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Chapter 3: Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins: Dr. Clower Chem 4202

This document provides an outline and overview of key concepts regarding amino acids, peptides, and proteins. It discusses the chemical structure of amino acids, how they form peptide bonds to create polypeptides and proteins, and their acid-base properties. It also summarizes common techniques for separating and purifying proteins, including manipulating factors like pH, temperature, and solubility through changes in salt concentration, solvent composition, or binding abilities. The goal is to obtain pure proteins that can then be analyzed to determine their primary structure and properties.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
1K views55 pages

Chapter 3: Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins: Dr. Clower Chem 4202

This document provides an outline and overview of key concepts regarding amino acids, peptides, and proteins. It discusses the chemical structure of amino acids, how they form peptide bonds to create polypeptides and proteins, and their acid-base properties. It also summarizes common techniques for separating and purifying proteins, including manipulating factors like pH, temperature, and solubility through changes in salt concentration, solvent composition, or binding abilities. The goal is to obtain pure proteins that can then be analyzed to determine their primary structure and properties.

Uploaded by

Vikas Yadav
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 3: Amino Acids, Peptides,

and Proteins
Dr. Clower
Chem 4202
Outline (part I)

 Sections 3.1 and 3.2


 Amino Acids
 Chemical structure
 Acid-base properties
 Stereochemistry
 Non-standard amino acids
 Formation of Peptide Bonds
Amino Acids

 The building blocks of proteins


 Also used as single molecules in biochemical
pathways
 20 standard amino acids (-amino acids)
 Two functional groups:
 carboxylic acid group
 amino group on the alpha () carbon
 Have different side groups (R) R side chain
|
 Properties dictate behavior of AAs H2N— C —COOH
|
H
Zwitterions

 Both the –NH2 and the –COOH groups in an amino acid


undergo ionization in water.
 At physiological pH (7.4), a zwitterion forms
 Both + and – charges
 Overall neutral
 Amphoteric
 Amino group is protonated
 Carboxyl group is deprotonated

 Soluble in polar solvents due to ionic character


 Structure of R also influence solubility
Classification of Amino Acids

 Classify by structure of R
 Nonpolar
 Polar
 Aromatic
 Acidic
 Basic
Nonpolar Amino Acids

 Hydrophobic, neutral, aliphatic


Polar Amino Acids

 Hydrophilic, neutral, typically H-bond


Disulfide Bonds

 Formed from oxidation of cysteine residues


Aromatic Amino Acids

 Bulky, neutral, polarity depend on R


Acidic and Basic Amino Acids

 Acidic  Basic
 R group = carboxylic  R group = amine
acid  Accepts H+
 Donates H+  Positively charged
 Negatively charged  His ionizes at pH 6.0
Acid-base Properties

 Remember H3PO4 (multiple pKa’s)


 AAs also have multiple pKa’s due to multiple ionizable
groups

pK1 ~ 2.2
(protonated below 2.2)

pK2 ~ 9.4
(NH3+ below 9.4)

pKR
(when applicable)
Table 3-1

Note 3-letter
and 1-letter
abbreviations

Amino acid organ


ization chart
pH and Ionization

 Consider glycine:

O O O

OH- OH-
H3N CH C OH H3N CH C O H2N CH C O
+ +
H3O H3O
H H H

Glycine ion at Zwitterion of glycine Glycine ion at


acidic pH (charge = 0) basic pH
(charge = 1+) (charge = 1-)

 Note that the uncharged species never forms


Titration of Glycine

 pK1
 [cation] = [zwitterion]
 pK2
 [zwitterion] = [anion]
 First equivalence point
 Zwitterion
 Molecule has no net charge
 pH = pI (Isoelectric point)
 pI = average of pKa’s = ½ (pK1 + pK2)
 pIglycine = ½ (2.34 + 9.60) = 5.97
 Animation
pI of Lysine

 For AAs with 3 pKa’s, pI = average of two relevant pKa values


 Consider lysine (pK1 = 2.18, pK2 = 8.95, pKR = 10.53):
O O O O
pK1 pK2 pKR
H3N CH C OH H3N CH C O H2N CH C O H2N CH C O

CH2CH2CH2CH2NH3+ CH2CH2CH2CH2NH3+ CH2CH2CH2CH2NH3+ CH2CH2CH2CH2NH2

 Which species is the isoelectric form?


