Title: Protein Chemistry Basics
1Protein ChemistryBasics
- Protein function
- Protein structure
- Primary
- Amino acids
- Linkage
- Protein conformation framework
- Dihedral angles
- Ramachandran plots
- Sequence similarity and variation
2Protein Function in Cell
- Enzymes
- Catalyze biological reactions
- Structural role
- Cell wall
- Cell membrane
- Cytoplasm
-
3Protein Structure
4Protein Structure
5Model Molecule Hemoglobin
6Hemoglobin Background
- Protein in red blood cells
7Red Blood Cell (Erythrocyte)
8Hemoglobin Background
- Protein in red blood cells
- Composed of four subunits, each containing a heme
group a ring-like structure with a central iron
atom that binds oxygen
9Heme Groups in Hemoglobin
10Hemoglobin Background
- Protein in red blood cells
- Composed of four subunits, each containing a heme
group a ring-like structure with a central iron
atom that binds oxygen - Picks up oxygen in lungs, releases it in
peripheral tissues (e.g. muscles)
11Hemoglobin Quaternary Structure
Two alpha subunits and two beta subunits (141 AA
per alpha, 146 AA per beta)
12Hemoglobin Tertiary Structure
One beta subunit (8 alpha helices)
13Hemoglobin Secondary Structure
alpha helix
14ß-Hairpin Motif
- Simplest protein motif involving two beta strands
from Wikipedia - adjacent in primary sequence
- antiparallel
- linked by a short loop
- As isolated ribbon or part of beta sheet
- a special case of a turn
- direction of protein backbone reverses
- flanking secondary structure elements interact
(hydrogen bonds)
15Types of Turns
- ß-turn (most common)
- donor and acceptor residues of hydrogen bonds are
separated by 3 residues (i ?i 3 H-bonding) - d-turn
- i ?i 1 H-bonding
- ?-turn
- i ?i 2 H-bonding
- a-turn
- i ?i 4 H-bonding
- p-turn
- i ?i 5 H-bonding
- ?-loop
- a longer loop with no internal hydrogen bonding
16Structure Stabilizing Interactions
- Noncovalent
- Van der Waals forces (transient, weak electrical
attraction of one atom for another) - Hydrophobic (clustering of nonpolar groups)
- Hydrogen bonding
17Hydrogen Bonding
- Involves three atoms
- Donor electronegative atom (D)
- (Nitrogen or Oxygen in proteins)
- Hydrogen bound to donor (H)
- Acceptor electronegative atom (A) in close
proximity -
D H
A
18D-H Interaction
- Polarization due to electron withdrawal from the
hydrogen to D giving D partial negative charge
and the H a partial positive charge - Proximity of the Acceptor A causes further charge
separation
19D-H Interaction
- Polarization due to electron withdrawal from the
hydrogen to D giving D partial negative charge
and the H a partial positive charge - Proximity of the Acceptor A causes further charge
separation - Result
- Closer approach of A to H
- Higher interaction energy than a simple van der
Waals interaction
20Hydrogen Bonding And Secondary Structure
beta-sheet
alpha-helix
21Structure Stabilizing Interactions
- Noncovalent
- Van der Waals forces (transient, weak electrical
attraction of one atom for another) - Hydrophobic (clustering of nonpolar groups)
- Hydrogen bonding
- Covalent
- Disulfide bonds
22Disulfide Bonds
- Side chain of cysteine contains highly reactive
thiol group - Two thiol groups form a disulfide bond
23Disulfide Bridge
24Disulfide Bonds
- Side chain of cysteine contains highly reactive
thiol group - Two thiol groups form a disulfide bond
- Contribute to the stability of the folded state
by linking distant parts of the polypeptide
chain
25Disulfide Bridge Linking Distant Amino Acids
26Hemoglobin Primary Structure
NH2-Val-His-Leu-Thr-Pro-Glu-Glu- Lys-Ser-Ala-Val-T
hr-Ala-Leu-Trp- Gly-Lys-Val-Asn-Val-Asp-Glu-Val- G
ly-Gly-Glu-..
