1 / 40

Protein Functions; Enzyme Properties

Protein Functions; Enzyme Properties. Andy Howard Introductory Biochemistry, Fall 2009 15 September 2009. Proteins and enzymes. Proteins perform a variety of functions, including acting as enzymes. Visualizing structure The Protein Data Bank Tertiary & quaternary structure

allan
Download Presentation

Protein Functions; Enzyme Properties

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Protein Functions;Enzyme Properties Andy HowardIntroductory Biochemistry, Fall 2009 15 September 2009 Biochem: Protein Functions I

  2. Proteins and enzymes • Proteins perform a variety of functions, including acting as enzymes. Biochem: Protein Functions I

  3. Visualizing structure The Protein Data Bank Tertiary & quaternary structure Protein Functions Structure-function relationships Protein Functions PTM Allostery Classes of proteins and their roles Enzyme properties Classes of enzymes Enzyme kinetics Plans for Today Biochem: Protein Functions I

  4. How do we visualize protein structures? • It’s often as important to decide what to omit as it is to decide what to include • Any segment larger than about 10Å needs to be simplified if you want to understand it • What you omit depends on what you want to emphasize Biochem: Protein Functions I

  5. Styles of protein depiction • All atoms • All non-H atoms • Main-chain (backbone) only • One dot per residue (typically at C) • Ribbon diagrams: • Helical ribbon for helix • Flat ribbon for strand • Thin string for coil Biochem: Protein Functions I

  6. How do we show 3-D? • Stereo pairs • Rely on the way the brain processes left- and right-eye images • If we allow our eyes to go slightly wall-eyed or crossed, the image appears three-dimensional • Dynamics: rotation of flat image • Perspective (hooray, Renaissance) Biochem: Protein Functions I

  7. Straightforward example • Sso7d bound to DNAGao et al (1998) NSB 5: 782 Biochem: Protein Functions I

  8. A little more complex: • Aligning Cytochrome C5with Cytochrome C550 Biochem: Protein Functions I

  9. Stereo pair: Release factor 2/3Klaholz et al, Nature (2004) 427:862 Biochem: Protein Functions I

  10. Mostly helical:E.coli RecG - DNA PDB 1gm53.24Å, 105 kDa Mixed:hen egg-white lysozyme PDB 2vb10.65Å, 14.2kDa Ribbon diagrams Biochem: Protein Functions I

  11. The Protein Data Bank • http://www.rcsb.org/ • This is an electronic repository for three-dimensional structural information of polypeptides and polynucleotides • 55660 structures as of 1pm today • Most are determined by X-ray crystallography • Smaller number are high-field NMR structures • A few calculated structures, most of which are either close relatives of experimental structures or else they’re small, all-alpha-helical proteins Biochem: Protein Functions I

  12. What you can do with the PDB • Display structures • Look up specific coordinates • Run clever software that compares and synthesizes the knowledge contained there • Use it as a source for determining additional structures Biochem: Protein Functions I

  13. Generalizations about Tertiary Structure • Most globular proteins contain substantial quantities of secondary structure • The non-secondary segments are usually short; few knots or twists • Most proteins fold into low-energy structures—either the lowest or at least in a significant local minimum of energy • Generally the solvent-accessible surface area of a correctly folded protein is small Biochem: Protein Functions I

  14. Hydrophobic in, -philic out • Aqueous proteins arrange themselves so that polar groups are solvent-accessible and apolar groups are not • The energetics of protein folding are strongly driven by this hydrophobic in, hydrophobic out effect • Exceptions are membrane proteins Biochem: Protein Functions I

  15. Domains • Proteins (including single-polypeptide proteins) often contain roughly self-contained domains • Domains often separated by linkers • Linkers sometimes flexible or extended or both • Cf. fig. 6.36 in G&G Biochem: Protein Functions I

