Amino Acids
Amino Acids
Amino Acids
Grisham
Amino Acids
Outline
What are the structures and properties of amino acids ? What are the acid-base properties of amino acids ? What reactions do amino acids undergo ? What are the optical and stereochemical properties of amino acids ? What are the spectroscopic properties of amino acids ? How are amino acid mixtures separated and analyzed ?
Anatomy of an amino acid. Except for proline and its derivatives, all of the amino acids commonly found in proteins possess this type of structure.
Two amino acids can react with loss of a water molecule to form a covalent bond.
3.9
10.5
12.5
10.1
6.0
Hydrophobic Ala, Val, Leu, Ile, Phe, Pro, Met Charged Arg, Asp, Glu, Lys Polar Ser, Thr, Tyr, Asn, Gln, His, Cys, Trp
pKa = 10
_ + H3N CH C O R
pKb = 12
Evolutionarily conserved
Occurs in tight turns
Alanine is smallish non-polar residue Occurs abundantly No preference for inside or surface of the protein
Val, Leu and Ile are branched side chains Branching allows limited internal flexibility Occur primarily in protein cores Bricks around assembled which functional parts are
Phe, Tyr and Trp are the aromatic side chains All these contain one methylene group as a spacer
Met and Cys are the sulfur containing side chains Met is rather large and flexible
Asn and Gln have amide in side chain Gln has an extra methylene group, rendering the polar group flexible and reducing its interaction with main chain H- bond donor as well as acceptor
Asp and Glu are -vely charged at physiological pH Althoughly chemically similar, markedly different effect on the conformation and chemical reactivity Asp relatively rigid, and found frequently in active sites Mostly found on protein surfaces
Lys and Arg are +vely charged residues Long and flexible
Ser and Thr are small and aliphatic -OH no more reactive than ethanol Frequently form H-bond with main chain
Pro is imino acid Reduces main cyclization chain flexibility drastically due to
His is a very special residue with pKa of 6.0 Can be uncharged or charged easily Very suitable for catalysis, found in most active centres
Amino Acids are Weak Polyprotic Acids H2A+ + H2O HA0 + H3O+ Ka1 = [ HA0 ] [ H3O+ ]
__________________________
[H2A+ ]
_______________________
[ HA0 ]
The first dissociation is the carboxylic acid group (using glycine as an example):
+NH CH COOH 3 2
+NH3CH2COO- + H+
NH2CH2COO- + H+
The ionic forms of the amino acids, shown without consideration of any ionizations on the side chain.
These numbers are approximate, but entirely suitable for our purposes.
Zwitterions formation
Although the amino acids are commonly shown as containing an amino group and a carboxyl group, H2NCHRCOOH, certain properties, both physical and chemical, are not consistent with this structure: On contrast to amines and carboxylic acids, the amino acids are non-volatile crystalline solid which melt with decomposition at fairly high temperatures.
1.
Zwitterions formation
2. They are insoluble in non-polar solvents like petroleum ether, benzene, or ether and are appreciably soluble in water. 3. Their aqueous solutions behave like solutions of substances of high dipole moment.
Zwitterions formation
4. Acidity and basicity constants are ridiculously low for COOH and NH2 groups. Glycine, e.g., has Ka = 1.6 x 10-10 and Kb = 2.5 x 10-12, whereas most carboxylic acids have Kas of about 10-5 and most aliphatic amines have Kbs of about 10-4.
Zwitterions formation
All these properties are quite consistent with a dipolar ion structure for the amino acids.
+ H3N C
COO
Since it exists as internal salt, known as zwitterion, in which both cation and anion are held together in the same unit.
Zwitterions formation
Example: glycine exists as
H + H3N C H
Since the zwitterions are held by strong electrostatic attraction, thus m.p. and b.p. are high. Also, it exerts strong attraction to polar water, so it is highly soluble in water, but insoluble in non-polar solvent.
COO
Zwitterions formation
Amino acid with equal number of amino and carboxyl group is neutral when dissolved in water, but in acidic solution, COO- group is protonated (I.e. exists as a COOH), and basic solution, -NH3+ group is free and exists as an NH2.
H H2N C H COO OH H + H3N C H COO H H+ + H3N C H COOH
Therefore, the acidic group in amino acid is NH3+ NOT COOH. The basic group in amino acid is -COO- not NH2.
OH -
Isoelectric Point
pH at which amino acids exist as the zwitterion (neutral). Depends on structure of the side chain. Acidic amino acids, isoelectric pH ~3. Basic amino acids, isoelectric pH ~9. Neutral amino acids, isoelectric pH is slightly acidic, 5-6.
Isoelectric Point, pI
The isoelectric point is the pH at which there is zero net charge Using Gly again:
Charges in the first ionization: +1 0 Charges in the second ionization: 0 -1 So, in the case of glycine, the pH at which there is most of the zero net charge form occurs half way between the first and second ionizations. pI = (pKa1 + pKa2)/2 = 5.95
Titration of lysine.
A Sample Calculation
What is the pH of a glutamic acid solution if the alpha carboxyl is 1/4 dissociated?
Side chains show unique reactivities Cys residues can form disulfides and can be easily alkylated Few reactions are specific to a single kind of side chain
+ NH2-CH-COOH OH CH3
Note: The product from Pro is Yellow and absorbs at 440 nm.
N-Terminal Reagents
F NO2
Other Reagents
C-terminal analysis: Hydrazine
NH 2-NH 2
CH2-SH HO C H H C OH
I-CH2-COOH
CH2-SH Cleland's
Edmans Reaction
Edmans reagent reacts with the N-terminal residue of a peptide or protein and cleaves the peptide bond forming a cyclic thiazoline derivative that reacts in weak aqueous acid to form a PTH-amino acid. This reaction can proceed down the chain cleaving successive residues. Samples are used to identify each residue.
Cysteine residues react with each other to form disulfides. This will occur with O2 in air.
Naming a chiral center in the (R,S) system is accomplished by viewing the molecule from the chiral center to the atom with the lowest priority. The priorities of the functional groups are: SH > OH > NH2 > COOH > CHO > CH2OH > CH3
Spectroscopic Properties
All amino acids absorb in the infrared (bond vibrations). Only Phe, Tyr, and Trp absorb in the UV (electronic transitions between energy levels). Absorbance at 280 nm is a good method for determining protein concentration. NMR spectra are characteristic of each residue in a protein, and high resolution NMR measurements can be used to elucidate three-dimensional structures of proteins.
Spectroscopic Properties
The UV spectra of the aromatic amino acids at pH 6. Beers Law: A = cl
Proteins typically have UV absorbance maxima around 275-280 nm Tryptophan and tyrosine are the strongest chromophores Concentration can be determined by UV-visible spectrophotometry using Beers law: A = cl
Spectroscopic Properties
Spectroscopic Properties
A plot of C13 chemical shifts versus pH for the carbons of lysine.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Aa.svg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Aa.svg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Aa.svg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Aa.svg
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Aa.svg