Title: Proteins
1Proteins
2Chemical Composition
- Linear chains formed by the reaction of L-amino
acids with each other - Backbone
- Identical
- trans-peptide (amide) bonds
- less sterically hindered
- favored by 10001 over cis
- Side chains
3Amino Acids and Stereochemistry
- C? has 4 different groups attached
- side chain (unique to each amino acid)
- amino group
- carboxyl group
- proton
4Amino Acids and Stereochemistry (contd)
- Can arrange these in two different ways around a
tetrahedral carbon
5Classification of Common Amino Acids
- Side chains unique, differ in polarity
- Hydrophilic
- Uncharged
- relatively soluble in water
- Charged
- Acidic
- Basic
- Hydrophobic
- relatively insoluble
- tend to self associate
6Hydrophobic
- Alanine Ala A
- -CH3
- Valine Val V
- -CH(CH3)2
- Leucine Leu L
- -CH2CH(CH3)2
7Hydrophobic (contd)
- Isoleucine Ile I
- CH(CH3)(CH2CH3)
- Methionine Met M
- CH2SCH2CH3
- Phenylalanine Phe F
- -CH2(C6H5)
8Hydrophobic
9Hydrophilic and Uncharged
- Serine Ser S
- CH2OH
- Threonine Thr T
- CH(OH)(CH3)
10Hydrophilic and Uncharged (contd)
11Hydrophilic and Uncharged (contd)
- Glycine Gly G
- H
- Asparagine Asn N
- CH2CONH2
- Glutamine Gln Q
- CH2CH2CONH2
- Cysteine Cys C
- CH2SH
12Hydrophilic and Uncharged (contd)
Note cis (C? same side as CO) is preferred for
Pro
Rigid ring - can induce kinks in polypeptide chain
13Hydrophilic and Charged
- Aspartic acid Asp D
- CH2COOH
- Glutamic acid Glu E
- CH2CH2COOH
- Histidine His H
14Hydrophilic and Charged (contd)
- Lysine Lys K
- CH2CH2CH2CH2NH2
- Arginine Arg R
15Nonprotein Amino Acids
- EX ?-aminobutyric acid
- accumulates under stress conditions
GABA chemical agent for transmission of nerve
impulses
164 Elements of Protein Structure
- Primary
- gt 200 kJ/mol
- Secondary
- 10 kJ/mol
- Tertiary
- lt 5 kJ/mol
- Quaternary - oligomeric (gt 1 chain) only
17Protein Structure
- Primary
- Order of amino acids in linear chain
- N - terminus (start, by convention)
- C-terminus (end)
- Secondary
- Portions of linear chain fold into regular
conformations - ?-helix
- ?-sheet
- Other structures ?- or reverse turns, omega
loops Random coil
18Protein Structure (contd)
- Tertiary structure
- Overall shape
- Quaternary structure
- In proteins with several peptide chains
- EXAMPLE hemoglobin
1A3O from Homo Sapiens
19Primary Structure - Homology
- Cyt c amino acid residues from several species
homology
From Fig. 3.1 in Moore, G.R. Pettigrew, G.W.
Cytochromes c. Evolutionary, Structural and
Physicochemical Aspects. Berlin
Springer-Verlag, 1990.
20Secondary Structure - ?-Helix
- Cylindrical shape
- Stabilized by H-bonds between CO of residue i
and amide proton of residue i3 - Typically 10 -15 amino acid residues and 3-4
turns - Each turn
- contains 3.6 amino acid residues
- covers distance of 5.41 Å
21Secondary Structure - ?-Helix (contd)
