Title: PROTEIN PHYSICS
1PROTEIN PHYSICS
- A. V. Finkelstein
- O. B. Ptitsyn
- LECTURE 5
- www.nd.edu/aasztalo
Andrea Asztalos, 2007 June 20
2Chemical Bonds
- Covalent Bond 50 - 100kcal/mol
- Ionic Bond 5 - 80kcal/mol
- Hydrogen Bond 3 - 6kcal/mol
- Hydrophobic Interaction 0.5 - 3kcal/mol (not a
bond per se) - Van der Waals Interaction 1kcal/mol
Van der Waals int. lt Hydrogen Bond lt Ionic Bond
lt Polar Covalent Bond lt Non-polar Covalent Bond
3Hydrophobic Effect
HYDRO PHOBICITY - fear of water
- Nonpolar molecules H2, CH4, CH3CH2CH3, Ala,
Val, Leu, Gly, Met, Pro,
- Polar molecules CH3CH2OH, Asp, Ser,
Frozen hydrogen bonds Minimum enthalpy structures
4Hydrophobic Interaction
Hydrophobic Interaction - driven by surface
minimization
CLATHRATE
5Experimental Observations
At T25C
Crystallization or Hydrophobic effect?
6Temperature Dependence
Hydrophobicity increases till 140C
Hydrophobic molecules become more sticky
After T140C T?S gt 0, the hydrophobic effect
decreases
High heat capacity (CpdH/dT) (melting of the
ordered water)
Transferring pentane from liquid pentane to water
7Molecular Size Dependence
0.02 0.025 kcal/(moleÅ)-1 of accessible
nonpolar area
8Questions Remarks
- What does it mean physically, that one amino acid
has a higher hydrophobicity than another one? - Is there one clathrate or many small ones? It
depends on the number of water molecules between
two nonpolar molecules - The hydrophobic effect is responsible 90 to form
a compact protein - The final polishing is done by the van der
Waals interactions, H-bonds and ionic bonds