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Chapter 6

Chapter 6. Proteins: Secondary, Tertiary, and Quaternary Structure to accompany Biochemistry, 2/e by Reginald Garrett and Charles Grisham.

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Chapter 6

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  1. Chapter 6 Proteins: Secondary, Tertiary, and Quaternary Structure to accompany Biochemistry, 2/e by Reginald Garrett and Charles Grisham All rights reserved. Requests for permission to make copies of any part of the work should be mailed to: Permissions Department, Harcourt Brace & Company, 6277 Sea Harbor Drive, Orlando, Florida 32887-6777

  2. Outline • 6.1 Forces Influencing Protein Structure • 6.2 Role of the Amino Acid Sequence in Protein Structure • 6.3 Secondary Structure of Proteins • 6.4 Protein Folding and Tertiary Structure • 6.5 Subunit Interactions and Quaternary Structure

  3. 6.1 The Weak Forces What are they? What are the relevant numbers? • van der Waals: 0.4 - 4 kJ/mol • hydrogen bonds: 12-30 kJ/mol • ionic bonds: 20 kJ/mol • hydrophobic interactions: <40 kJ/mol

  4. 6.2 The Role of the Sequence in Protein Structure All of the information necessary for folding the peptide chain into its "native” structure is contained in the primary amino acid structure of the peptide.

  5. How do proteins recognize and interpret the folding information? • Certain loci along the chain may act as nucleation points • Protein chain must avoid local energy minima • Chaperones may help

  6. 6.3 Secondary Structure The atoms of the peptide bond lie in a plane • The resonance stabilization energy of the planar structure is 88 kJ/mol • A twist about the C-N bond involves a twist energy of 88 kJ/mol times the square of the twist angle. • Twists can occur about either of the bonds linking the alpha carbon to the other atoms of the peptide backbone

  7. Consequences of the Amide Plane Two degrees of freedom per residue for the peptide chain • Angle about the C(alpha)-N bond is denoted phi • Angle about the C(alpha)-C bond is denoted psi • The entire path of the peptide backbone is known if all phi and psi angles are specified • Some values of phi and psi are more likely than others.

  8. The angles phi and psi are shown here

  9. Steric Constraints on phi & psi Unfavorable orbital overlap precludes some combinations of phi and psi • phi = 0, psi = 180 is unfavorable • phi = 180, psi = 0 is unfavorable • phi = 0, psi = 0 is unfavorable

  10. Steric Constraints on phi & psi • G. N. Ramachandran was the first to demonstrate the convenience of plotting phi,psi combinations from known protein structures • The sterically favorable combinations are the basis for preferred secondary structures

  11. Classes of Secondary Structure All these are local structures that are stabilized by hydrogen bonds • Alpha helix • Other helices • Beta sheet (composed of "beta strands") • Tight turns (aka beta turns or beta bends) • Beta bulge

  12. The Alpha Helix Read the box on page 167 • First proposed by Linus Pauling and Robert Corey in 1951 • Identified in keratin by Max Perutz • A ubiquitous component of proteins • Stabilized by H-bonds

  13. The Alpha Helix Know these numbers • Residues per turn: 3.6 • Rise per residue: 1.5 Angstroms • Rise per turn (pitch): 3.6 x 1.5A = 5.4 Angstroms • The backbone loop that is closed by any H-bond in an alpha helix contains 13 atoms • phi = -60 degrees, psi = -45 degrees • The non-integral number of residues per turn was a surprise to crystallographers

  14. The Beta-Pleated Sheet Composed of beta strands • Also first postulated by Pauling and Corey, 1951 • Strands may be parallel or antiparallel • Rise per residue: • 3.47 Angstroms for antiparallel strands • 3.25 Angstroms for parallel strands • Each strand of a beta sheet may be pictured as a helix with two residues per turn

  15. The Beta Turn (aka beta bend, tight turn) • allows the peptide chain to reverse direction • carbonyl C of one residue is H-bonded to the amide proton of a residue three residues away • proline and glycine are prevalent in beta turns

