Horton 3-wa

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Principles of Biochemistry Fourth Edition Chapter 3 Amino Acids and the Primary Structures of Proteins Copyright © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc. Horton • Moran • Scrimgeour • Perry • Rawn Dr. Wisam Alsamah

Transcript of Horton 3-wa

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Principles of BiochemistryFourth Edition

Chapter 3Amino Acids and the Primary

Structures of Proteins

Copyright © 2006 Pearson Prentice Hall, Inc.

Horton • Moran • Scrimgeour • Perry • Rawn

Dr. Wisam Alsamah

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Biological Functions of Proteins

1. As enzymes (catalysts)2. Storage and transport (hemoglobin)3. Provide support and shape (collagen)4. Mechanical work (muscles contraction)5. Decoding information (translation)6. As hormones 7. Specialized functions (antibodies)

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General Structure of Amino Acids

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General Structure of Amino Acids

Zwitterions

Chiral OrAsymmetric

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General Structure of Amino Acids

Ball-and-stick model ofserine

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General Structure of Amino AcidsStereoisomers (enantiomers)

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General Structure of Amino Acids

The RS system

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General Structure of Amino Acids

The RS system

Clockwise R configuration

Counterclockwise S configuration

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Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

A. Aliphatic R Groups

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A. Aliphatic R Groups

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

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A. Aliphatic R Groups

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

Pyrrolidine ring

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A. Aliphatic R Groups

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

●Valine, Leucine, and isoleucine are known as branched-chain amino acids

●All three amino acids are highly hydrophobic

●Pyrrolidine ring of proline restricts the geometry of polypeptides

●Proline is much less hydrophobic than the three amino acids

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B. Aromatic R Groups

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

(Benzyl) (Phenol) (Indol)(260 nm) (280 nm) (280 nm)

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C. Sulfur-Containing R Groups

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

Disulfide bond

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C. Sulfur-Containing R Groups

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

Nonpolar Methyl thioether

Sulfhydryl

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D. Side Chains with Alcohol Groups

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

α- carbon

β- carbon

Stereoisomers

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E. Basic R Groups

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

Imidazole ring

Guanidinium ion

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F. Acidic R Groups and Their Amide Derivatives

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

Amide

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F. Acidic R Groups and Their Amide Derivatives

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

●Aspartate, and glutamate are dicarboxylic amino acidsand have negatively charged hydrophilic side chains at pH 7.

●These amino acids are often found on the surface of proteins.

●Monosodium glutamate (MSG) is used as a flavor enhancer.

●The polar amide groups of these amino acids can form hydrogen bonds with atoms in the side chain of other polar amino acids.

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G. The Hydrophobicity of Amino Acids Chains

Structures of the 20 common Amino Acids

Hydropathy

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Other Amino Acids and Amino Acid Derivatives

(GABA)

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Other Amino Acids and Amino Acid Derivatives

(21st amino acid)

(22nd amino acid)

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Ionization of Amino Acids

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Ionization of Amino Acids

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Ionization of Amino Acids

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Ionization of Amino Acids

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Ionization of Amino Acids

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Ionization of Amino Acids

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Peptide Bonds link Amino Acids in Proteins

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Peptide Bonds link Amino Acids in Proteins

Aspartame (aspartylphenylalanine methyl ester)

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Protein Purification Techniques

●Column chromatography /eluate/ ●HPLC

●Ion-exchange chromatography

●Gel-filtration chromatography

●Affinity chromatography

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Column chromatography /eluate/

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Analytical Techniques

●Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) ●Mass spectrometry

●Electrospray mass spectrometry

●Matrix-assisted desorption ionization (MALDI)

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Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE)

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Matrix-assisted desorption ionization (MALDI)

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Matrix-assisted desorption ionization (MALDI)

MALDI-TOF

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Matrix-assisted desorption ionization (MALDI)

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Amino Acids Composition of Proteins

▪Peptide bonds of the protein are cleaved by acid hydrolysis using 6M HCl.

▪Method of amino acid analysis : treatment of the protein hydrolysate with PITC at pH 9.0 PTC-amino acid derivatives HPLC (column of fine silica beads+short hydrocarbon chains) Detection at 254 nm (peak absorbance of the PTC moiety)

▪1 picomole of a protein that contains about 200 residues

▪Glutamate + glutamine Glx or Z Aspartate + asparagine Asx or B

▪Side chain of Tryptophan is almost destroyed by acid hydrolysis

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Amino Acids Composition of Proteins

Acid hydrolysis

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Amino Acids Composition of Proteins(phenylisothiocyanate)

(phenylthiocarbomyl)

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Amino Acids Composition of Proteins

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Determing the Sequence of Amino Acid Residues

Edman degradation procedure

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Determing the Sequence of Amino Acid Residues

Entire procedure can be repeated serially using a sequenator

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Determing the Sequence of Amino Acid Residues

2-mercaptoethanol

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Protein Sequencing Strategies

▪Most proteins contain too many residues cleave peptide bonds proteases (trypsin, staphylococcus aureus V8 protease) or certain chemical reagents (BrCN)

▪BrCN reacts with Methionine C-terminal homoserine lactone Residues + new N-terminal residues

▪Trypsin carbonyl side of lysine and Arginine residues (positively charged side chains)

▪Staphylococcus aureus V8 protease carbonyl side of glutamate and Aspartate residues (negatively charged side chain)

▪Chymotrypsin carbonyl side of uncharged residues with aromatic or bulky hydrophobic side chains ( Phe, Tyr, Trp)

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Protein Sequencing Strategies

▪The amino acid sequence of a protein can be deduced from the sequence of nucleotides in the corresponding gene.

▪A sequence of three nucleotides specifies one amino acid.

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Comparisons of the Primary Structures of Proteins reveal Evolutionary Relationships

▪The protein cytochrome c (single polypeptide chain of about 104 residues) example of evolution at the molecular level

▪Protein sequences from distantly related species are similar enough proteins are homologous

▪Cytochrome c sequences of humans and chimpanzees are Identical.

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Comparisons of the Primary Structures of Proteins reveal Evolutionary Relationships