4 - Proteins: Structure, Function, Folding: © 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company
4 - Proteins: Structure, Function, Folding: © 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company
4 - Proteins: Structure, Function, Folding: © 2013 W. H. Freeman and Company
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CHAPTER 4
Proteins: Structure, Function, Folding
Learning goals:
• Structure and properties of the peptide bond
• Structural hierarchy in proteins
• Structure and function of fibrous proteins
• Structure analysis of globular proteins
• Protein folding and denaturation
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Structure of Proteins
• Protein adopts a specific 3D conformation.
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Six Themes About Protein Structure
1. 3D structure determined by amino acid sequence.
2. Function depends on structure.
3. One or a few stable structures.
4. Most important force is noncovalent bond.
5. Structural patterns can be organized.
6. Not static.
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Three-Dimensional Structure of Proteins
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4 Levels of Protein Structure
Local arrangement of a peptide segment
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Structure Stabilized by Weak Interactions
• Covalent bond (disulfide)
• Noncovalent bond
- hydrophobic interaction
- hydrogen bond
- ionic interaction
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Structure of Peptide Bond
• Structure partially dictated by peptide bond.
• A resonance hybrid of two canonical structures.
• The resonance causes the peptide bonds:
- to be less reactive.
ethylene
- to be quite rigid and nearly planar.
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Resonance in Peptide Bond
Zwitterion-like
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Polypeptide Made up of A Series of
Planes Linked at α Carbons
Two C-N bond lengths are different?
on the α-carbon
SAME carbonyl group (C and O)
plane amino group (N and H)
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α-carbon
Summary 4.1 Overview of Protein Structure
• A typical protein has one or more stable three-
dimensional structures or conformations.
• Protein structure is stabilized largely by multiple
weak interactions, with hydrophobic interactions
being the major contributors.
• The peptide bond has a partial double-bond
character that keeps it in a rigid planar
configuration.
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Example Question
Any given protein is characterized by a unique
amino acid sequence (primary structure) and three-
dimensional (tertiary) structure. How are these
related?
A) hydrogen bonds.
B) hydrophobic interactions.
C) ionic bonds.
D) peptide bonds.
E) all above interactions are weak interactions.
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Example Question
Which statement about the peptide bond is correct?
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Three-Dimensional Structure of Proteins
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Secondary Structures
• Any chosen segment of a polypeptide chain.
• Local spatial arrangement of main-chain atoms.
• NOT positioning of side chains.
• NOT relationship to other segments.
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Secondary Structures
Three common secondary structures:
• α helix
- stabilized by hydrogen bonds between nearby
residues.
• β sheet
- stabilized by hydrogen bonds between adjacent
segments that may not be nearby in primary
sequence.
• β turn
- used to connect two adjacent β sheets.
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α Helix
• Side chains point outward and
roughly perpendicular with the
axis.
1
• 3.6 residues per turn. 2
4 3
- 5.4 Å along the axis
- 1 Å (angstrom) = 10-10 m = 0.1 nm.
• Hydrogen bonds between the
backbone amides of 1st and
4th peptide bonds.
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What is a Right-handed Helix?
Not
Common Form
Observed in
Proteins
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α Helix
• Hydrophobic interface
• Ionic interaction
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Parallel and Antiparallel β Sheets
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hydrogen bonds: In-line.
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hydrogen bonds: Not in-line, or distorted.
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β Turn
• β turns occur frequently whenever strands in β sheets
change the direction
• The 180° turn is accomplished over four amino acids
• The turn is stabilized by a hydrogen bond.
• Proline in position 2 or glycine in position 3 are
common in β turns
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β Turn
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Proline Isomers
• Most peptide bonds not involving proline are in the trans
configuration (>99.95%).
• For peptide bonds involving proline, about 6% are in the
cis configuration. Most of this 6% involve β-turns.
• Proline isomerization is catalyzed by proline isomerases.
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Summary 4.2 Secondary Structure
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Example Question
Secondary structure describes the relationship and
interaction of amino acid residues that are:
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Example Question
A) 1
B) 2.8
C) 3.6
D) 4.2
E) 10
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Example Question
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Example Question
A) antiparallel β sheet.
B) parallel β sheet.
C) α helix.
D) β sheet.
E) β turn.