 So, pI = ½ (pK2 + pKR)
= ½ (8.95 + 10.53) = 9.74

 Note: pKR is not always higher than pK2 (see Table 3-1 and Fig. 3-12)
Learning Check

 Would the following ions of serine exist at a


pH above, below, or at pI?
O O O

H3N CH C O H3N CH C OH H2N CH C O

CH2 CH2 CH2

OH OH OH
Stereochemistry of AAs

 All amino acids (except glycine) are optically active

 Fischer projections:
D and L Configurations

 d = dextrorotatory
 l = levorotatory
 D, L = relative to glyceraldehyde
Importance of
Stereochemistry
 All AA’s found in proteins are L geometry
 S enantiomer for all except cysteine

 D-AA’s are found in bacteria


 Geometry of proteins affects reactivity (e.g
binding of substrates in enzymes)
 Thalidomide
Non-standard Amino Acids

 AA derivatives
 Modification of AA after
protein synthesized
 Terminal residues or R
groups
 Addition of small alkyl
group, hydroxyl, etc.
 D-AAs
 Bacteria
CHEM 2412 Review

 Carboxylic acid + amine = ?

O O
heat
R C OH + H2N R R C NH R + H2O

 Structure of amino acid


R

H2N C CO2H

H
The Peptide Bond
 Chain of amino acids = peptide or protein
 Amino acid residues connected by peptide bonds
 Residue = AA – H2O
The Peptide Bond

 Non-basic and non-acidic in pH 2-12 range


due to delocalization of N lone pair
O O

C
N N

H H
Rigid
restricted rotation

 Amide linkage is planar, NH and CO are anti


Polypeptides

 Linear polymers (no branches)


 AA monomers linked head to tail
 Terminal residues:
 Free amino group (N-terminus)
 Draw on left
 Free carboxylate group (C-terminus)
 Draw on right
 pKa values of AAs in polypeptides differ
slightly from pKa values of free AAs
Naming Peptides

 Name from the free amine (NH3+)


 Use -yl endings for the names of the amino acids
 The last amino acid with the free carboxyl group (COO-)
uses its amino acid name

(GA)
Amino Acid Ambiguity

 Glutamate (Glu/E) vs. Glutamine (Gln/Q)


 Aspartate (Asp/D) vs. Asparagine (Asn/N)
 Converted via hydrolysis
 Use generic abbreviations for either
 Glx/Z
 Asx/B

 X = undetermined or nonstandard AA
Learning Check

Write the name of the following tetrapeptide using amino


acid names and three-letter abbreviations.
CH3
CH3 S
CH CH3 SH CH2
CH3 O CH O CH2 O CH2 O
-
H3N CH C N CH C N CH C N CH C O
H H H
Learning Check

 Draw the structural formula of each of the following peptides.


A. Methionylaspartic acid
B. Alanyltryptophan
C. Methionylglutaminyllysine
D. Histidylglycylglutamylalanine
Outline (part II)

 Sections 3.3 and 3.4


 Separation and purification
 Protein sequencing
 Analysis of primary structure
Protein size

 In general, proteins contain > 40 residues


 Minimum needed to fold into tertiary structure
 Usually 100-1000 residues
 Percent of each AA varies
 Proteins separated based on differences in
size and composition
 Proteins must be pure to analyze, determine
structure/function
Factors to control
 pH
 Keep pH stable to avoid denaturation or chemical degradation
 Presence of enzymes
 May affect structure (e.g. proteases/peptidase)
 Temperature
 Control denaturation (0-4°C)
 Control activity of enzymes
 Thiol groups
 Reactive
 Add protecting group to prevent formation of new disulfide bonds
 Exposure to air, water
 Denature or oxidize
 Store under N2 or Ar
 Keep concentration high
General Separation Procedure

 Detect/quantitate protein (assay)


 Determine a source (tissue)
 Extract protein
 Suspend cell source in buffer
 Homogenize
 Break into fine pieces
 Cells disrupted
 Soluble contents mix with buffer
 Centrifuge to separate soluble and insoluble
 Separate protein of interest
 Based on solubility, size, charge, or binding ability
Solubility

 Selectively precipitate protein


 Manipulate
 Concentration of salts
 Solvent
 pH
 Temperature
Concentration of salts

 Adding small amount of salt increases [Protein]


 Salt shields proteins from each other, less
precipitation from aggregation
 Salting-in
 Salting out
 Continue to increase [salt] decreases [protein]
 Different proteins salt out at different [salt]
Other Solubility Methods

 Solvent
 Similar theory to salting-out
 Add organic solvent (acetone, ethanol) to interact with
water
 Decrease solvating power
 pH
 Proteins are least soluble at pI
 Isoelectric precipitation
 Temperature
 Solubility is temperature dependent
Chromatography

 Mobile phase
 Mixture dissolved in liquid or
solid
 Stationary phase
 Porous solid matrix
 Components of mixture
pass through the column
at different rates based on
properties
Types of Chromatography

 Paper
 Stationary phase = filter paper
 Same theory as thin layer chromatography (TLC)
 Components separate based on polarity
 High-performance liquid (HPLC)
 Stationary phase = small uniform particles, large surface area
 Adapt to separate based on polarity, size, etc.
 Hydrophobic Interaction
 Hydrophobic groups on matrix
 Attract hydrophobic portions of protein
Types of Chromatography

