • http// www.genome.gov/
  • 2002
  • Mouse Genome Project
  • www.informatics.jax.org/

82
Human Genome Project
  • The Human Genome Project Started in 1988,
    Public Domain
  • Collaborative work between Celera Genomics
  • and NIH
  • Accomplishments
  • Identify all the approximately 35,000 genes in
    human DNA
  • Determine the sequences of the 3 billion chemical
    bases that make up human DNA (completed July 2000)

83
Other Genome Databases
  • A lot of Organism specific databases at NCBI
  • Allows for Comparative Genomics studies
  • Phylogenetic Analysis studies
  • Gene Annotation and Identification issues
  • Drug therapy and Gene Therapy- Cystic Fibrosis
    etc.
  • DNA Vaccines

84
Insulin and Biotechnology
  • 1978 Genentech, Inc. - Genetic engineering
    techniques used to produce human insulin in E.
    coli
  • 1983 Genetech, Inc. licensed Eli Lily to make
    insulin

85
Insulin Production in E.coli
86
3D STRUCTURE OF INSULIN
87
Insulin Trends
  • Insulin was first isolated from the pancreas of
    cows and pigs in the early 1920s
  • In 1978, a synthetic version of the human insulin
    gene was constructed and inserted into the
    bacterium Eschericia coli, in the laboratory of
    Herbert Boyer at the University of California at
    San Francisco

88
Insulin Trends in Medicine
  • Recombinant human insulin was developed by
    Boyer's fledgling company, Genentech, in October
    of 1982, the first product of modern
    biotechnology
  • Humulin
  • Various modes of delivering Insulin to the Tissue
  • Less Adverse reactions, More strict glucose
    control in diabetics

89
References
  • Nobel e-Museum
  • The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
  • Britannica Nobel Prizes, Guide to the Nobel
    Prizes
  • Michigan State University, Department of
    Chemistry
  • Science Daily
  • http//www.geocities.com/jdelaney25/FrederickSange
    r.html
  • The wellcome Trust Sanger Institute

90
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