Title: Last Lecture: Protein 3 Structure, Folding
1Last Lecture Protein 3 Structure,
Folding Today Structure Determination, Heme
Proteins Mid-term to end of Mondays lecture
2Problems 1. Draw a possible hydrogen bonding
interaction-containing two hydrogen bonds for the
following pairs of amino acid side chains
Asn/Gln, Asp/Glu (protonated). 2. Consider a
folded protein in which two Glu side chains are
positioned close to one another in space. What
is the effect of this on the pKa representing
the ionization of the second side chain? 3.
Would you expect to find positively or negatively
charged side chains positioned near the C
terminus of an a helix? 4. Name the most
conservative mutation for the following amino
acids given the choices in brackets (a) Glu (F,
A, E, V) (b) N (Asp, Met, Pro, His) (c) Phe (Y,
P, E, V)
3Structure Determination
NMR -solution structure -dynamics -size
limitations
X-ray -crystal structure -high resolution
41D-1H NMR Spectrum
CH3CH2Cl
5X-ray Diffraction
Structure
6Crystallization -"Hanging Drop"
Buffer A Protein
Buffer A buffer salts additives
7Crystallization -"Hanging Drop"
Buffer A Protein
water vapour diffusion
Buffer A buffer salts additives
8Crystallization -"Hanging Drop"
Buffer A Protein
water vapour diffusion
Buffer A buffer salts additives
9High Throughput Crystallization
10X-ray Diffraction
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12Electron Density to Structure
Tyr or Phe
Pro
13BRCT Domain - BRCA1
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16BRCT Domain - BRCA1
A1708
171D-1H NMR Spectrum
CH3CH2Cl
181D 1H Spectrum of Protein
192D-NMR Spectrum (1H-1H NMR)
202D-NMR Spectrum (15N- 1H NMR)
21NMR
-connectivity (linear sequence) -coordinates
(through space)
22Nuclear Overhauser Effect (NOE)
-relaxation by through space transfer
23Detail of 2D Spectrum
24Set of NMR Derived Structures
25Protein Function
Structure cellular architecture Carriers
transport Enzymes Catalysis
26Oxygen Transport and Storage Hemoglobin and
Myoglobin
27Hemoglobin and Human Disease
-Sickle Cell b chain E6 to V6
-b thalassemia imbalance in a to b ratio
28Binding of Oxygen to Myoglobin
1 torr 133 Pa 0.132 atm
29Structural Features of Hb
1. Hb is a tetramer (4 subunits) a2b2 2. One
heme bound per subunit 3. Each heme binds one
O2 4. Hb exists in 2 states T deoxy Hb R
oxy Hb 5. T state is stabilized by intrasubunit
and intersubunit salt bridges 6. Conversion T
R involves breaking salt bridges 7. T R is
also characterized by changes in a1 b2
(a2 b1)contacts subunits move closer
together to expel 2,3 BPG 8. More extensive
contacts remain unchanged a1 b2 a2 b1
30Oxygen Binding Curves
hyperbolic (My) and sigmoidal (Hb)
31Four Factors Affect O2 Binding to Hb
Hb stripped of these factors has high O2
affinity, P50 12 torr little cooperativity
(hyperbolic O2 binding curve) H ions bind to
deoxyHb and stabilize it Cl- ions also
stabilize deoxyHb BPG (2,3-bisphosphoglycerate)
binds to deoxyHb preferentially CO2
binds to deoxyHb preferentially All 4 of these
factors stimulate Hb to release its bound O2 in
the capillaries by reducing the O2 binding
affinity
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33Oxygen Transfer Between Hemoglobins
34Myoglobin
35Structure of DeoxyHb
36Structure of OxyHb
a2
b1
a1
b2
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40T to R Transition in Hemoglobin
41(oxy)
42Specific Binding of Bisphosphoglycerate to
Hemoglobin