Title: Proteins
1Proteins
2Proteins
- Macromolecules built of amino acids.
- Huge number of possibilities
- Classified in many ways
- solubility
- composition
- shape
- physical properties
- function
- 3-D structure
3Solubility
- Albumins Soluble in water and salt solns
- Globulins Sparingly soluble in water but
soluble in salt solutions - Prolamines Soluble in 70-80 EtOH but
insol in water and absolute EtOH - Histones Soluble in salt solns
- Scleroproteins Insoluble in water or salt solns
4CompositionSimple vs. Conjugated
- Simple-
- Conjugated-
- Apoprotein-
- Holoprotein-
- Prosthetic group-
5Shape Globular vs. Fibrous
- Rasmol Demo
- 101 ratio arbitrary division
6Physical Properties
7Function
- Enzymatic catalysts- next chapter
- Transport and storage of molecules- Hb, ferritin
- Mechanical functions- elastin
- Movement- myosin
- Protection- Ab
- Information processing- rhodopsin
- Regulatory- renin
- Other
8Structure
- Primary (1o)- sequence of amino acids
- Secondary (2o)- local 3-D shape
- a-helix
- ß-sheet
- collagen triple helix
- Tertiary (3o)- global 3-D shape
- Quaternary (4o)- relation of polypeptides
91o Structure
- 1o Structure- sequence of amino acids (disulfide
bond locations) - MUST have pure protein
10Protein Purification Starting Material
- Start with a source very rich in protein
Organism, tissue, cell type - Can you isolate a particular organelle as a
starting purification step?
11Protein Purification Salting-in/salting out
- Process
- Bigger salts work better (NH4)2SO4
- Bigger proteins ppt at lower salt
- Dialysis
12Protein Purification Size exclusion
chromatography
- Separate by size (number of amino acids)
13Protein Purification Ion-exchange chromatography
- Separate on basis of protein charge
- lys/arg vs asp/glu
- net charge
- Positively charged beads
- Negatively charged beads
14Protein Purification Affinity chromatography
- Takes advantage of a specific binding property of
the protein.
15Protein Purification Electrophoresis
- Preparative electrophoresis can be used, but
analytical electrophoresis used more often to see
how pure the protein is.
16Protein Amino Acid Composition
- Acid hydrolysis- destroys Ser, others
- Base hydrolysis- destroys Gln, others
17Protein Sequencing
- 1. What is amino acid composition?
- 2. What is amino terminus?
- Sangers reagent
- 3. What is carboxy terminus?
- Limited carboxypeptidase digestion
- 4. What is sequence?
- Edman degradation
18Protein Sequencing Continued
- 5. Fragment protein
- cyanogen bromide
- proteases
- 6. Align fragments
19Protein Sequencing
- 1. What is amino acid compostion?
- 2. What is amino terminus? -Sangers reagent
- 3. What is carboxy terminus? -Carboxypeptidase
- 4. What is sequence? -Edman degradation
- 5. Fragment protein
- cyanogen bromide
- proteases
- 6. Align fragments
20Protein Sequencing Example
- 1. Isolated pure protein
- 2. What is amino acid composition?
- Acid hydrolyze, 2D chromatography and detect
- Gly- 2 Val- 2 Pro- 2 Ser- 2 His- 1 Phe- 1 Tyr-
1 Trp- 1 Met- 1 Arg- 3 Lys- 3 Glx- 1
21Protein Sequencing Example
- 3. What is amino terminus? Serine
- Sangers reagent
22Protein Sequencing Example
- 4. What is carboxy terminus? Valine
- Carboxypeptidase
- Limited digestion (short time, low temp) gives a
single major a.a.
23Protein Sequencing Example
- 5. What is sequence?
- Edman degradation
24Protein Sequencing Example
- 6. Fragment protein
- cyanogen bromide 2 pieces
- Chymotrypsin 5 pieces
- Trypsin ? Pieces
- Data on board
25Protein Sequencing Example
- 7. Align fragments
- Ser-...
26Much Data, Much Work
27The Process Just Described is a Huge Amount of
Work
- Method of choice today is to sequence DNA
drawback - Only with prior knowledge do we move forward
28Forces Involved in 1o Structure
- Strong
- peptide bond
- disulfide bond
29Primary Structure Determines Secondary Structure
- Dipeptide model- not all conformations are
possible - Ramachandran plot
- Secondary (2o)- local 3-D shape
- a-helix
- ß-sheet
- collagen triple helix
30a-helix
- Compact
- pitch rise/residue
- know the dimensions
- location of R groups
- every fourth amino acid R group interacts
- amino acids
- NOT Pro
- forces responsible
- h-bonds parallel to axis
31ß-sheet
- More extended conformation
- location of R groups
- alternate
- amino acids
- all
- forces involved
- h bonds perpendicular
- Parallel vs. Antiparallel
- Usually short
32collagen triple helix
- Kinky
- Pro-X-Gly or Hyp-X-Gly
- Pro makes kinks
- X varies
- Why Gly?
33Forces Involved in 2o Structure
- Weak
- hydrogen bonds
- electrostatic interactions
- metal ion coordination
- hydrophobic effect
343o Structure
- 3o Structure- Global 3-D shape
- How are the 2o structures arranged in relation to
each other?
35Predicting 3o Structure
- Shape of 6,000 proteins determined by X-ray
crystallography - More than 500,000 sequenced
- Computers allow prediction if sequence known
363o Structure
- Huge number of possible structures
- Generalizations
- interior hydrophobic, exterior hydrophillic
- form follows function motifs
- EX helix-loop-helix motif
- EX beta bend motif
- EX Greek Key motif
- EX ß-a-ß motif
37Protein Folding
- Not just any old way
- For a given protein, all molecules have the same
shape. - folding occurs in stages
- Domains-several motifs usually combine to form
compact globular structures
38Forces Involved in 3o Structure
- Weak
- hydrogen bonds
- electrostatic interactions
- metal ion coordination
- hydrophobic effect
39Denaturation
- Denaturation- disruption of the normal 3D shape
- agents
- alcohol
- weak acid or base
- heat
- detergents
- reducing agents
404o Structure
- 2 or more subunits arranged in relation to each
other - held together by noncovalent interactions
- 2 or more subunits --- dimer, trimer, etc.
- homodimer vs. heterotrimer, etc.
41Forces Involved in 4o Structure
- Weak
- hydrogen bonds
- electrostatic interactions
- metal ion coordination
- hydrophobic effect
424o Structure and Sickle-cell Anemia