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Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins

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For all the standard amino acids except. glycine,the a-carbon is covalently bonded ... Steric relationship of the stereoisomers of alanine to the absolute ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins


1
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  • ?????????????
  • Part I

??? 5/14/2008
2
Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins
  • Amino Acids
  • Peptides and Proteins
  • Protein Structure
  • Protein Sequences

3
a-carboxyl group
a-amino group
?-carbon
Side chain
General structure of amino acid
4
For all the standard amino acids except
glycine,the a-carbon is covalently bonded to
four different groups (-COO-, -NH3, -H and
-R).The a-carbon is a chiral center.All
molecules with a chiral center are also
optically active.
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  • The two stereoisomers of alinine, L- and
    D-alanine, are nonsuperimposable mirror images of
    each other (enantiomers).

8
Steric relationship of the stereoisomers of
alanine to the absolute configuration of L- and
D-glyceraldehyde. The amino acid residues in
proteins are L stereoisomers
9
Amino acids can be classified by R group
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Tryptophan and tyrosine absorb ultraviolet light.
The absorbance maxima for both occurs near a
wavelength of 280 nm. Phenylalanine generally
contributes little to the absorbance properties
of proteins,
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  • Reversible formation of a disulfide bond by the
    oxidation of two molecules of cysteine. Disulfide
    bonds between Cys residues stabilize the
    structures of many proteins

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  • The additional carbons in an R group are commonly
    designated ?, ?, ?, ?, and so forth, proceeding
    out from the ? carbon,

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Peptides and Proteins
  • The polymers of amino acids that are linked by
    peptide bonds. The protein is a polypeptide.

Formation of a peptide bond by condensation
19
The pentapeptide Ser-Gly-Tyr-Ala-Leu
20
Biologically active peptides and polypeptides
occur in a vast range of sizes
  • Oxytocin nine amino acid residues, secreted by
    the posterior pituitary and stimulates uterine
    contractions.
  • Glucagon 29 residues, a pancreatic hormone,
    opposing the action of insulin.

21
Lengths of proteins vary considerably
22
Different proteins contain different amino acid
compositions
23
Some proteins contain chemical groups other than
amino acids
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Levels of structure in proteins
25
  • Column Chromatography

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3. Ion-exchange Chromatography
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4. Size-exclusion chromatography
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5. Affinity chromatography
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  • Electrophoresis a technique for the separation
    of proteins is based on the migration of charged
    proteins in an electric field.
  • Electrophoresis of proteins is generally carried
    out in gels made up of the cross-linked polymer
    polyacrylamide.
  • The polyacrylamide gel acts as a molecular sieve.
    Separation of proteins is based on their
    charge-to mass ratio.
  • Electrophoresis in the presence of SDS separates
    proteins on the basis of molecular weight.

31
  • SDS binds to most proteins in amount roughly
    proportional to the molecular weight of the
    protein.
  • The bound SDS contributes a large net negative
    charge, rendering the intrinsic charge of the
    protein insignificant.
  • The native conformation of a protein is altered
    when SDS is bound.

32
Different samples are loaded in well at the top
of the polyacrylamide gel.
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  • After electrophoresis, the proteins are
    visualized by
  • adding a dye such as Coomassie blue, which binds
    to proteins

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  • SDS-PAGE can estimate the molecular weight of a
    protein

35
  • Isoelectric focusing a technique used to
    determine the isoelectric point.
  • A pH gradient is established by allowing a
    mixture of ampholytes to distribute themselves in
    an electric field generated across the gel.
  • When a protein mixture is applied, each protein
    migrates until it reaches the pH that matches its
    pI.

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  • Isoelectric focusing

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Two-dimensional electrophoresis
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  • More than 1,000 different proteins from E coli
    can be resolved using this technique

40
  • The Function of a protein depends on its amino
    acid sequence

41
  • The bacterium E. coli produces more than 3,000
    different proteins a human produces 25,000 to
    35,000.
  • Each type of protein has a unique
    three-dimensional structure and this structure
    confers a unique function.
  • Each type of protein has a unique amino acid
    sequence.

42
  • Thousands of human genetics diseases have been
    traced to the production of defective proteins.
  • Perhaps one-third of these proteins are defective
    because of a single change in their amino acid
    sequence hence, if the primary structure is
    altered, the function of the protein may also be
    changed.
  • On comparing functionally similar proteins often
    have similar amino acid sequences, as an extreme
    case is ubiquitin.

43
Is the amino acid sequence absolutely fixed, or
invariant, for a perticular protein?
  • NO some flexibility is possible.
  • An estimated 20 to 30 of the proteins in human
    are polymorphic, having amino acid sequence
    variants in the human population.
  • Many of these variations in sequence have little
    or no effect on the function of the protein.

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  • Although the amino acid sequence in some regions
    of the primary structure might vary considerably
    without affecting biological function, most
    proteins contain crucial regions that are
    essential to their function and whose sequence is
    therefore conserved.

45
Methods of protein sequencing
  • Automated Edman degradation
  • DNA sequencing
  • Mass spectrometry

46
Amino acid sequence of protein can be deduced by
its DNA sequence
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The Nobel Prize Winners in Chemistry 2002
J. B. Fenn (1917)
K.Tanaka (1959)
Kurt WĆ¼thrich
ESI
SLD
NMR
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Protein Sequences and Evolution
  • Protein sequences are a rich source of
    information about protein structure and function,
    as well as the evolution of life on this planet.

49
A bacterial evolutional tree, based on the
sequence divergence observed in the GroEL family
of protein
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