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Three-Dimensional Structure of Proteins
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Protein Tertiary and Quaternary Structure
• 3° structure refers to the overall spatial
arrangement of atoms in a protein
- Secondary structure: adjacent residues
- Tertiary structure: longer-range interactions
• 4° structure refers to the arrangement of
subunits in a multisubunit protein in
three-dimensional complex.
• Stabilized by numerous weak
interactions between amino acid side
chains.
- Largely hydrophobic and polar interactions
- Can be stabilized by disulfide bonds
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Fibrous Proteins and Globular Proteins
• Fibrous Proteins
- Long strands or sheets
- A single type of secondary structure
- Provide support, shape, and external protection
• Globular Proteins
- Spherical or globular shape
- Several types of secondary structure
- Enzymes and regulatory protein
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Fibrous Proteins:
From Structure to Function
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Structure of α-Keratin in Hair
Right-handed α helix
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Structure of Hair
• Right-handed
α helix
• Left-handed
coiled coil
• Cross-linked
by disulfide
bonds
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Chemistry of Permanent Waving
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Structure of Collagen
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Structure of Collagen
• NOT α-helix.
• Left-handed helix.
• Three helices wrap around.
• Right-handed super-twisting.
blood vessel ⾎血管 These filaments are NOT individual protein strands.
Each collagen monomer consists of three left-handed helical protein
strands, wound around each other to form a right-handed triple helix.
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Silk Fibroin
• Fibroin is the main protein in silk from insects
and spiders.
• Antiparallel β sheet structure.
• Small side chains (Ala and Gly) allow the close
packing of sheets.
• Structure is stabilized by
- Hydrogen bonding.
- NOT covalent bonds.
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Structure of Silk
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Fibrous Proteins Review
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Structural Diversity -> Functional Diversity
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Myoglobin
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Structure of Myoglobin
(a)Ribbon representation
(b)Surface representation
(c) Ribbon representation with several side chains shown as sticks
(d)Space-filling model
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Structure of Heme
• Center: Fe2+ (ferrous) ion.
• Heterocyclic macrocycle porphyrin.
• Histidine side chain.
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Motif or Fold
• A recognizable folding pattern
• Involves two or more elements of secondary structure
• Can be very simple or complex
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Examples of Motifs
Globin Fold
• Reoccurring in many
proteins.
• A single large motif may be
the entire protein.
- NOT a hierarchical structural
element.
- A folding pattern.
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Domain
• A part of a polypeptide chain.
• Independently stable or move as a single entity.
• Maintain structure and function when separated.
• For small proteins, the domain is the protein.
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Quaternary Structure
Quaternary structure is formed by the assembly of
individual polypeptides into a larger functional cluster.
• Disordered regions
can interact with
many different
partner proteins
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Intrinsically Disordered p53 Protein
• Inhibit by wrapping around target proteins.
• Multiple targets.
• Bind different targets in different ways.
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What is A Protein?
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Summary 4.3 Tertiary & Quaternary Structure
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Example Question
Which statement about intrinsically disordered
proteins is true?
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Proteostasis
• Continual maintenance
of an active set of
cellular proteins under a
given set of conditions.
• Three processes:
- Synthesis
- Folding
- Degradation
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Loss of Structure -> Loss of Function
• A protein’s function depends on its 3D-structure.
• Loss of structural integrity with accompanying loss
of activity is called denaturation.
• Proteins can be denatured by:
- Heat
- pH extremes
- Organic solvents
- Urea, detergent and guanidinium hydrochloride
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Protein Denaturation by Heat
• NOT linear
• Abrupt transition
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Denaturation by Guanidine Hydrochloride
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Ribonuclease Refolding Experiment
• A small protein
• 8 cysteines
• 4 disulfide bonds
• Urea and BME fully denatures
• When urea and BME are
removed, the protein
spontaneously refolds, and the
correct disulfide bonds are
reformed
• Sequence alone determines
the native conformation.
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Proteins Fold by a Stepwise Process
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Assisted Folding by Chaperones
heptamer (7 subunits)
interior space
for client protein
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Assisted Folding by Chaperones
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Summary 4.4 Protein Folding & Denaturation
Asn, N Gln, Q
Asp, D Glu, E
Amino acid for 3rd week
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Chapter 4: Summary
In this chapter, we learned about:
• Two most important secondary structures.
- α helices
- β sheets
• Three common fibrous proteins and one globular protein.
- α keratin
- collagen
- silk fibroin
- myoglobin
• Protein denaturation & folding.
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