Title: Protein metabolism
1Protein metabolism
2Birth of a protein
Predicted genes or genes of unknown function are
typically called open reading
frames (ORFs)
3Complexity of protein synthesis
4Aminoacyl-tRNA synthetases charge tRNAs with
amino acids
- Specificity is shown
- Here ?
- Note two non-standard
- amino acids have been
- shown to be incorporated
- into proteins in this way
- selenocysteine, and
- pyrrolysine
5Initiation requires several auxiliary factors
- Bacterial translation is regulated
- by specific incorporation of fMet
- Note three sites for tRNA binding
- two encompass both subunits
6Structural analysis reveals RNA binding sites on
50S subunit
7Structures have been solved for both 50S and 30S
ribosomal subunits
8(No Transcript)
9RNA as a catalyst in peptide bond formation
10Translation elongation
11The ribosome is a molecular machine
12Ribosomes are the site for various antibiotic
action
13A Proteins Adolescence
14Fate of proteins in cells
Prokaryote vs. Eukaryote
15 Additional codes are intrinsic to a
proteins primary sequence
Acquire secondary structure either coming off
ribosome (a), or by interactions with chaperones
(b), however,some proteins fold into tertiary
structures autonomously Post-translational
processing and modifications Insulin and
proteases Inteins Glycosylation, etc.
16Protein targeting utilizes signal peptides
Various protein activities are regulated by
processing to yield a mature enzyme
17The PCC functions in protein translocation
18Introns versus Inteins
Intron Intein
DNA DNA RNA RNA RNA
Protein Protein Protein
Splicing event
19Formation of disulfide bonds addition of
prosthetic groups
20Glycosylation provides a ligand and targeting to
proteins
21Buttering proteins
22Some amino acids are modified post-translationally
23Some nascent polypeptides can fold spontaneously
24while others need help
25DnaKJ and GrpE are chaperones
26GroESL is a chaperonin
27Other important enzymes in protein folding
- Protein disulfide isomerase (PDI) assists
protein in forming proper disulfide bridges - Peptide prolyl cis-trans isomerase (PPI)
interconverts cis-trans isomers of proline
28The state of proteins are monitored by the cell
20 of new polypeptides are immediately degraded
because of abnormalities, incomplete assembly
others inactivated by heat or chemical stress,
while some are unstable
Quality control for proteins
Signal for quality control is surface-exposed
hydrophobic regions
29Why do some proteins need help folding, while
others do not?
- What are the molecular mechanisms of protein
folding? - How important is protein folding?
- Why should I care?
30Two-state folding of small proteins
- Modeled after Anfinsen experiments
- A large number of proteins fewer than 150 amino
acids can efficiently refold upon dilution - During refolding, only observe two distinct
states folded and unfolded on a time scale of
seconds or less
31A non-random process
- The unfolded protein undergoes specific
kinetically preferred steps on way to the native
state
32Long-range interactions lead to non-randomness
- In non-native proteins residual structure appears
as hydrophobic clusters, in which tryptophan or
histidine residues are surrounded by hydrophobic
residues - Do these act as nucleation sites for protein
folding?
33Lysozyme folding
34H-exchange and lysozyme folding
- Refolding experiments indicated both domains
achieve native structure in folding intermediates
prior to tertiary interactions spanning the two
domains - Amide hydrogens become protected in the alpha
domain much faster than beta
35Hydrogen exchange measures solvent accessibility
of amide hydrogens
36Trp-63 is an exception
- The amide hydrogen of Trp-63 becomes protected as
rapidly as the alpha domain residues, despite
its location in the beta domain - This result suggests Trp-63 may be involved in
alpha domain folding
37Other Trps are important too
- Replacement of Trp-62 and Trp-108 with Tyr lead
to increased rate of refolding - Chemical modification of Trp-62 leads to
increased misfolding - Trp-62 is also important for correct formation of
disulfide binds in peptide fragments
38Folding interactions
- Native state Trp62 is solvent accessible and side
chain disordered in crystal structure - Denatured state, this Trp and others are
inaccessible - Trp62 and 63 (in a non-native b domain state)
associate with native hydrophobic cluster in a
(Trp108-111) - These non-native interactions stabilize a native
core (W62G destabilizes core and causes
misfolding)
39Take home
- Although a residue such as tryptophan may be
exposed in the native state for functional
reasons, it could be buried in early stages of
folding to reduce the tendency of transiently
populated species to aggregate - Protein sequence codes for structural
characteristics other than those of the native
fold!
40Larger proteins have a more difficult time
becoming native
41Kinetic barriers
- Folding intermediates can become trapped in
energy minima - Some may be necessary intermediates, which can
accumulate to significant populations - This may lead to aggregation
42Tryptophanase folding
- 8 M urea ? Dilution ? aggregates and native
protein - 3 M urea ? Dilution ? only aggregates
- Suggests a folding intermediate whose population
is favored under this urea - Occurs in the presence of other denatured
proteins generating a homogenous population
43A competition
- Kinetics of aggregate formation indicates a
competition between unimolecular, intrachain
reaction and multimolecular, interchain reaction
44Competition evident in domain swapping between
monomers
- Three domains in diptheria toxin
- In dimer, one domain loses contact with other two
(rotates 180 degrees and translates 65 angstroms)
and forms similar contacts with other chain. - Observed in several proteins
45(No Transcript)
46Chaperonin function
- Open rings of chaperonin provide a hydrophobic
binding surface to bind hydrophobic clusters of
non-native structures (compete with multimer
formation, no access in cavity) - GroES and ATP binding cause conformational
changes in GroEL ? leading to alternation of
surface from hydrophobic to hydrophilic
(encourages burial of hydrophobic surfaces of
folding protein) - Oligomeric structures form in bulk solution
47GroESL cycle
48Why should I care?
- Amyloid Protein deposit in b-pleated sheets
- Associated with numerous disease states
- Alzheimers ? Ab peptides
- Creutzfeldt-Jacob ? Prion
- Elderly cardiac ? Transthyretin
49The amyloid state
- Various proteins share NO primary sequence
identity - Amyloid state must be accessible to any protein
as a very stable alternative state (may be more
thermodynamically stable than native) - Expect sequences that readily form amyloids to be
selected against (very few form in vivo)
50Amyloid formation
- Often results from destabilization of already
folded native protein - Is structural disruption thermodynamic or
kinetic? - Thermodynamic ? free energy difference between
native and monomeric intermediate leading to
amyloid formation - Kinetic ? refers to free energy barrier between
native state and transition state for amyloid,
reflected in rate constant for conversion
51Mutations affect kinetics and thermodynamics
- Mutations increase free energy of native state or
decrease free energy of amyloid monomer - Mutations affect kinetics by increasing free
energy of transition state or decreasing the
transition state - Both can contribute
52Variant proteins vs. wild type lysozyme
- Crystal structures look the same, although subtle
changes indicated destabilization in domain
interface - Variants more sensitive to temperature in vitro
- Deuterium exchange show all hydrogens
exchangeable in variant, while 55 are
inaccessible in wild type
53(No Transcript)
54Polymerization of amyloid intermediates
- Like microtubule assembly, nucleation is a
critical step - Indicates that a critical concentration of
monomers is needed for amyloids to form - Prion diseases can be seeded
- Nucleation behavior might account for long term
development of amyloidic disease
55Clinical treatments