- Amino acids with extended side chains
- Hydrophilic and hydrophobic amino acids on
opposite faces of cylinder
1IRL from Homo sapiens Mott, H. R., Baines,
B. S., Hall, R. M., Cooke, R. M., Driscoll, P.C.,
Weir, M. P., Campbell, I. D. The solution
structure of the F42A mutant of human interleukin
2. J Mol Biol 247 pp. 979 (1995).
22Secondary Structure - ?-Sheet
- Sheet-like structure
- Consisting of 2-6 strands (3-10 amino acids each)
stabilized by H-bonds - Parallel
- Antiparallel (more common)
- Contain amino acids branched at ?-C
- e.g., isoleucine, threonine, valine
23Secondary Structure - ?-sheet (contd)
- Silk fibroin (poly Ala-Gly) (theoretical)
- High ?-sheet content
- 400,000 Da
1SLK theoretical Fossey, S. A., Nemethy, G.,
Gibson, K. D., Scheraga, H. A. Conformational
energy studies of beta-sheets of model silk
fibroin peptides. I. Sheets of poly(Ala-Gly)
chains. Biopolymers 31 pp. 1529 (1991).
24Stabilizing Intramolecular Interactions
- H-bonds
- 3 kcal/mol
- Electrostatic interactions - between charged
amino acid side chains - salt bridges
- Disulfide bonds
- 2 S-H S-S 2H
- Hydrophobic interactions
- 3-5 kcal/mol (entropic)
25Proteins
26Proteins - Functionally Diverse
27Proteins - Diverse
- E. coli - 1000 different proteins
- Total number of proteins gt 1010
28Chemical Stability
- Proteolysis
- digestion of peptide bonds by proteases
- Hydrolysis
- Enzymatic
- Chemical
- Oxidation
- serine
- cysteine
- Aggregation
- Adsorption
- Deamidation
- asparagine
- Phosphorylation and glycation
- ?-elimination
- Isopeptide formation
- Racemization
- Maillard chemistry
- reaction of amines with reducing sugars
29Conformational Stability Affected by
- pH
- Hydrophobic aggregation
- Pressure
- Shear (mixing, flow, UF)
- Temperature
- Sorption at interfaces
- Metal binding
- Solvent effects
30Deterioration of Proteins
- Thermal Inactivation
- Cold inactivation
- Reversible
- Heat inactivation (gt 600C)
- Irreversible
- Loss of activity
- Microbiological reaction
- Sterile buffer, solutions, glassware, gloves
- Adsorption
- Plasticware rather than glassware
- Clean glassware
- Shear
- Mix solutions gently
- Vortex mixer or sonication vs. inversion
31Deterioration of Proteins - Thermal Inactivation
- Hydrolysis
- avoid acidic/alkaline pH
- Deamidation
- Sulfhydryl oxidation
- reducing agents, e.g., dithiothreitol (DTT) or
?-mercaptoethanol - Disulfide rearrangement
- avoid pH gt 10
- t1/2 (S-S) 10 h at room temperature
32Storage Stabilization of Proteins
- Chemical additives
- 50 glycerol (polyhydroxyl cpds - PHCs)
- 50 methanol (fp depression)
- Salting
- 3M (NH4)2SO4
- lt 0.15M (isotonic in living organisms)
- Freeze/thaw
33Storage Stabilization of Proteins
- Lyophilization
- Chemical modification
- Crosslinking (gluteraldehyde)
- x-ray crystallography
34Storage Stabilization of Proteins
- Dialysis
- Remove low MW impurities
- Ultrafiltration (UF)
35Proteins and pH
- Since proteins are made of amino acids,
- at any pH above the pKa, molecule will be
negatively charged (R-COO-) - at any pH below the pKa, the molecule will be
positively charged (R-NH3) - at any pH more than 1.0 unit away from pKa,
moiety can be considered to be essentially
completely ionized
36(No Transcript)
37At Physiological pH...
