Title: Biochemistry Chapter 5
1BiochemistryChapter 5
- Introduction to Proteins
- The primary Level of Protein Structure
- Mak Oi Tong
2Introduction
- Protein Complexity -myoglobin, (Figure 5.1)
- Roles of proteins e.g. enzymes
3Fig. 5.1
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5Amino Acids
- Structure of the -amino acids (Figure 5.2, Figure
5.3) - Amino group attached to carbon
- (next to carboxyl carbon)
- Side chains
- Zwitterions
6Fig. 5.2
7Fig. 5.3a
8Fig. 5.3b
9Stereochemistry of the -amino acids (Figure 5.4)
- Chiral center / Stereocenter --Asymmetric carbon
- Stereoisomers / Enantiomers / Optical isomers
(Figure 5.5) - L-amino acids (predominant form in polypeptides)
- Drawn in this book with amino to left, carboxyl
to right, - R group on top
- Glycine is the only amino acid in proteins with
asymmetric carbon - so is not chiral. - D-Amino acids (rare - occur in some bacterial
polypeptides) - (Table 5.2)
- It is possible to chemically synthesize proteins
with D-amino acids.
10Fig. 5.4
11Stereochemistry of the -amino acids (Figure 5.4)
- Chiral center / Stereocenter --Asymmetric carbon
- Stereoisomers / Enantiomers / Optical isomers
(Figure 5.5) - L-amino acids (predominant form in polypeptides)
- Drawn in this book with amino to left, carboxyl
to right, - R group on top
- Glycine is the only amino acid in proteins with
asymmetric carbon - so is not chiral. - D-Amino acids (rare - occur in some bacterial
polypeptides) - (Table 5.2)
- It is possible to chemically synthesize proteins
with D-amino acids.
12Fig. 5.5
13Stereochemistry of the -amino acids (Figure 5.4)
- Chiral center / Stereocenter --Asymmetric carbon
- Stereoisomers / Enantiomers / Optical isomers
(Figure 5.5) - L-amino acids (predominant form in polypeptides)
- Drawn in this book with amino to left, carboxyl
to right, - R group on top
- Glycine is the only amino acid in proteins with
asymmetric carbon - so is not chiral. - D-Amino acids (rare - occur in some bacterial
polypeptides) - (Table 5.2)
- It is possible to chemically synthesize proteins
with D-amino acids.
14Table 5.2
15Properties of Amino Acid Side chains Classes of
-Amino Acids (Table 5.1, Figure 5.3)
- Aliphatic side chains (a diverse group - more
nonpolar ones, such as VAL, LEU, ILE prefer
interior of protein molecule) - Glycine, Alanine, Valine, Leucine, Isoleucine,
Proline - Hydroxyl or Sulfur-Containing Side Chains (weakly
polar side chains, except MET) Serine, Cysteine,
Threonine, Methionine - Aromatic Amino Acids (Strong absorption of light
in near UV) (Figure 5.6) Phenylalanine, Tyrosine,
Tryptophan
16Fig. 5.6
17- Basic Amino Acids (Strongly polar, usually on
exterior of proteins) (Figure 5.7) Histidine,
Lysine, Arginine - Acidic Amino Acids and Their Amides (ASP and GLU
strongly acid, ASN and GLN polar but not charged.
All prefer exterior of protein) - Aspartic Acid, Glutamic Acid, Asparagine,
Glutamine
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19Fig. 5.7
20Modified Amino Acids
- O-Phosphoserine
- 4-Hydroxyproline
- d-Hydroxylysine
- ?-Carboxyglutamic acid
21Peptides and the Peptide Bond (Figure 5.8)
- Condensation of amino acids to form peptide
bonds. - Similar to -CC- bond.