  16. Generalizations about quaternary structure • Considerable symmetry in many quaternary structure patterns(see G&G section 6.5) • Weak polar and solvent-exclusion forces add up to provide driving force for association • Many quaternary structures are necessary to function:often the monomer can’t do it on its own Biochem: Protein Functions I

  17. Protein Function: Generalities • Proteins do a lot of different things. Why? • Well, they’re coded for by the ribosomal factories • … But that just backs us up to the question of why the ribosomal mechanism codes for proteins and not something else! Biochem: Protein Functions I

  18. Proteins are chemically nimble • The chemistry of proteins is flexible • Protein side chains can participate in many interesting reactions • Even main-chain atoms can play roles in certain circumstances. • Wide range of hydrophobicity available (from highly water-hating to highly water-loving) within and around proteins gives them versatility that a more unambiguously hydrophilic species (like RNA) or a distinctly hydrophobic species (like a triglyceride) would not be able to acquire. Biochem: Protein Functions I

  19. Structure-function relationships • Proteins with known function: structure can tell is how it does its job • Example: yeast alcohol dehydrogenase:Catalyzesethanol + NAD+ acetaldehyde + NADH + H+ • We can say something general about the protein and the reaction it catalyzes without knowing anything about its structure • But a structural understanding should help us elucidate its catalytic mechanism Biochem: Protein Functions I

  20. Why this example? • Structures of ADH from several eukaryotic and prokaryotic organisms already known • Yeast ADH is clearly important and heavily studied, but until 2006: no structure! • We got crystals 8 years ago, but so far I haven’t been able to determine the structure Yeast ADH PDB 2hcy2.44Å 152 kDa tetramerdimer shown Biochem: Protein Functions I

  21. What we know about this enzyme • Cell contains an enzyme that interconverts ethanol and acetaldehyde, using NAD as the oxidizing agent (or NADH as the reducing agent) • We can call it alcohol dehydrogenase or acetaldehyde reductase; in this instance the former name is more common, but that’s fairly arbitrary (contrast with DHFR) Biochem: Protein Functions I

  22. Size and composition • Tetramer of identical polypeptides • Total molecular mass = 152 kDa • We can do arithmetic: the individual polypeptides have a molecular mass of 38 kDa (347 aa). • Human is a bit bigger: 374 aa per subunit • Each subunit has an NAD-binding Rossmann fold over part of its structure Biochem: Protein Functions I

  23. Structure-functionrelationships II • Protein with unknown function: structure might tell us what the function is! • Generally we accomplish this by recognizing structural similarity to another protein whose function is known • Sometimes we get lucky: we can figure it out by binding of a characteristic cofactor Biochem: Protein Functions I

  24. What proteins can do: I • Proteins can act as catalysts, transporters, scaffolds, signals, or fuel in watery or greasy environments, and can move back and forth between hydrophilic and hydrophobic situations. Biochem: Protein Functions I

  25. What proteins can do: II • Furthermore, proteins can operate either in solution, where their locations are undefined within a cell, or anchored to a membrane. • Membrane binding keeps them in place. • Function may occur within membrane or in an aqueous medium adjacent to the membrane Biochem: Protein Functions I

  26. What proteins can do: III • Proteins can readily bind organic, metallic, or organometallic ligands called cofactors. These extend the functionality of proteins well beyond the chemical nimbleness that polypeptides by themselves can accomplish • We’ll study these cofactors in detail in chapter 17 Biochem: Protein Functions I

  27. Zymogens and PTM • Many proteins are synthesized on the ribosome in an inactive form, viz. as a zymogen • The conversions that alter the ribosomally encoded protein into its active form is an instance of post-translational modification PDB 3CNQSubtilisin prosegment complexed with subtilisin1.71Å; 35 kDa monomer Biochem: Protein Functions I