 Ion-exchange
 Stationary phase =
chemically modified to
include charged groups
 Separate based on net
charge of proteins
 Anion exchangers
 Cation groups (protonated
amines) bind anions
 Cation exchangers
 Anion groups (carboxylates)
bind cations
Types of Chromatography

 Gel-filtration
 Size/molecular exclusion
chromatography
 Stationary phase = gels
with pores of particular
size
 Molecules separate based
on size
 Small molecules caught in
pores
 Large molecules pass
through
Types of Chromatography

 Affinity
 Matrix chemically
altered to include a
molecule designed
to bind a particular
protein
 Other proteins pass
through
UV-Vis Spectroscopy

 Absorbance used to
monitor protein
concentrations of each
fraction
  = 280 nm
 Absorbance of aromatic
side groups
Electrophoresis

 Migration of ions in an electric field


 Electrophoretic mobility (rate of movement) function of
charge, size, voltage, pH
 The positively charged proteins move towards the negative
electrode (cathode)
 The negatively charged proteins move toward the positive
electrode (anode)
 A protein at its pI (neutral) will not migrate in either direction
 Variety of supports (gel, paper, starch, solutions)
Protein Sequencing

 Determination of primary structure


 Need to know to determine 3D structure
 Gives insight into protein function
 Approach:
 Denature protein
 Break protein into small segments
 Determine sequences of segments

 Animation
End group analysis

 Identify number of terminal AAs


 Number of chains/subunits
 Identify specific AA

 Dansyl chloride/dabsyl chloride


 Sanger method (FDNB)
 Edman degradation (PITC)

Bovine
insulin
Dansyl chloride
 Reacts with primary amines
N

 N-terminus O

 Yields dansylated polypeptides + H2N CH C

R
 Dansylated polypeptides SO2

hydrolyzed to liberate the Cl

modified dansyl AA
 Dansyl AA can be identified by
chromatography or
N N
spectroscopy (yellow
fluorescence) HCl +
H3O+
+ other free AAs

 Useful method when protein


SO2 O O
fragmented into shorter HN CH C
SO2

HN CH C OH

polypeptides R R
Dabsyl chloride and FDNB

 Same result as
O
dansyl chloride
N N

N S Cl

 Dabsyl chloride

 1-Fluoro-2,4-
dinitrobenzene
(FDNB)
 Sanger method
Edman degradation
 Phenylisothiocyanate (PITC)
 Reacts with N-terminal AA to produce a phenylthiocarbamyl (PTC)
 Treat with TFAA (solvent/catalyst) to cleave N-terminal residue
 Does not hydrolyze other AAs
 Treatment with dilute acid makes more stable organic compound
 Identify using NMR, HPLC, etc.
 Sequenator (entire process for proteins < 100 residues)
Fragmenting Proteins

 Formation of smaller segments to assist with


sequencing
 Process:
 Cleave protein into specific fragments
 Chemically or enzymatically
 Break disulfide bonds
 Purify fragments
 Sequence fragments
 Determine order of fragments and disulfide bonds
Cleaving Disulfide Bonds

 Oxidize with performic acid


O

H C O OH

 Cys residues form cysteic acid


 Acid can oxidize other
residues, so not ideal
Cleaving Disulfide Bonds

 Reduce by mercaptans (-SH)


 2-Mercaptoethanol
 HSCH2CH2OH
 Dithiothreitol (DTT)
 HSCH2CH(OH)CH(OH)CH2SH
 Reform cysteine residues
 Oxidize thiol groups with
iodoacetete (ICH2CO2-) to
prevent reformation of disulfide
bonds
Hydrolysis

 Cleaves all peptide bonds


 Achieved by
 Enzyme
 Acid
 Base
 After cleavage:
 Identify using chromatography
 Quantify using absorbance or fluorescence
 Disadvantages
 Doesn’t give exact sequence, only AAs present
 Acid and base can degrade/modify other residues
 Enzymes (which are proteins) can also cleave and affect results
Enzymatic and Chemical Cleavage

 Enzymatic
 Enzymes used to break
protein into smaller peptides
 Endopeptidases
 Catalyze hydrolysis of
internal peptide bonds

 Chemical
 Chemical reagents used to
break up polypeptides
 Cyanogen bromide (BrCN)
An example
Another example
 A protein is cleaved with cyanogen bromide to yield the
following sequences:
 Arg-Ala-Tyr-Gly-Asn
 Leu-Phe-Met
 Asp-Met
 The same protein is cleaved with chymotrypsin to yield the
following sequences:
 Met-Arg-Ala-Tyr
 Asp-Met-Leu-Phe
 Gly-Asn
 What is the sequence of the protein?
Suggested Problems, Chapter 3

 1-5, 7, 10-13, 15, 18

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