a specific amide linkage that connect two amino acids together in proteins btween the carboxyl group and amino group
dipeptide
oligo: large number of amino acids, synthetic
poly; large chain produced naturally
a large polypeptide ( or >1 polypeptide) with a biological function
no in can be arg-met or met-arg which has different directionality and structure but same molecular weight
only the terminal amino and carboxylate groups in a peptide retain their charge, others are eliminated by the formation of peptide bonds
side chains retain their charge (if they have one)
the sequence of amino acids , every protein has a uniqiue sewuence
electrons in pepetide bonds are somewhat delocalized generating 2 resonances
peptide bonds therefore exhibit partial double bond character with no rotation around the C-N bond
the functional groups in peptide bonds are potential h bond acceptor or donor
5
arg ++, Asp-, Glu --
asn-trp-cys-tyr-lys-val-glu
lys +, glu, -
2
the bond has a rigid, flat (planar) structure while rotaion is only possible around the alpha carbons on either side
primary--> the sequence of amino acid residues which determine 3d which determines function
secondary--> the spatial arrangement of the polypeptide backbone
tertiary structure--> the three dimesnional structure of an entire polypeptide including all its side chains
quaternanry structure--> the spatial arrangement of polypeptide chains in a protein with multiple sub units
peptide bonds stay flat proteins can only bent at N- calpha nd calpha-c
yes the chemical groups in the peptide bonds are highly polar the carbonyl groups are h bond acceptor and nh groups are h bond donor
the local 3d folding patterns in polypeptide chain formed by h bonds between backbone atoms (not side chains)
alpha helic and beta sheet
carbonyl oxygen forms h bond with the backbone nh group 4 residues downstream. c1-n5
the only ones that arent bonded are the amino acid residues at either end
right handed coil, twists like spiral
amino acids project outwards, residues 3-4 apart in the primary structure are close in the secondary structure
yes both can
alot of acidic side chains, lots of - side chains
electrostatic repuslion among side chains
the arrows are show pointing from the n terminal end to the c terminal end, so antiparallel or paralelel sheets (arrows same way)
backbone stretches into strands that align side by side
h bonds between c=o and n-h of adjacent strands (can be parallel or antiparallel)
strands joined by loops or other structures
located above and below the plane of the sheet (alternating)
both are stabilized by h bonds between backbone CO and NH groups except
a helix: in the same helice
b sheets: of neighbouring strands
the peptide backbone has the same conformation for every amino acid within the secondary structure
distinct elements of regular secondary structures are linked together by polypeptide loops of various sizes ranging from simple hairpins to longer loops--> irregular structures
non repeating, connecting regular segments (loops turns coils)
no, polypeptide loops typically have a backbone of irregular secondary structure
arrangement of all atoms in a single polypeptide
--> arrangement of secondary structures in relation to one another, positions of amino acid sidechains, location of prosthetic groups
fiborous (elongated) or globular (compact)
1. pratically insoluble in aq solutions
2. form long protein filaments (limtied reisdues with repeats)- often linear/extended
3. usually structural or connective proteins
ex. collagen
1. basically soluble in aq solution
2. fold into compact structures with non polar cores and polar surfaces
hemo (globin), my(globin)
lactate dehydrogenase, chymotrypsin, hexokinase, lysozyme
on the surface
the shape of globular proteins depends on the relative position of hydrophobic amino acids in the proteisn primary structure
this effect is the driving force via which soluble globular proteins adopt and maintain their tertiarty structure
secondary: h bonds between backbone C=O and N-H stabilize alpha helices and beta sheets
tertiary: H-bonds between polar side chains help maintain the overall 3d fold
electrostatic interactions between closely-positioned formal charged groups. helps fine tune and stabilize secondary and teritary structures
can form between + and - charged groups
covalent bonds between closely- positioned cysteines, form stabilizing crosslinks for extracellular proteins (or proteins in the lumen)
bc disulfide bonds form only in oxidizing environments. ribonuclease, secreted outside the cell, form stable cystine (S-S) links that hold its tertiary structure in the reducing cytosol, cysteine as SH, preventing disulfide formation
oxidizing= cystine (S-S)
reducing= cysteine (SH)
a polypeptide segment that has folded into a single structural unit with a hydrophobic core, proteins may contain more than one domain
motif a short region of polypeptide with a recognizable 3d shape, zinc fingers is an example, may be found in many contexts
structural motifs.
an example of a structural motif including a prosthetic group
a non peptide component that is permamemtly incorporated into a protein. these provide structure (ex. zinc fingers) and functional chemical groups (ex. heme in hemoglobin)
weak non covalent forces and are easily unfolded or dentatured
heat --> h-bonds/hydrophobic interactions
changes in pH--> salt bridges/H bonds
salt--> salt bridges/ion pairs
detergents--> hydrophobic interactions
reducing agents (DTT)
proteins composed of more than one polypeptide chain, each polypeptide chain is called a subunit.
by number and type of subunits,
ex. 2 subunits: dimer
identical subunits: homodimer
non identical subunits: heterodimer
3 subunits: trimer
the same forces as the teritary structure
hydrophobic interactions, h bonds, ion pairs "fine tune"
