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Explore the fascinating world of protein structure and biochemistry, from the linear sequence of amino acids joined by peptide bonds to the folded tertiary structures that determine protein functions. Learn about primary structure, secondary structures such as alpha helices and beta sheets, and the forces that stabilize protein folding. Discover the role of chaperonins, proteasomes, and ubiquitin in protein processing and degradation. Dive into the intriguing phenomena of intrinsically disordered proteins and metamorphic proteins.
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Protein Structure • Biochemistry Free For All
Peptide Bonds From Amino Acids to Proteins Alpha Carboxyl Alpha Amine In Ribosomes
Linear sequence of amino acids Joined by Peptide Bonds Translated from mRNA using Genetic Code Synthesis begins at amino end and terminates at carboxyl end Ultimately determines all properties of a protein Primary Protein Structure
A simple view Free Carboxyl Group Amino Terminus Alternating Orientations of R-groups Peptide Bond Peptide Bond Peptide Bond Polypeptides Carboxyl Terminus Free Alpha Amine Peptide Bond Peptide Bond Alternating Orientations of R-groups
Chemical Character Double Bond Behavior Peptide Bonds Alpha Carbons Usually Trans-oriented
Alpha Carbons Trans Separated bulky groups Proteins Steric Hindrance Alpha Carbons Cis Separated bulky groups Interacting Bulky Groups
Multiple Peptide Bond Planes Free Rotation Polypeptides
Phi Angle Psi Angle Omega Angle Peptide Bond Phi and Psi Angles Peptide Bond
Bond Angles Ramachandran Plot Primary Angles of Stability
Alpha Helix Secondary Structure
Alpha Helix Hydrogen bonds stabilize structure Secondary Structure Hydrogen bonds stabilize structure
Beta Strands / Beta Sheets Hydrogen Bonds Secondary Structure Anti-Parallel Parallel
Fibrous Proteins Secondary Structure • Collagen • Connective tissue • Keratin • Hair / nails • Fibroin • Silk
Collagen Partial Sequence Primary Structure Hydroxyproline Proline in Helix Abundant Glycine Occasional Lysine
Structural Proteins • Keratins • Fibrous • 50 in Humans • Intermediate Filaments of Cytoskeleton • Hair, nails, horns
Fibroin Silk Beta sheets Repeating glycines
Secondary Structure Types • Alpha Helix • Beta Strands / Beta Helix • Reverse turns (5 types) • 310 Helix
Tendencies of Amino Acids High Propensity for Reverse Turns Secondary Structure High Propensity for Beta Strands High Propensity for Alpha Helices
Hydrophobic Amino Acid Bias In Bilayer Hydrophobic Amino Acid Bias Inside Soluble vs. Membrane Bound Proteins Hydrophilic Amino Acid Bias Outside Hydrophilic Amino Acid Bias Outside of Bilayer
Folding and Turns Alpha Helices Random Coil Beta Strands Turns Tertiary Structure
Forces Stabilizing Tertiary Structure Hydrogen Bonds
Forces Stabilizing Tertiary Structure Disulfide Bonds (Covalent)
Denaturing/Unfolding Proteins • Break forces stabilizing them Mercaptoethanol/dithiothreitol - break disulfide bonds Detergent - disrupt hydrophobic interactions Heat - break hydrogen bonds pH - change charge/alter ionic interactions Chelators - bind metal ions
Protein Structural Domains • Leucine Zipper - Prot.-Prot. and Prot.-DNA • Helix Turn Helix - Protein-DNA • Zinc Fingers • SH2 Domains - Protein-Protein • Pleckstrin Homology Domains - Signaling (Membrane) Zinc Finger Leucine Zipper Pleckstrin Domains SH2 Domain Leucine Zipper Helix-Turn-Helix
Amyloids and Disease • Amyloids - a collection of improperly folded protein aggregates found in the human body. • When misfolded, they are insoluble and contribute to some twenty human diseases including important neurological ones involving prions. • Amyloid diseases include (affected protein in parentheses) - • Alzheimer’s disease (Amyloid β) • Parkinson’s disease (α-synuclein) • Huntington’s disease (huntingtin), • Rheumatoid arthritis (serum amyloid A), • Fatal familial insomnia (PrPSc)
Chaperonins - Proper folding - environment for hydrophobic sequences Protein Processing GroEL / GroEL-GroES Proteasomes - Degradation to oligopeptides of about 8 amino acids each
Role of Ubiquitin • Flag for protein destruction by proteasome
Intrinsically Disordered Proteins Not all proteins folded into stable structures Intrinsically Disordered Proteins (IDPs) have regions favoring disorder IDP regions tend to lack hydrophobic residues Rich in polar amino acids and proline IDPs may favor adaptation to binding another protein IDPs may favor being modified IDPs may be more involved in signaling and regulation Non-IDPs more involved in catalysis and transport Metamorphic Proteins May adopt more than one stable structure Lymphotactin - monomeric receptor. Binds heparin as dimer
Protein Structure • Primary – Amino Acid Sequence • Secondary / Supersecondary – Repeating Structures – short range forces • Tertiary – Folded structures – longer range interactions