  28. Why PTM? • This happens for several reasons • Active protein needs to bind cofactors, ions, carbohydrates, and other species • Active protein might be dangerous at the ribosome, so it’s created in inactive form and activated elsewhere • Proteases (proteins that hydrolyze peptide bonds) are examples of this phenomenon • … but there are others Biochem: Protein Functions I

  29. Protein Phosphorylation • Most common form of PTM that affects just one amino acid at a time • Generally involves phosphorylating side chains of specific polar amino acids:mostly S,T,Y,H (and D, E) • Enzymes that phosphorylate proteins are protein kinases and are ATP or GTP dependent • Enzymes that remove phosphates are phosphatases and are ATP and GTP independent Biochem: Protein Functions I

  30. iClicker question 1 Why are digestive proteases usually synthesized as inactive zymogens? • (a) Because they are produced in one organ and used elsewhere • (b) Because that allows the active form to be smaller than the ribosomally encoded form • (c) To allow for gene amplification and diversity • (d) So that the protease doesn’t digest itself prior to performing its intended digestive function • (e) None of the above Biochem: Protein Functions I

  31. iClicker question 2 Which amino acids can be readily phosphorylated by kinases? • (a) asp, phe, gly, leu • (b) ser, thr, tyr, his • (c) leu, ile, val, phe • (d) arg, lys, gln, asn • (e) none of the above. Biochem: Protein Functions I

  32. iClicker question 3 Why are kinase reactions ATP- (or GTP-) dependent, whereas phosphatase reactions are not? • (a) To ensure stereospecific addition of phosphate to the target • (b) To prevent wasteful hydrolysis of product • (c) Adding phosphate is endergonic; taking phosphate off is exergonic • (d) None of the above. Biochem: Protein Functions I

  33. Allostery • Formal definition:alterations in protein function that occur when the structure changes upon binding of small molecules • In practice: often the allosteric effector is the same species as the substrate: they’re homotropic effectors • … but not always: allostery becomes an effective way of characterizing third-party (heterotropic) activators and inhibitors Biochem: Protein Functions I

  34. v0 What allostery means [S] • Non-enzymatic proteins can be allosteric:hemoglobin’s affinity for O2 is influenced by the binding of O2 to other subunits • In enzymes: non-Michaelis-Menten kinetics (often sigmoidal) when the allosteric activator is also the substrate Biochem: Protein Functions I

  35. R and T states • Protein with multiple substrate binding sites is in T (“tense”) state in absence of ligand or substrate • Binding of ligand or substrate moves enzyme into R (“relaxed”) state where its affinity for substrate at other sites is higher Glycogen phosphorylase BPDB 1XC7 98 kDa monomer1.83Å Biochem: Protein Functions I

  36. R and T state kinetics • Binding affinity or enzymatic velocity can then rise rapidly as function of [S] • Once all the protein is converted to R state, ordinary hyperbolic kinetics take over Biochem: Protein Functions I

  37. Other effectors can influence RT transitions • Post-translational covalent modifiers often influence RT equilibrium • Phosphorylation can stabilize either the R or T state • Binding of downstream products can inhibit TR transition • Binding of alternative metabolites can stabilize R state Biochem: Protein Functions I

  38. Why does that make sense? • Suppose reactions are: (E)A  B  C  D • Binding D to enzyme E (the enzyme that converts A to B) will destabilize its R state, limiting conversion of A to B and (ultimately) reducing / stabilizing [D]: homeostasis! Biochem: Protein Functions I

  39. Alternative pathways • Often one metabolite has two possible fates: B  C  DA H  I  J • If we have a lot of J around, it will bind to the enzyme that converts A to B and activate it; that will balance D with J! Biochem: Protein Functions I

  40. How does this work structurally? • In general, binding of the allosteric effector causes a medium-sized (~2-5Å) shift in the conformation of the protein • This in turn alters its properties • Affinity for the ligand • Flexibility (R vs T) • Other properties • We’ll revisit this when we do enzymology Biochem: Protein Functions I

More Related