beta subunit amino acid sequence
27Protein Structure - Primary
- Protein chain of amino acids joined by peptide
bonds
28Protein Structure - Primary
- Protein chain of amino acids joined by peptide
bonds - Amino Acid
- Central carbon (Ca) attached to
- Hydrogen (H)
- Amino group (-NH2)
- Carboxyl group (-COOH)
- Side chain (R)
29General Amino Acid Structure
H
COOH
H2N
Ca
R
30General Amino Acid Structure At pH 7.0
H
COO-
H3N
Ca
R
31General Amino Acid Structure
32Amino Acids
33Chirality Glyceraldehyde
L-glyderaldehyde
D-glyderaldehyde
34Amino Acids
- Chiral
- 20 naturally occuring distinguishing side chain
3520 Naturally-occurring Amino Acids
36Amino Acids
- Chiral
- 20 naturally occuring distinguishing side chain
- Classification
- Non-polar (hydrophobic)
- Charged polar
- Uncharged polar
37Alanine Nonpolar
38Serine Uncharged Polar
39Aspartic AcidCharged Polar
40GlycineNonpolar (special case)
41Peptide Bond
42Peptide Bond Formation
43Peptide Chain
44Peptide Bond
- Joins amino acids
- 40 double bond character
- Caused by resonance
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46Peptide bond
- Joins amino acids
- 40 double bond character
- Caused by resonance
- Results in shorter bond length
47Peptide Bond Lengths
48Peptide bond
- Joins amino acids
- 40 double bond character
- Caused by resonance
- Results in shorter bond length
- Double bond disallows rotation
49Protein Conformation Framework
- Bond rotation determines protein folding, 3D
structure
50Bond Rotation Determines Protein Folding
51Protein Conformation Framework
- Bond rotation determines protein folding, 3D
structure - Torsion angle (dihedral angle) t
- Measures orientation of four linked atoms in a
molecule A, B, C, D
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53Protein Conformation Framework
- Bond rotation determines protein folding, 3D
structure - Torsion angle (dihedral angle) t
- Measures orientation of four linked atoms in a
molecule A, B, C, D - tABCD defined as the angle between the normal to
the plane of atoms A-B-C and normal to the plane
of atoms B-C-D
54Ethane Rotation
A
A
D
D
B
B
C
C
55Protein Conformation Framework
- Bond rotation determines protein folding, 3D
structure - Torsion angle (dihedral angle) t
- Measures orientation of four linked atoms in a
molecule A, B, C, D - tABCD defined as the angle between the normal to
the plane of atoms A-B-C and normal to the plane
of atoms B-C-D - Three repeating torsion angles along protein
backbone ?, f, ?
56Backbone Torsion Angles
57Backbone Torsion Angles
- Dihedral angle ? rotation about the peptide
bond, namely Ca1-C-N- Ca2
58Backbone Torsion Angles
59Backbone Torsion Angles
- Dihedral angle ? rotation about the peptide
bond, namely Ca1-C-N- Ca2 - Dihedral angle f rotation about the bond
between N and Ca
60Backbone Torsion Angles
61Backbone Torsion Angles
- Dihedral angle ? rotation about the peptide
bond, namely Ca1-C-N- Ca2 - Dihedral angle f rotation about the bond
between N and Ca - Dihedral angle ? rotation about the bond
between Ca and the carbonyl carbon
62Backbone Torsion Angles
63Backbone Torsion Angles
- ? angle tends to be planar (0º - cis, or 180 º -
trans) due to delocalization of carbonyl p
electrons and nitrogen lone pair
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65Backbone Torsion Angles
- ? angle tends to be planar (0º - cis, or 180 º -
trans) due to delocalization of carbonyl pi
electrons and nitrogen lone pair - f and ? are flexible, therefore rotation occurs
here
66Backbone Torsion Angles
67Backbone Torsion Angles
- ? angle tends to be planar (0º - cis, or 180 º -
trans) due to delocalization of carbonyl pi
electrons and nitrogen lone pair - f and ? are flexible, therefore rotation occurs
here - However, f and ? of a given amino acid residue
are limited due to steric hindrance
68Steric Hindrance
- Interference to rotation caused by spatial
arrangement of atoms within molecule - Atoms cannot overlap
- Atom size defined by van der Waals radii
- Electron clouds repel each other
69Backbone Torsion Angles
- ? angle tends to be planar (0º - cis, or 180 º -
trans) due to delocalization of carbonyl pi
electrons and nitrogen lone pair - f and ? are flexible, therefore rotation occurs
here - However, f and ? of a given amino acid residue
are limited due to steric hindrance - Only 10 of the f, ? combinations are generally
observed for proteins - First noticed by G.N. Ramachandran
70G.N. Ramachandran
- Used computer models of small polypeptides to
systematically vary f and ? with the objective of
finding stable conformations - For each conformation, the structure was examined
for close contacts between atoms - Atoms were treated as hard spheres with
dimensions corresponding to their van der Waals
radii - Therefore, f and ? angles which cause spheres to
collide correspond to sterically disallowed
conformations of the polypeptide backbone
71Ramachandran Plot
- Plot of f vs. ?
- The computed angles which are sterically allowed
fall on certain regions of plot
72Computed Ramachandran Plot
White sterically disallowed conformations
(atoms come closer than sum of van der Waals
radii) Blue sterically allowed conformations
73Ramachandran Plot
- Plot of f vs. ?
