LECTURE 1: PRINCIPLES OF BIOMOLECULAR STRUCTURES Flashcards
Structure Dictates Function + Most Drugs Target Proteins:
1) What are 4 roles proteins play
2) what confers the role of the protein
1) recognition of other molecules, enzymatic catalysis, signal transduction switch, structural proteins
2) roles are conferred by the structure of the protein
Levels of Biomolecular Structure:
1) how many AA and nucleotides are there
2) what are the varying levels of proteins/nucleotides
1) 20 AA or 4 nucleotides
2)
1º: sequence of amino acids/nucleotides
2º: conformation adopted by backbone/main chain of polymer
* polypeptides: form -helices or -chains
* nucleic acids: adopt different types of helical conformation (A- or B- forms)
3º: 3D configuration or fold of the 2º structure elements + linkers between them
4º association of >1 folded chains (3º structures)
Structure of AA:
1) what are the 3 groups found in an AA/what groups does an AA consist of
2) what does the variable group/side chain do
3) what is the molecular geometry and stereoisomer of AA
1)
o Amino group: NH2
o Acid group: COOH
o R-variable-group
2) Side-chain and defines the AA type
* AA are classified according to the R-group chemistry
* Some AA can be found in 2 different groups
3) All groups are attached to the C with tetrahedral geometry
o Most natural AA are in L-stereoisomer
Aliphatic AA:
1) list all aliphatic AA
1)
o Glycine
o Alanine
o Proline
o Valine
o Leucine
Aliphatic AA:
1) where are pro and val often found in the structure of a protein and why?
2) What 2 aliphatic AA are mildly hydrophobic, so where are they found
1) Gly + Pro are often found in loops because of their unique:
o Backbone flexibility glycine
o Backbone rigidity proline
2) Val + Leu are mildly hydrophobic (.˙. found in the core)
Hydrophobic AA:
1) list
2) what AA can also be aliphatic
3) where are these AA mostly found
1)
o Isoleucine
o Methionine
o Tryptophan
o Phenylalanine
2) isoleucine
3) hydrophobic core
Polar AA:
1) list
2) what do these AA consist of in their side chain
3) what is the function of these types of side chains
4) which AA have electronegative atoms
1)
o Serine
o Threonine
o Tyrosine
o Asparagine
o Glutamine
o Cysteine
2) amides (electronegative) + nucleophillic
3)
- Side chains with electronegative atoms act as e- donors for H-bonds
- Nucleophilic side-chains can be implicated in enzymatic catalysis
4) serine, threonine, tyrosine, cysteine
Charged AA
1) list basic
2) list acidic
3) what are the charges of acidic vs basic AA @ pH 7
1)
o Lysine
o Arginine
o Histidine
2)
o Aspartate
o Glutamate
3) basic: +ve @ pH 7
acidic : -ve @ pH
Ionizable Groups in Proteins
1) Some side chains have what property that allows them to do what type of RXN
2) What affects the reactivity of these side chains @ pH 7 and what is its general rule
3) give an example of how different reactivity @ pH 7 allows for preferential reaction with N-terminus of a protein at varying pH
1) Exchangeable H+ –> acid-base RXN
2) pKa, increase pKa = weaker acid
3) @ physiological pH 7.4:
o Terminal -amino group will be partically uncharged (NH2)
♣ Therefore can react with a free e- pair
o Side-chain lysine epsilon-amino group (terminal) will be charged (NH3+)
Peptide Bond:
1) How is an peptide bond formed and what is lost in the RXN
2) how many resonance structures are there and whats the minor structure
3) what does the resonance structure do
4) draw the RXN
1) through condensation RXN where H2O is lost
2) two resonance forms
♣ Minor/less favored has C=N+ and C-O-
3) Makes all atoms involved to be in the same plane
4)
Cis or Trans Peptide Bond:
1) How do these positions impact configuration
2) Cis: X-Z
a) what does this mean
b) whats the issue
c) how often is it observed in protein structures
3) Trans: X-Z
a) what does this mean
b) whats the issue
4) Cis + Trans: X-Pro
a) what does this mean
b) what is the issue and its implication
c) what is this important and what catalyzes the exchange between the 2 forms
1) both cause planar configuration for peptide bond
2) a) The 2 (C alpha + R-group) are on the same side
b) causes them to clash/steric hinderance
c) rarely observed
3) a) The 2 (C alpha + R-group) are on opposite sides
b) no issue because they don’t clash with each other
4) a) C gamma of the side-chain/R-group forms covalent bond with N of backbone (which is already bound to C-alpha)
b) Therefore, clashing occurs in both configurations (cis + trans) with a 50:50 ratio
- Both have similar energies
c) This is important because:
o Enzymes called proline isomerase catalyze the exchange between these 2 forms to facilitate protein folding
Torsion Angles in Polypeptides:
1) what is the polypeptide bond in terms of planarity
2) therefore, what are the only variable torsion angles in a polypeptide
3) why are only certain combinations of these angles possible
1) planar
2)
o Phi angle: N — C-alpha
o Psi angle: Calpha — C=O
3) because clashes between the side-chains + carbonyl oxygen (C=O)
ALPHA HELIX:
1) what kind of phi + psi torsion angles
2) alpha-helix formed by L-AA is what position
3) 2 ways the helix is stabilized
4) explain the bond between i and i+4
5) where do side chains of helix stick out to
1) negative phi + psi torsion angle
2) right handed
3)
a) H-bonds between the carbonyl oxygen (C=O) of residue i and the amide group i+4
b) dipole (overall strong with axis of helix)
4) at AA 5, there will be a H-bond between the oxygen of C=O and amide group
5) Side chains stick out of helix and all point outwards in the same direction
BETA STRAND:
1) what kind of phi + psi torsion angles
2) what shift do these types of angles give the beta strand
3) can it stand on its own?
4) how is it stabilized
5) properties of beta sheet
6) where do side chains of helix stick out to
1) Negative phi and positive psi torsion angles
2) Gives an extended configuration
3) Cannot stand on its own and instead needs to be stabilized
4) Cross-strand H-bonds in both parallel + anti-parallel -sheets
5)
- sheets are pleated by virtue of the tetrahedral C-alpha
- sheets can be parallel or anti-parallel
6) The side chains stick outwards pointing in alternate directions
Proteins Fold:
1) what dictates protein folding
2) what is the tertiary structure
4) what is a key step in protein folding and is it efficient
5) where are hydrophobic + aliphatic + aromatic AA found + whats an exception
6) where are charged + polar AA found
7) Where is proline found and why is it special
8) where is glycine found and why is it special
1) primary sequence
2) 3º structure of a protein is the specific arrangement of 2º structure elements With loops + turns connecting them
4) Packing of side-chains to form hydrophobic core + other stabilizing interaction
♣ Packing inside the hydrophobic core tend to be very efficient, leaving little empty cavities
5) tend to be within the core
- Some exceptions apply where aliphatic are exposed
6) exposed to the environment
7) Can induce sharp kinks in the protein
o Allows it to have specific folds + loops
8) Has large liberty because it has no side-chain
- Has a wider degree of freedom in terms of phi + psi angles