22Fig. 5.8
23Peptides
- Amide bond between amino and carboxyl groups
(Figure 5.9, Figure 5.10) - Dipeptide contains 2 amino acids linked by a
peptide bond - Oligopeptide contains a few amino acids joined by
peptide bonds - Polypeptide contains many amino acids joined by
peptide bonds - All proteins are polypeptides
24Fig. 5.9
25Fig. 5.10
26Polypeptides as Polyampholytes (Figure 5.11)
- Small pH changes can significantly alter protein
charge and properties
27Fig. 5.11
28Structure of the Peptide Bond (Figure 5.12)
- Double bond character of peptide bonds makes C,
N, H, O nearly coplanar
29Fig. 5.12
30Stability and Formation of the Peptide Bond
(Table 5.4)
- Hydrolysis of peptide bond favored energetically,
but uncatalyzed reaction very slow. - Strong mineral acid, such as 6 M HCl, good
catalyst for hydrolysis - Proteolytic enzymes (proteases) provide catalysis
for cleaving - specific peptide bonds
- Cyanogen bromide cleaves peptide bonds at
specific point on carboxyl side of methionines
(Figure 5.13) - Amino acids must be "activated" by ATP-driven
reaction to be - incorporated into proteins (Figure 5.19)
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33Stability and Formation of the Peptide Bond
(Table 5.4)
- Hydrolysis of peptide bond favored energetically,
but uncatalyzed reaction very slow - Strong mineral acid, such as 6 M HCl, good
catalyst for hydrolysis - Proteolytic enzymes (proteases) provide catalysis
for cleaving - Specific peptide bonds
- Cyanogen bromide cleaves peptide bonds at
specific point too on carboxyl side of
methionines (Figure 5.13) - Amino acids must be "activated" by ATP-driven
reaction to be - incorporated into proteins (Figure 5.19)
34Fig. 5.13
35Stability and Formation of the Peptide Bond
(Table 5.4)
- Hydrolysis of peptide bond favored energetically,
but uncatalyzed reaction very slow - Strong mineral acid, such as 6 M HCl, good
catalyst for hydrolysis - Proteolytic enzymes (proteases) provide catalysis
for cleaving - Specific peptide bonds
- Cyanogen bromide cleaves peptide bonds at
specific point too on carboxyl side of
methionines (Figure 5.13) - Amino acids must be "activated" by ATP-driven
reaction to be - incorporated into proteins (Figure 5.19)
36Fig. 5.19
37Proteins
- Polypeptides of Defined Sequence
- (Figure 5.14, Figure 5.15)
- Amino acid composition
- Amino acid sequence
38Fig. 5.14
39Fig. 5.15
40From Gene to Protein
- The Genetic Code (Three nucleotides - codon -
code for one amino acid in a protein) (Figure
5.16, Figure 5.17, Figure 5.18) - Translation (Figure 5.19, Figure 5.20)
- Translation is the process of "reading" the
codons and linking - appropriate amino acids together through
peptide bonds - tRNAs carry amino acids for translation
- Translation is accomplished by the anticodon loop
of tRNA forming base pairs with the codon of mRNA
in ribosomes - Stop codons act to stop translation
41Fig. 5.16
42Fig. 5.17
43Fig. 5.18
44From Gene to Protein
- The Genetic Code (Three nucleotides - codon -
code for one amino acid in a protein) (Figure
5.16, Figure 5.17, Figure 5.18) - Translation (Figure 5.19, Figure 5.20)
- Translation is the process of "reading" the
codons and linking - appropriate amino acids together through
peptide bonds - tRNAs carry amino acids for translation
- Translation is accomplished by the anticodon loop
of tRNA forming base pairs with the codon of mRNA
in ribosomes - Stop codons act to stop translation
45Fig. 5.19
46Fig. 5.20
47Posttranslational Processing of Proteins (Figure
5.21)
- Folding
- Amino acid modification (some proteins)
- Proteolytic cleavage (some proteins - insulin is
an example) - 1. Insulin is synthesized as a single polypeptide
called preproinsulin with leader sequence to help
it be transported through the cell membrane. - 2. Specific protease cleaves leader sequence to
yield proinsulin. - 3. Proinsulin folds into specific 3D structure
and disulfide - bonds form
- 4. Another protease cuts molecule, yielding
insulin, which has two polypeptide chains
48Fig. 5.21