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Tema 3

The document discusses the four levels of protein structure: primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary. It describes the key elements of secondary structure, including alpha helices, beta sheets, beta turns, and random coils. It also discusses factors that influence secondary structure formation and the differences between parallel and antiparallel beta sheets.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
14 views22 pages

Tema 3

The document discusses the four levels of protein structure: primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary. It describes the key elements of secondary structure, including alpha helices, beta sheets, beta turns, and random coils. It also discusses factors that influence secondary structure formation and the differences between parallel and antiparallel beta sheets.

Uploaded by

blescatllar
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Tema 3.

Estructura tridimensional de les proteínes

• Nivells d'estructuració de les proteïnes.

• Descripció de l'hèlix alfa i fulla plegada beta.

• Proteïnes fibroses i globulars.

• Plegament de proteïnes.

• Estructura quaternària.

1
❖Structure of Proteins

➢Unlike most organic polymers, protein molecules adopt a specific three-


dimensional conformation.

➢This structure is able to fulfill a specific biological function.

➢This structure is called the native fold.

➢The native fold has a large number of favorable interactions within the
protein.

➢There is an entropy cost to folding the protein into one specific native
fold.

2
❖ Four Levels of Protein Structure

I. Primary Structure: The Peptide Bond

3
II. Secondary Structures

➢ The structure of the protein is partially dictated by the properties of the peptide bond.
➢ The peptide bond is a resonance hybrid of two canonical structures.
➢ The resonance causes the peptide bonds:
✓ To be quite rigid and nearly planar
✓ To exhibit a large dipole moment in the favored trans configuration

4
The Rigid Peptide Plane and the Partially Free Rotations

➢ Rotation around the peptide bond is not permitted due to resonance


structure.
➢ Rotation around bonds connected to the  carbon is permitted.
✓ φ (phi): angle around the  carbon—amide nitrogen bond
✓ ψ (psi): angle around the  carbon—carbonyl carbon bond

➢ The organization around the peptide bond, paired with the identity of the
R groups, determines the secondary structure of the protein.

➢ Secondary structures are regular structures elements.


➢ The main chain is relatively polar having a hydrogen donor (NH) and a
hydrogen acceptor (C=O) for peptide unit
➢ Polar groups of the main chain are neutralized forming hydrogen bonds.

5
➢ Secondary structure refers to a local spatial arrangement of the polypeptide
backbone.
➢ Two regular arrangements are common:
✓ The  helix
▪ stabilized by hydrogen bonds between nearby residues
✓ The  sheet
▪ Stabilized by hydrogen bonds between adjacent segments that may not be nearby
An additional structure called  -Turn.

➢ Irregular arrangement of the polypeptide chain is called the random coil.

6
II. Secondary Structures C-terminal

II. 1. The  Helix

5 It is a right-handed helix with


3.6 residues (5.4 Å) per turn.
Helical backbone is held together by 4
hydrogen bonds between backbone 3
oxygen of an n residue and
backbone amide of n + 4 residue 2
1 Hydrogen bonds are aligned
What Is a Right-Handed Helix? roughly parallel with the
helical axis.

N-terminal

7
Sequence Affects Helix Stability
Propensity of Amino Acid
TABL
Residues to Take Up an α-
E 4-2
Helical Conformation
➢ Not all polypeptide sequences adopt -helical structures.
ΔΔG°
➢ Small hydrophobic residues such as Ala and Leu are strong Amino
acid
ΔΔG°
(kJ/mol)a
Amino
acid
(kJ/mol
helix formers. )a
Ala 0 Leu 0.79
➢ Pro acts as a helix breaker because the rotation around the
Arg 0.3 Lys 0.63
N-Cα (φ-angle) bond is impossible.
Asn 3 Met 0.88
➢ Gly acts as a helix breaker because the tiny R group Cys 3 Pro >4
supports other conformations.
Gln 1.3 Ser 2.2
➢ Attractive or repulsive interactions between side chains 3 Glu 1.4 Thr 2.4
to 4 amino acids apart will affect formation. Gly 4.6 Tyr 2.0
His 2.6 Trp 2.0
Ile 1.4 Val 2.1
Sources: Data (except proline) from J. W. Bryson
et al., Science 270:935, 1995. Proline data from
J. K. Myers et al., Biochemistry 36:10,923, 1997.
aDDG° is the difference in free-energy change,

relative to that for alanine, required for the


amino acid residue to take up the α-helical
conformation. Larger numbers reflect greater
difficulty taking up the α-helical structure. Data
are a composite derived from multiple
experiments and experimental systems.
8
II. Secondary Structures

II.2.  -Sheets
➢The planarity of the peptide bond and tetrahedral
geometry of the  carbon create a pleated sheet-like
structure.

➢Sheet-like arrangement of the backbone is held


together by hydrogen bonds between the backbone
amides in different strands.

➢Side chains protrude from the sheet, alternating in an


up-and-down direction.

Peptide bond 9
Parallel and Antiparallel  Sheets
➢ Multi -strand interactions are called sheets.
➢ Sheets are held together by the hydrogen bonding of amide and carbonyl
groups of the peptide bond from opposite strands.
➢ Two major orientations of  sheets are determined by the directionality of the
strands within:
✓Parallel sheets have strands that are oriented in the same direction.
✓Antiparallel sheets have strands that are oriented in opposite directions.

➢ In parallel  sheets, the H-bonded strands run in the same direction.