- Computed sterically allowed angles fall on
certain regions of plot - Experimentally determined angles fall on same
regions
74Experimental Ramachandran Plot
f, ? distribution in 42 high-resolution protein
structures (x-ray crystallography)
75Ramachandran Plot And Secondary Structure
- Repeating values of f and ? along the chain
result in regular structure - For example, repeating values of f -57 and ?
-47 give a right-handed helical fold (the
alpha-helix)
76The structure of cytochrome C shows many segments
of helix and the Ramachandran plot shows a tight
grouping of f, ? angles near -50,-50
cytochrome C Ramachandran plot
alpha-helix
77Similarly, repetitive values in the region of f
-110 to 140 and ? 110 to 135 give beta
sheets. The structure of plastocyanin is
composed mostly of beta sheets the Ramachandran
plot shows values in the 110, 130 region
plastocyanin Ramachandran plot
beta-sheet
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79Ramachandran PlotAnd Secondary Structure
- White sterically disallowed conformations
- Red sterically allowed regions if strict
(greater) radii are used (namely right-handed
alpha helix and beta sheet) - Yellow sterically allowed if shorter radii are
used (i.e. atoms allowed closer together brings
out left-handed helix)
80Sample Ramachandran Plot
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82Alanine Ramachandran Plot
83Arginine Ramachandran Plot
84Glutamine Ramachandran Plot
85Glycine Ramachandran Plot
Note more allowed regions due to less steric
hindrance - Turns
86Proline Ramachandran Plot
Note less allowed regions due to structure
rigidity
87f, ? and Secondary Structure
Name f ? Structure
------------------- -------
------- --------------------------------- alpha-L
57 47 left-handed alpha
helix 3-10 Helix -49 -26
right-handed. p helix -57 -80
right-handed. Type II helices -79 150
left-handed helices
formed by polyglycine
and
polyproline. Collagen -51 153
right-handed coil formed
of three left handed
helicies.
88Sequence Similarity
- Sequence similarity implies structural,
functional, and evolutionary commonality
89Homologous ProteinsEnterotoxin and Cholera toxin
Enterotoxin
Cholera toxin
80 homology
90Sequence Similarity
- Sequence similarity implies structural,
functional, and evolutionary commonality - Low sequence similarity implies little structural
similarity
91Nonhomologous ProteinsCytochrome and Barstar
Cytochrome
Barstar
Less than 20 homology
92Sequence Similarity
- Sequence similarity implies structural,
functional, and evolutionary commonality - Low sequence similarity implies little structural
similarity - Small mutations generally well-tolerated by
native structure with exceptions!
93Sequence Similarity Exception
- Sickle-cell anemia resulting from one residue
change in hemoglobin protein - Replace highly polar (hydrophilic) glutamate with
nonpolar (hydrophobic) valine
94Sickle-cell mutation in hemoglobin sequence
95Normal Trait
- Hemoglobin molecules exist as single, isolated
units in RBC, whether oxygen bound or not - Cells maintain basic disc shape, whether
transporting oxygen or not
96Sickle-cell Trait
- Oxy-hemoglobin is isolated, but de-oxyhemoglobin
sticks together in polymers, distorting RBC - Some cells take on sickle shape
97Sickle-cell
98RBC Distortion
- Hydrophobic valine replaces hydrophilic glutamate
- Causes hemoglobin molecules to repel water and be
attracted to one another - Leads to the formation of long hemoglobin
filaments
99Hemoglobin Polymerization
Normal
Mutant
100RBC Distortion
- Hydrophobic valine replaces hydrophilic glutamate
- Causes hemoglobin molecules to repel water and be
attracted to one another - Leads to the formation of long hemoglobin
filaments - Filaments distort the shape of red blood cells
(analogy icicle in a water balloon) - Rigid structure of sickle cells blocks
capillaries and prevents red blood cells from
delivering oxygen
101Capillary Blockage
102Sickle-cell Trait
- Oxy-hemoglobin is isolated, but de-oxyhemoglobin
sticks together in polymers, distorting RBC - Some cells take on sickle shape
- When hemoglobin again binds oxygen, again becomes
isolated - Cyclic alteration damages hemoglobin and
ultimately RBC itself
103Protein The Machinery of Life
NH2-Val-His-Leu-Thr-Pro-Glu-Glu- Lys-Ser-Ala-Val-T
hr-Ala-Leu-Trp- Gly-Lys-Val-Asn-Val-Asp-Glu-Val- G
ly-Gly-Glu-..
- Life is the mode of existence of proteins, and
this mode of existence essentially consists in
the constant self-renewal of the chemical
constituents of these substances. - Friedrich Engles, 1878