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Design of a novel globular protein with atomic-level accuracy. NOVEL METHODS. Computational methods New developments in the making Opening of a new field of science. Ideas. Redesign naturally occurring proteins so that they have enhanced stability or new functionality. This group.
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Design of a novel globular protein with atomic-level accuracy
NOVEL METHODS • Computational methods • New developments in the making • Opening of a new field of science
Ideas • Redesign naturally occurring proteins so that they have enhanced stability or new functionality
This group • Found a procedure for the development of low free energy structures • Led them to the creation of the protein TOP7 • A 93 residue a/b protein with topology that is not present in the Protein Structure Data Base
Design Protocol • Critical is cycling between seequence design and backbone optimization. The goal is to find the lowest free energy backbone conformation for a fixed amino acid sequence
Some more Top7 features • Highly soluble protein • Monomeric structure • Thermally stable • More stable than most proteins of its size
Conclusion • Top7 shows that the design of globular proteins not yet observed in nature is possible but can be extremely stable • The methods used to design TOp7 are applicable to any globular protein structure • This may open the door for exploration of new protein strucutres and architectures
A few more signaling things • EGF receptor dimerizes when ligand binds and then causes signaling cascade for cell division uses covalent linkage of phosphate to downstream proteins to carry on signal
Continued • SH molecules (SH2 SH3) are adaptor proteins. • They will recognize specific parts of target molecule and bind and now the phosphate will be transferred on to the target molecule
Calmodulin • Helix loop helix (EF Hand) • Important in many signal transduction pathways • Charged glu and asp bind Ca2+ • Unbound state resembles a dumbbell • Bound state it becomes very compact
Globin Fold • Made up of alpha helices • Hemoglobin and myoglobin are examples
Myoglobin One subunit Transports oxygen in muscle Hemoglobin 4 subunits Transports oxygen all over body Four oxygen binding sites Oxygen is not soluble in blood so it needs carriers
Hemoglobin • Oxygen binds to heme group • No oxygen bound called T state • Oxygen bound called R
Binding of Oxygen • When shifts from T to R the iron moves to the center of the heme plane because an overall structural shift. This shift then gets propagated throughout the structure and leads to the change in other subunits COOPERATIVE BINDING: with the binding of the first The others will bind much easier
Sickle Cell • Base pair change in hemoglobin from glu to val Makes hemoglobin sticky and red blood cells will clump together and cause all sorts of problems
Enzymes • Enzymes speeds things up substantially
Enzymes • Have high specificity for their substrate
How they speed things up • Increase substrate at catalytic site • Physically bring molecules to the right place and increase local concentration • Selectively stabalize by binding to TRANSITION STATE • Lower the activation energy by stabalizing the transition state
ACTIVE SITE • Pocket or groove lined with specific amino acid residues • Here is where the substrate goes and undergoes some sort of chemical transformation • Therefore it can be seen that the enzyme is playing the role in this chemical modification
4 aspects for serine proteases • Catalytic Triad • Oxyanion hole • Specific binding • Non-specific binding
Catalytic Triad Always see these three particular side chains: ASP 102, His 57, and Ser 195 All spread out in primary sequence Come together at active site in binding pocket
Continued His residue accepts proton from reactive serine and helps stabalize the transition state Ser forms covalent bond with substrate
Oxyanion hole Very important in stabalizing the transition state by Forming H Bonds Allows for nonspecific substrate binding to the main chain of the substrate This is the region of the enzyme that is non specific Specific parts are taken care of with the specificity pocket
Specificity binding pocket Accepts different side chains from different substrates depending On the member of the serine protease family
Specificity Pocket Chymotrypsin cleaves bulky aromatic side chains: Serine at the Bottom of the pocket which wont interfere too much with large Aromatic side chain Trypsin cleaves next to large positively charged side chains; Asp At bottom which will attract positive side chain from substrate Elastase cleaves small uncharged sidechains:
Two Phase Reaction First: acylation in which the peptide bond gets cleaved When the substrate comes close, the oxygen of serine 195 Bends to interact with substrate RESULTS in bond between the reactive serine And carboxly or substrate Proton of serine is donated to His Peptide bond goes from planar to tetrahedral state This state is unstable and very short lived
Continued This then allows for peptide to be released and the end of the first step
Phase 2 Enzyme still attached to remaining part of peptide Deacylation: water comes along and forms a new tetrahedral Transition state which is also unstable A covalent bond is formed between C and O and the fragment is released Hydrgoen then goes back to serine and enzyme can be used again