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Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

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Page 1: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Bio 98 - Lecture 3

Amino acids &

the peptide bond

Page 2: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

The 20 common amino acids

1. Building blocks of all proteins• proteins are linear heteropolymers of AAs• same 20 AA used in all life forms on earth

2. Other uses • neurotransmitters• metabolic energy• precursors to other molecules

3. Essential vs. non-essential• some bacteria are able to synthesize all

20 • humans can synthesize only 11 of the 20, the other 9 are essential in our diet

Page 3: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Structures and properties of amino acids

1. Structures• memorizing “groups” will help (see next slide)

2. Properties • abbreviations, pKa values, mass, pI (see last

slide)

Page 4: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond
Page 5: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

H3N-CH-C-O-

CH2

CH2

O C O-

Two examples of amino acids

+

O

H3N-CH-C-O-

CH3

+O

side chains

-amino-carboxyl

-carboxyl

glutamate glutamic acid

Glu, E

alanineAla, A

Page 6: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Free amino acids are zwitterions

Page 7: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Mirror images

Handedness of amino acids

Page 8: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Peptide bond formation

Sneak preview to Bio99:This reaction is catalyzed by the rRNA (ribozyme!) of the large subunit of the ribosome at a rate of about 15 per second!

Page 9: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

peptide bond

Structure of a dipeptide

NH-CH-C-O CH2

H3N-CH-C- CH2 O C O

+O O

CH3

aspartyl-phenylalanine-methyl ester aka aspartame (Nutrasweet®)

Page 10: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Polypeptides

Useful terms

1. Oligopeptide - a peptide of few amino acids• dipeptide: RF (Arg-Phe)• tripeptide: YES (Tyr-Glu-Ser)• tetrapeptide: HELP (His-Glu-Leu-Pro)

2. Polypeptide – many amino aids, no formal definition with regard to size

Page 11: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

3. Protein (applicable when mol wt > ~10,000 Da)

• cytochrome c (mitochondrial protein) 104 amino acids, mol wt 13,000 Da or 13 kDa• titin (structural protein in muscle) 34,350 amino acids, mol wt 2,993,000 Da or 3 MDa empirical chemical formula C132,983H211,861N36,149O40,883S693

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titin

As the largest known protein, titin also has the longest IUPAC name. The full chemical name, which starts with methionyl... and ends in ...isoleucine, contains 189,819 letters and is sometimes stated to be the longest word in the English language.

1 mole of titin would weigh 3 metric tons (~1 elephant)!Compare: 1 mole of H2O weighs 18 grams

Page 12: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

3. Protein (continued)

• most proteins have a molecular weight in the range of ~20,000 - ~80,000 Da

Left-to-right convention

+ OH3N-Phe-Gly-Ala-Val-Ser-C-O-amino or

N terminuscarboxyl or C terminus

F-G-A-V-S

Zwitterion at pH 7 (formal charges cancel)

Page 13: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Molecular weight calculations

Molecular weight• free amino acid vs amino acid residue in

protein Glu Ala-Glu-Phe-Gly

147.18 Da 129.12 Da

• amino acid residue masses are 18 mass units (Da) less than the free amino acid

• each peptide bond eliminates one H2O

• the molecular weight of a peptide/protein = sum of all residue masses + 18 Da

• the molecular weight of a peptide/protein = sum of all free AA masses - (NAA-1) * 18 Da

Page 14: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

• average residue mass of the 20 AAs = 118.9 Da / AA

• for a protein of typical composition, average residue mass is ~110 Da, because some amino acids occur more frequently than others in proteins

• so to estimate the mass of a 150 AA protein150 x 110 Da = 16,500 Da = 16.5 kDa

For our “monster” protein titin (34,340 residues) this would predict 3.7 MDa (about 0.7 MDa too high).

Estimating molecular weight of polypeptides

Page 15: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

OVERVIEW OF

AMINO ACID STRUCTURES

AND FUNCTION

Page 16: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond
Page 17: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

pKR = 8.2

Page 18: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Cysteines can form disulfide bonds

insulin

Page 19: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Insulin processing

insulin

Page 20: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

pKR = 10.0

Absorb UV light - used to determine [protein]

Page 21: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

Positively charged R groups

pKR = 10.5 pKR = 12.5 pKR = 6.0

Resonance stabilized N lone pair in double bond, therefore pKa is lower.

Page 22: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

pK1 = 1.82

H

pKR = 6.0 pK2 = 9.17

2

Histidine titration

+2 +1 0 -1

Page 23: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond

pKR = 3.7 pKR = 4.3

Page 24: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond
Page 25: Bio 98 - Lecture 3 Amino acids & the peptide bond