- Every amino acid is a zwitterion
- Asp and Glu negatively charged
- Cys and Tyr protonated
- Arg and Lys positively charged
38pI
- pH at which protein has no net charge
- Proteins have low solubility near pI
39Basic Protein
- pI at high pH
- R-NH3 R-NH2 H
- at neutral pH, protein is positively charged
- HPLC use cation exchange
40Acidic Protein
- pI at low pH
- R-COOH RCOO- H
- at neutral pH, protein is negatively charged
- HPLC use anion exchange
41Protein Solubility
- Varies widely
- Depends on hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity of
surface amino acid residue side chains - Varying pH may affect
- Proteins less soluble near pI
- Animal proteins pI near 5.5-6.0
- Plant/bacterial proteins pI near 4.5-5.0
42Protein Solubility (contd)
- Can enhance by addition of detergent or solvent
- Form micelle
- Add sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) or Triton-X
(non-ionic) - Dissolve or precipitate by addition of ethanol or
acetone - Disadvantages must remove may denature
43Enzymes
- Proteins that catalyze biological reactions
- E S -gt E P
- Categorized according to S
- Proteases - break down proteins
- Amylases - break down starch into simple sugars
- Lipases - split fats
- Catalases - break down H2O2
44Advantages
- Enantioselective (FDA)
- Regioselective
- Chemoselective
- Cheap
- React under mild conditions (T, P)
- Green alternatives
- Minimal waste cleanup
- Recyclable
45Disadvantages
- Purity
- Inactivation
- Solvent compatibility
- proteolysis
- T, P
- Downstream processing
- Low volume productivity
Issues for Chemists
Chemical Engineering Issues
46Forms Used
- Soluble enzyme
- Cost
- Stability
- Immobilized enzyme
- Kinetic limitations
- Cross-linked enzyme
- Whole cells
Desireable but requires high purity
47Application of UV to Proteins
- 3 aromatic amino acids (?-? chromophores)
- tyrosine
- tryptophan
- phenylalanine
48Amino Acids
49Molar Absorptivity for Selected Amino Acids
Taken from Franks, F. Protein Biotechnology
Humana Totowa, 1993.
NB pKa tyrosine 9.5
50Cofactors Can Be Useful Diagnostic Features
51Cofactors
- Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH)
- flavin adenine dinucleotide (FADH)
- Heme group (Fe in protoporphyrin IX)
52Application of UV to Proteins
- Cofactors
- Heme (?400105 M-1 cm-1)
- NADH (?3406.2 x 106 M-1 cm-1 ?26014 x 106 M-1
cm-1) - NAD (?26018 x 106 M-1 cm-1)
Taken from Campbell, I.D. Dwek, R.A. Biological
Spectroscopy Benjamin Cummings Menlo Park,
1984.
Highly delocalized ?-systems
53Cyt c
- Function Redox protein involved in cell
apoptosis and respiration - Structure heme protein
- FW 12,384 (horse)
- 6-c low spin
- axial ligands H18, M80
- 2 internal conserved H2Os
54UV-vis of 10 µM Cytochrome c
- Three sets of bands
- Soret
- Q-bands
- 695-nm band
- Intensity and energy redox-dependent
55Spectroscopic Methods of Protein Analysis
56Circular Dichroism (CD)
- A spectroscopic probe of protein secondary
structure - Based on differential absorption of lcp/rcp light
by chromophores
Taken from Franks, F. Protein Biotechnology
Humana Totowa, 1993.
57Fluorescence
- Natural fluorophores (few)
- Aromatic amino acids (guess which ones!)
- Cofactors
- FADH
- NADH
58Natural Fluorophores
Note ? is the quantum yield think of this as
analogous to ? in UV-vis spectroscopy
59Selected Fluorescent Probes
Note extensively delocalized ?-systems
60Useful Resources
- (1) Bell, J. E. Bell, E. T. Proteins and
Enzymes Prentice-Hall Englewood Cliffs, 1988. - (2) Campbell, I. D. Dwek, R. A. Biological
Spectroscopy The Benjamin/Cummings Publishing
Company Menlo Park, 1984. - (3) Cooper, T. G. The Tools of Biochemistry
John Wiley Sons New York, 1977. - (4) Franks, F., Ed. Protein Biotechnology.
Isolation, Characterization, and Stabilization
Humana Press Totowa, 1993. - (5) Seidman, L. A. Moore, C. J. Basic
Laboratory Methods for Biotechnology. Textbook
and Laboratory Reference Prentice-Hall Upper
Saddle River, 2000. - (6) Stein, S., Ed. Fundamentals of Protein
Biotechnology Marcel Dekker New York, 1990.
61Useful Resources (contd)
- http//www.worthpublishers.com/lehninger3d/