Title: Amino Acids: Structure, Analysis, and Sequence in peptides
1Amino Acids Structure, Analysis, and Sequence
(in peptides)
2Structures of the Amino Acids
3Abbreviations of Amino Acids
- Amino acids have 1-letter and 3-letter
abbreviations the 1-letter abbreviations are
used almost exclusively today, but you should
also be aware of the older 3-letter
abbreviations. - Some examples
- glycine (R H) Gly G
- alanine (R CH3) Ala A
- phenylalanine (R CH2C6H5) Phe F
- tyrosine (R CH2C6H4OH) Tyr Y
- serine (R CH2OH) Ser S
- cysteine (R CH2SH) Cys C
- methionine (R CH2CH2SCH3) Met M
- leucine (R CH2CH(CH3)2) Leu L
4Isoelectric Point
- Each amino acid has an isoelectric point, (pI)
numerically equal to the pH at which the
zwitterion concentration is at a maximum. - The amino acid has no NET charge at its pI it
has one positive and one negative charge. - At a pH less than the value of the isoelectric
point, the amino acid is protonated and has a
POSITIVE charge at a pH greater than the pI the
amino acid is deprotonated and has a NEGATIVE
charge.
Cation
Neutral
Anion
(zwitterion form)
5Separation and Analysis using pI values
- Differences in isoelectric points (and therefore
charges) are used to separate mixtures of amino
acids by two common methods - Ion exchange chromatography
- Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE)
These methods will be illustrated with a simple
mixture of three amino acids having very
different isoelectric points
aspartic acid alanine lysine
6Ion Exchange Chromatography
D- elutes first, followed by A K elutes last,
and only after pH of buffer is increased and K
is deprotonated.
7Ion Exchange Chromatography
- Recall that in our simple mixture D- elutes
first, followed by A K elutes last, and only
after the pH of buffer is increased and K is
deprotonated. - But there is a problem in detecting amino acids
they are colorless, and most of them have very
little absorption in the UV region (they have no
conjugation, except in the four aromatic amino
acids) - To overcome this difficulty, amino acids are
converted (after separation by ion exchange
chromatography) to a derivative using ninhydrin.
8Derivatization with Ninhydrin
Ninhydrin (2 mol) reacts with one mol of ANY
amino acid to give the SAME blue colored product.
This reaction is performed post-column, after
Ion Exchange Chromatography separation of a
mixture of amino acids. The area of each peak
in the chromatogram is proportional to the
relative molar amount of the amino acid of that
retention time.
9Ion Exchange Chromatography
Recall that in our simple mixture D- elutes
first, followed by A K elutes last, and only
after the pH of buffer is increased and K is
deprotonated.
injection
Increase pH of buffer
Retention time
10Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis (PAGE)
Before current is turned on
After current is turned on
11The Strecker amino acid synthesis
(racemic alanine)
12Resolution of racemic amino acids
D-
L-
L-amino acid D-N-acetylamino acid
Racemic amino acid
Racemic N-acetyl amino acid
Carboxypeptidase hydrolyzes the amide bond ONLY
of the L-aa, leaving the unnatural
D-N-acetylamino acid unreacted separation is
simple
13Covalent bonding in peptides
- Amino acids are covalently bonded to one another
by amide linkages (bonds) between the carboxylic
acid group of one amino acid and the amino group
of the next amino acid. - Amide bonds are strong and are resistant to
hydrolysis, but there are enzymes that catalyze
their hydrolysis (to the amino acids). - In addition to amide bonds, a second kind of
covalent bond exists in some peptides in which
two cysteine residues (amino acids) are connected
through a disulfide bond formed by oxidation
(dehydrogenation) of the sulfhydryl (SH) groups
(next slide).
14Disulfide bonding in peptides
15Total Hydrolysis conversion of a peptide
into a mixture of its component amino
acids
Ion Exchange Chromatogram
162. Amino Acid Sequence Primary
Structure Determination of Peptides
- Total hydrolysis followed by ninhydrin
derivatization and ion exchange chromatography
tells us the identity and relative amount of each
amino acid present in the peptide - It gives NO INFORMATION about the sequence, or
order of attachment of the amino acids, however. - For this, we need to perform selective hydrolysis
of the peptide. - Well learn three methods
- Sangers reagent followed by total hydrolysis
- Carboxypeptidase
- Leucine aminopeptidase
17Sangers Reagent N-terminal Amino Acid Analysis
18Sangers Reagent, contd
19Carboxypeptidase C-terminal AA Analysis
20Ion Exchange Chromatograms following
Carboxypeptidase
21Leucine aminopeptidase N-terminal AA Analysis
22Ion Exchange Chromatograms following Leucine
Aminopeptidase
23Partial Hydrolysis
Peptide represented schematically
(some molecules)
(other molecules)
(some other molecules)
(different molecules of the peptide can fragment
differently, leading to a mixture)
24Putting it all together!
- Suppose an unknown hexapeptide gave tagged A
(alanine) upon treatment with Sangers reagent,
and upon treatment with carboxypeptidase, the
first amino acid released was M (methionine)
followed by G (glycine) - Partial hydrolysis gave the following
identifiable tripeptides V-G-M, A-S-F, and
S-F-V. What is the 1º structure of the
hexapeptide?