1 Amino Acids Engl 2016
1 Amino Acids Engl 2016
1 Amino Acids Engl 2016
STRUCTURE, CLASSIFICATION,
PROPERTIES.
PRIMARY STRUCTURE
OF PROTEINS
Elena Rivneac
PhD, Associate Professor
Department of Biochemistry and
Clinical Biochemistry
State University of Medicine and
Pharmacy "Nicolae Testemitanu"
Amino acids are particularly important
for the human body:
• are the basic structural elements of
proteins;
• are precursors of the hormones,
purine and pyrimidine nitrogenous
bases, porphyrins, vitamins and
biogenic amines.
α-Amino acids are heterofunctional
compounds containing carboxyl and amine
groups linked to the same α-carbon atom.
Amino acid radical (R) - is also joined to the
α-carbon atom.
The hydrophilic acidic side chain in neutral medium have a negative charge
and the amino acid is an anion. The hydrophilic basic side chain in neutral
medium have a positive charge and the amino acid is an cation. In order to
have such amino acids in the isoelectric state - it is necessary to change the pH
of the medium.
Thus, the isoelectric point of the amino acids will vary from low values (pI <7) for
acidic amino acids (pI=2.87 for aspartic acid) to high values (pI> 7) for basic amino
acids (pI=10.8 for arginine). Neutral amino acids don’t have the isoelectric point at
a neutral pH, as it would be expected, but in week acidic medium (pI = 5-6).
Classification of amino acids according to the
physico-chemical properties of the side chain
1. Amino acids with a non-polar (hydrophobic) side chain: glycine,
alanine, valine, leucine, isoleucine, proline, phenylalanine, tryptophan and
methionine. All of them are less soluble in water than the polar amino acids;
2. Amino acids with a polar (hydrophilic) neutral side chain (at pH = 6):
serine, threonine, cysteine, tyrosine, asparagine, glutamine. These amino
acids are more soluble in water than the non-polar amino acids, due to -OH,
-NH2 , amide and -SH functional groups that can interact with water;
Examples:
Examples:
Classification by chemical structure:
by the presence of other functional groups in the chain –
Examples:
Imino acid -
Classification of amino acids by the
presence in protein and genetic encoding
Amino acids
Proteinogenic – Non-proteinogenic
enter in the – don’t enter in the
composition of composition of
proteins proteins
Non-essential:
Essential:
Valine* Glycine
Leucine* Semi-essential: Alanine
Isoleucine* Proline
Phenylalanine* Serine
Arginine*
Triptophan* Tyrosine
Histidine* Cysteine
Methionine*
Threonine* Asparagine
Lysine* Glutamine
Aspartic acid
Glutamic acid
For example:
a) decarboxylation of glutamic acid and gamma-aminobutyric
acid (GABA) formation:
b) Decarboxylation of histidine and histamine formation:
• The peptide bond is planar - all the atoms of the peptide group are in the same
plane.
The properties of peptide bond:
• The classical peptide bond has trans- conformation.
The "R" groups come from the 20 amino acids which occur in
proteins. The peptide chain is known as the backbone, and the
"R" groups are known as side chains.
"R" – side chains of the amino acids - they are maximal distant in
space from each other.
Each protein has a specific sequence of amino acids which are
assembled under the direction and control of nucleic acids.
Nomenclature of peptides
All amino acids in the polypeptide chain situated on the left to the C-terminus
have –yl terminus and the C-terminal keeps its trivial name. For example:
tripeptide Gly-Ala-…-Ser will be called glycyl-alanyl-…-serine.
The sequence of amino acids in a protein is called
Edman method has been shown to be useful for reproduction in an automatic device
called sequencer. It can performe 40-50 cleavage steps.