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The 3Dimensional Structure of Proteins

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Title: The 3Dimensional Structure of Proteins


1
Chapter 4
  • The 3-Dimensional Structure of Proteins

2
Objectives
  • What forces drive the folding of proteins?
  • Describe the levels of protein structure.
  • What are the constraints and determinants of
    adopting various structures?
  • What are some examples of proteins that display
    various structural motifs?

3
  • Three-dimensional, functional structure is called
    native
  • Folded shape is called conformation
  • There are thousands of possible conformations,
    but not an infinite amount
  • Conformations are restrained by
  • planarity of peptide bond
  • allowed angles

4
The 4 levels of protein stucture
  • Primary Linear amino acid sequence
  • Bonds Covalent
  • Secondary Local structure certain motifs are
    common
  • Bonds Mostly H-bonds
  • Tertiary Complete 3-D shape
  • Bonds H-bonds, hydrophobic interactions, ionic
    bonds, van der Waals interactions, disulfide
    bonds
  • Quaternary gt1 peptide chains
  • Bonds Mostly H-bonds

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6
There is no free rotation about the peptide bond
due to resonance. This limits the number of
possible conformations.
7
Psi (?) Dihedral angle between C? and
Ccarbonyl Phi (?) Dihedral angle between N and
C?
Ramachandran Plot
8
Ramachandran Plot for L-Ala
9
Secondary Structure
  • The alpha helix
  • Tightly wound, repeating sequence
  • Right-handed
  • R-groups are on outside of helix
  • Each twist ? 5.4 Å 3.6 residues
  • Stabilized by H-bonds between N-H and CO 3
    residues away
  • a-helices are polar (positive at amino end
    negative at carboxyl)
  • Some amino acids are a-helix breakers
  • Repeating like-charges
  • Repeating bulky groups

10
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11
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12
Alpha Helix, continued
  • Effects on helical stability
  • Electrostatic interactions between adjacent
    residues
  • Steric interference between adjacent residues
  • Interactions between residues 3-4 amino acids
    away
  • Pro and Gly (helix breakers)
  • Polarity of residues at both ends of helix

13
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14
Beta Conformation
  • Extended, zigzag conformation
  • Interactions between adjacent amino acids
  • Adjacent strands, H-bonded to one another, lead
    to beta sheet
  • R-groups protrude opposite of parallel structure

15
Beta Sheet
  • Parallel ?-sheet
  • Same Amino-carboxyl direction
  • (6.5 Å repeat)
  • Anti-parallel ?-sheet
  • Opposite orientation
  • (7 Å repeat)

16
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17
?-turns
  • Interacting strands can be many amino acids apart
  • Turns are 180 connect strands in folded
    (globular) proteins
  • Interaction is between carbonyl oxygen of aa 1
    and amino hydrogen of aa 4
  • Interior amino acids are not involved thus, Pro
    and Gly are often present (Type II turns)
  • Gly small and flexible
  • Pro Cis conformation makes inclusion in tight
    turn favorable

18
Proline isomerization
19
?-turns, continued
  • Type I (most common) Type II ALWAYS contain Gly
    as amino acid 3.

20
Bond angles (?, ?) describe secondary structure
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22
Tertiary Structure
  • Long range protein structure
  • Interactions between various secondary structural
    components of protein
  • 2 major classifications
  • Fibrous (structural proteins) vs. globular

23
Fibrous Proteins
  • Strong and flexible
  • Hydrophobic
  • Comprise hair, quills, wool, nails, etc.
  • Left-handed helix of intertwined a-helices (of
    smaller repeat period) confer strength this
    forms super-structure called protofilaments,
    which combine to form fibrils

24
Alpha-keratin
25
CollagenLeft-handed helix 3 aa/turn
26
Collagen
  • Tightly wound left-handed helix
  • Gly-X-Y
  • X Pro Y 4-Hyp

Hydroxyproline requires Vitamin C for proline
hydroxylationScurvy?
27
Globular Proteins
  • Water-soluble
  • Examples
  • Enzymes (Hexokinase)
  • Transport proteins (Myoglobin)
  • Immune system proteins (Antibodies)
  • More to come on this in subsequent lectures

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29
Protein Domains
Troponin C
30
Domains
31
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34
Levinthals Paradox
  • For random protein folding, make several
    assumptions
  • Since there are 2 torsional angles (?, ?), assume
    3 stable values for each
  • Assume protein of n amino acids
  • There are then 32n ? 10n possible conformations
  • 1013 conformations can be tested per second (time
    for single bonds to re-orient)
  • the time for all possible conformations is given
    by
  • t 10n/1013 and, for a protein of 100 amino
    acids, t 1087 s 1079 years!!!

35
Thermodynamics of protein folding
Greater stability
36
Molten Globule
  • An intermediate state in the folding of protein
    pathway of a protein that has some secondary and
    tertiary structure, but lacks the well packed
    amino acid side chains that characterize the
    native state of a protein.
  • Observed for many protein under both equilibrium
    and non-equilibrium conditions.
  • By contrast, for fast folding proteins without
    intermediates, the search for a core or nucleus
    is likely to be the rate-determine step once the
    core is formed, folding to the native state is
    fast

http//zcam.tsinghua.edu.cn/shipl/protein01.ppt2
70,12,Molten Globule
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