  16. Tertiary StructureSeveral important principles: • Secondary structures form wherever possible (due to formation of large numbers of H-bonds) • Helices and sheets often pack close together

  17. Tertiary StructureSeveral important principles: • The backbone links between elements of secondary structure are usually short and direct • Proteins fold to make the most stable structures (make H-bonds and minimize solvent contact

  18. Fibrous Proteins • Much or most of the polypeptide chain is organized approximately parallel to a single axis • Fibrous proteins are often mechanically strong • Fibrous proteins are usually insoluble • Usually play a structural role in nature

  19. Alpha Keratin Read the box on page 175 • Found in hair, fingernails, claws, horns and beaks • Sequence consists of 311-314 residue alpha helical rod segments capped with non-helical N- and C-termini • Primary structure of helical rods consists of 7-residue repeats: (a-b-c-d-e-f-g)n, where a and d are nonpolar. Promotes association of helices!

  20. Beta Keratin Proteins that form extensive beta sheets • Found in silk fibers • Alternating sequence: Gly-Ala/Ser-Gly-Ala/Ser.... • Since residues of a beta sheet extend alternately above and below the plane of the sheet, this places all glycines on one side and all alanines and serines on other side! • This allows Glys on one sheet to mesh with Glys on an adjacent sheet (same for Ala/Sers)

  21. Collagen - A Triple Helix Principal component of connective tissue (tendons, cartilage, bones, teeth) • basic unit is tropocollagen: • three intertwined polypeptide chains (1000 residues each • MW = 285,000 • 300 nm long, 1.4 nm diameter • unique amino acid composition

  22. Collagen The secrets of its a.a. composition... • Nearly one residue out of three is Gly • Proline content is unusually high • Unusual amino acids found: • 4-hydroxyproline • 3-hydroxyproline • 5-hydroxylysine • Pro and HyPro together make 30% of res.

  23. The Collagen Triple Helix A case of structure following composition • The unusual amino acid composition of collagen is unsuited for alpha helices OR beta sheets • But it is ideally suited for the collagen triple helix: three intertwined helical strands • Much more extended than alpha helix, with a rise per residue of 2.9 Angstroms • 3.3 residues per turn • Long stretches of Gly-Pro-Pro/HyP

  24. Collagen Fibers Staggered arrays of tropocollagens • Banding pattern in EMs with 68 nm repeat • Since tropocollagens are 300 nm long, there must be 40 nm gaps between adjacent tropocollagens (5x68 = 340 Angstroms) • 40 nm gaps are called "hole regions" - they contain carbohydrate and are thought to be nucleation sites for bone formation

  25. Structural basis of the collagen triple helix • Every third residue faces the crowded center of the helix - only Gly fits here • Pro and HyP suit the constraints of phi and psi • Interchain H-bonds involving HyP stabilize helix • Fibrils are further strengthened by intrachain lysine-lysine and interchain hydroxypyridinium crosslinks

  26. Globular Proteins Some design principles • Most polar residues face the outside of the protein and interact with solvent • Most hydrophobic residues face the interior of the protein and interact with each other • Packing of residues is close • However, ratio of vdw volume to total volume is only 0.72 to 0.77, so empty space exists • The empty space is in the form of small cavities

  27. An amphiphilic helix in flavodoxin: A nonpolar helix in citrate synthase: A polar helix in calmodulin:

  28. Globular Proteins More design principles • "Random coil" is not random • Structures of globular proteins are not static • Various elements and domains of protein move to different degrees • Some segments of proteins are very flexible and disordered • Know the kinds and rates of protein motion

  29. Globular Proteins The Forces That Drive Folding • Peptide chain must satisfy the constraints inherent in its own structure • Peptide chain must fold so as to "bury" the hydrophobic side chains, minimizing their contact with water • Peptide chains, composed of L-amino acids, have a tendency to undergo a "right-handed twist"

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