✓Hydrogen bonds between strands are bent (weaker).
10
➢ In antiparallel  sheets, the H-bonded strands run in opposite directions.
▪ Hydrogen bonds between strands are linear (stronger).

II.3.  Turns
➢  turns occur frequently whenever strands in  sheets
change the direction.
➢ The 180° turn is accomplished over four amino acids.
➢ The turn is stabilized by a hydrogen bond from a carbonyl
oxygen to amide proton three residues down the
sequence.
➢ Proline in position 2 or glycine in position 3 are common in
 turns.
11 11
III. Protein Tertiary Structures

➢Tertiary structure refers to the overall spatial arrangement of atoms in a protein.


➢Stabilized by numerous weak interactions between amino acid side chains
✓largely hydrophobic and polar interactions
✓can be stabilized by disulfide bonds
➢Interacting amino acids are not necessarily next to each other in the primary sequence.
➢Two major classes:
✓ fibrous and globular (water or lipid soluble)
12
❖ Fibrous Proteins: From Structure to Function
➢ Just an element of secondary structure
✓ Insoluble (high number of hydrophobic residues)
✓ Function: Structural

TABLE 4-3 Secondary Structures and Properties of Some Fibrous Proteins


Structure Characteristics Examples of occurrence

α Helix, cross-linked by Tough, insoluble protective α-Keratin of hair, feathers, nails


disulfide bonds structures of varying hardness and
flexibility
β Conformation Soft, flexible filaments Silk fibroin
Collagen triple helix High tensile strength, without stretch Collagen of tendons, bone matrix

13
Fibrous Proteins: From Structure to Function
1. Structure of -Keratin in Hair

➢ Elongated α helix with somewhat thicker elements near the amino and carboxyl termini.
➢ Pairs of these helices are interwound in a left-handed sense to form two-chain coiled
coils.
➢ These then combine in higher-order structures called protofilaments and protofibrils.
➢ about four protofibrils—32 strands of α-keratin in all—combine to form an intermediate
filament.
➢ Disulfur bridges stabilize structure

14
Fibrous Proteins: From Structure to Function
2. Structure of Collagen

➢ Pro acts as an α helix breaker because the rotation around


the N-Cα (φ-angle) bond is impossible.
➢ But polyPro can form a left-handed helix with 3 residues for
turn.
➢ Modified to hydroxiPro can form hydrogen bonds stabilizing
the helix

➢Collagen is an important constituent of connective tissue:


tendons, cartilage, bones, cornea of the eye.
➢Each collagen chain is a long Gly- and Pro-rich left-handed
helix. Repetitions of Gly-X-Pro(4-Hyp).
➢Three collagen chains intertwine into a right-handed
superhelical triple helix.
➢The triple helix has higher tensile strength than a steel wire
of equal cross section.
➢Many triple-helices assemble into a collagen fibril
15
2. Structure of Collagen
a) Hydroxyproline in Collagen

Proline HydroxyProline
➢ Forces the proline ring into a favorable pucker
➢ Offers more hydrogen bonds between the three strands of collagen

16
Fibrous Proteins: From Structure to Function
3. Silk Fibroin

➢ Extremely strong material


✓ stronger than steel
✓ rigid structure and tensile strength
➢ Fibroin is the main protein in silk from moths and spiders.
➢ Antiparallel  sheet structure side chains (Ala and Gly) allow the close packing of
sheets.
➢ Structure is stabilized by:
✓ hydrogen bonding within sheets
✓ London dispersion interactions between sheets

17
❖ Water-Soluble Globular Proteins
➢ Globular protein structures are compact and varied

❖ Motifs (folds) (supersecondary structure)


➢ They are specific arrangement of several secondary structure
elements
✓ all  helix
✓ all  sheet
✓ both
➢ Motifs can be found as recurring structures in numerous
proteins.
➢ Globular proteins are composed of different motifs folded
together.
18
❖Intrinsically Disordered Proteins

➢ Contain protein segments that lack definable structure

➢ Composed of amino acids whose higher concentration forces less-defined structure


✓ Lys, Arg, Glu, and Pro

➢ Disordered regions can conform to many different proteins, facilitating interaction


with numerous different partner proteins.

19
4. Quaternary Structure

➢ A quaternary structure is formed by the assembly of individual polypeptides


into a larger functional cluster.

20
❖ Protein Folding
➢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 or cold
✓ pH extremes
✓ organic solvents
✓ chaotropic agents: urea and guanidinium hydrochloride (interfere weak interactions)

Example: Ribonuclease Refolding Experiment


➢ Ribonuclease is a small protein that contains eight Cys linked via four
disulfide bonds.
➢ Urea in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol fully denatures ribonuclease.
➢ When urea and 2-mercaptoethanol are removed, the protein spontaneously
refolds, and the correct disulfide bonds are reformed.
➢ The sequence alone determines the native conformation.
➢ The experiment is quite “simple” but so important it earned Chris Anfinsen
the 1972 Chemistry Nobel Prize.
21
Chaperones Prevent Misfolding and Aggregation of Unfolded Peptides

➢ The chaperones do not actively promote the folding of the


substrate protein, but instead prevent aggregation of
unfolded peptides.

➢ For a population of polypeptide molecules, some fraction


of the molecules released at the end of the cycle are in the
native conformation.

Protein Misfolding Is the Basis of Numerous Human Diseases

➢ Native (correctly folded)  amyloid is a soluble globular protein,


➢ Misfolded  amyloid promotes aggregation at newly exposed protein-
protein interface.
➢ Correctly folded helices are lost and peptides form  strands,  helices,
and  sheets.

22

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