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Protein structural element Yun-Ru (Ruby) Chen 陳韻如 Ph.D. The Genomics Research Center (office at 7th floor) yrchen@gate.sinica.edu.tw 2789-9930 ext 355
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outline 1. Atom interaction and bonding 2. Amino acid and peptide bond 3. Secondary structure 4. Tertiary structure 5. Quantiary structure 6. Function
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Bonding
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Atom Interactions Covalent interaction Non-covalent interaction Energy 300-400x noncovalent interactions are 10-100 times weaker than covalent bonds.
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Non-covalent interactions
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Coulomb's law defines the force between a pair of charges (q1 and q2) separated by a vacuum by a distance, r as F = k*(q 1 q 2 )/r 2, where k is a constant. E in vacuum=120kcal/M (very strong) The dielectric constant arises from the fact that the dielectric medium shields the charges from each other. D water=79 dE in solution is lower because of hydration In non-vacuum, dielectric medium F = k*(q 1 q 2 )/( D *r 2 ) Charge-charge interaction
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Hydrogen bond Hydrogen is shared between 2 electronegative atoms Directional Stronger than van der waal Strength depends on donor and Acceptor electronegativity (O>N>S)
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Van der Waal radius of atoms Van der Waal
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pKa Peptide bond Carboxyl group(-COOH)=~2 Amide (-NH3+)=~9.6 Charged residues Acidic: Asp, D, pK1=~3.9, -carboxyl. Glu, E, pKa=~4.3, -carboxyl Basic: Lys, K, pK1=~10.5, -carboxyl. Arg, R, pKa=~12.5, -carboxyl His, H, pKa=~6, Hydroxyl residues Ser, pKa=~13.6 Thr, pKa=~13.6 Cys,pKa=~10.3 Protonation pKa<pH, deportonated pKa=pH, half-half pKa>pH, protonated
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Histidine
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Hydroxyl residues Aliphatic pKa=13.6
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cis-trans Isomerization (trans:cis) Non-proyl (1000:1) X-proyl bond (4:1)
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Disulfide bonds Cysteine v.s. Cystine Glutathione (reduced form vs. oxidized form (GSSG)) -Glu-Cys-Gly Reducing agent DTT(dithiothreitol) TCEP (Tris[2-carboxyethyl] phosphine)
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Aromatic residues
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labeling Amine-reacting group Reaction of a primary amine with an isothiocyanate Reaction of a primary amine with a succinimidyl ester or a tetrafluorophenyl (TFP) ester
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Reaction of a primary amine with an STP ester Reaction of a primary amine with a sulfonyl chloride
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Thiol group Reaction of a thiol with a maleimide Reaction of a thiol with a symmetric disulfide (e.g., didansyl-L-cystine, D146). Reaction of a thiol with an alkyl halide
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Steric constrains dictate the possible types of secondary structure Ramachandran plot phi psi
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Protein secondary structure Turn: beta turn, reverse turn, hairpin turn The simplest secondary structure element 3 or 4 aa involved
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Helix Alpha-helices are versatile cylindrical structures stabilized by a network of backbone hydrogen bonds Helices can be right-handed (favored) or left-handed 3.6aa per turn (a rotation of 100A) 7aa for a helical wheel
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Helical (macro)dipole (N-ter: positive; C-ter: negative)
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Helical wheel Lucine zipper Alpha-helices can be amphipathic with one polar and one non-polar face (favored helix-helix interaction)
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Special cases Collagen triple helix: proline found in left handed helices, three helices coil around each other Polyproline: when the peptide bonds are all trans it forms a left-handed helix with three residues per turn. Often serve as a docking sites for protein recognition modules such as SH3 domains in signal transduction pathways (exist in unfolded protein)
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Beta sheets are extended structures that sometimes form barrels
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Parallel strand must be joined by long connections
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Certain aa are more usually found in alpha helices, others in beta sheets Long side chains are often found in helices Side chain branched at -carbon are often found in stand Proline and glycine are disfavored in helix and sheet Predication is based on empirical rules (Chou-Fasman) None is completely accurate
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Condensed multiple secondary elements leads to tertiary structure (all alpha, all beta, mixed alpha/beta) Triosephosphate isomeraseDihydrofolate reductase V domain of IG light chain
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Bound water In unfolded protein: backbond contacts with water In folded protein: water release from backbond contacts to bulk water, but water still interact with polar group on the surface either peptide bond and side-chains.
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Hydrophobic effect The tendency of nonpolar groups in water to self-associated and thereby minimize their contact surface are with the polar solvent Exclusion of water A driving force for folding
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solubility
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Proteins are flexible molecules
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Quaternary structure
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Protein interacting domains
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Reading Assignment Chapter1 of Protein Structure and Function (or any other protein structure text book)
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