Protein Function I 9 Flashcards
Post translational modifications - Phosphorylation
- transfer of PO4^2- from ATP to Ser, Thr, or Tyr
- catalyzed by Kinases, removed by Phosphatases
- regulation of metabolism and signal transduction
- creates an overall negative charge
Serine -> Phosphoserine
Threonine -> phosphothreonine
Tyrosine -> phosphotyrosine
Post-translational modifications: glycosylation
- attachment of complex carbohydrate groups to Asn or Ser
- secreted, extracellular or lumenal proteins
- affects protein stability, targeting and recognition
- bacteria can be designed to bind to sugar groups
Post-translational modifications: proteolysis
- enzymatic cleavage of polypeptide chain at specific sites
- activation of other pro teases (eg. Thrombin and hemostasis)
- synthesis of peptide hormones
- if a protein has 3 connected chains, a superficial chain may be taken out by cleavage
- Proinsulin -> active form of insulin
Post-translational modification: ubiquitin and proteasomes
- cytosolic proteins are degraded in proteosome after ubiquitination
- organellar/extracellular proteins are degraded in lysosomes
Myoglobin
- myoglobin is a monomeric oxygen carrier in muscle cells: consists of 8 alpha helices (ancestor of hemoglobin)
- contains porphyrin heme prosthetic group, wedged between helices E and F
- burying heme in a hydrophobic pocket helps to prevent its oxidation to Fe3+
- makes iron stable
- Fe2+ is coordinated by poryphyrin ring to form heme (high affinity for oxygen)
- also coordinates to O2 and His F8
Oxygen binding to myoglobin is hyperbolic
- binding of oxygen to myoglobin can be expressed as a dissociation
- the fractional saturation (Y) of myoglobin with oxygen is given by bound Mb/Total Mb (conc)
- K is inversely proportional to the affinity of Mb for O2
- small Kd means high affinity
Myoglobin and Hemoglobin are homologous
- hemoglobin is a tetrameric protein (a2b2) that carries oxygen from lungs to tissues in blood
- despite only 18% sequence identity, Mb and Hb subunits have similar sequences
- invariant residues indicate critical function, while sequence difference indicates evolutionary divergence
- conservative mutations may not change the function
- homology can give clues to function
- area around heme is most structurally conserved
Oxygen binding to hemoglobin is sigmoidal
- Hb exhibits a sigmoidal O2 dissociation curve
- allows Hb to release much more oxygen than Mb could at lower oxygen pressure levels in tissue
- sigmoidal behaviour is typical of multisubunit allosteric proteins
- allows Hb to be a better oxygen transporter than Mb
Oxygen binding in Hb
- causes a structural change
- O2 binding to one subunit deoxy state moves helices E and F relative to eachother: this is transmitted to other subunits
- heme group is planar in relaxed (oxygenated form) otherwise it is displaced from the centre of the ring
Hemoglobin exists in 2 states with different O2 affinity
- hemoglobin can exist in 2 states that differ in intersubunit contacts with O2 affinity:
- The T (taut, tense, deoxy) state, salt bridges between subunits favour a low affinity conformation
- The R (relaxed, oxy) state, these ionic contacts are broken and the O2 affinity is increased
-O2 binding to one subunit in the T state moves helices E and F relative to eachother: this is transmitted to other subunits
Hemoglobin: allosteric effectors
- H+ (Bohr effect)
- CO2 production in tissues: formation of H2CO3 (dissociates to H+ and HCO3^-
- decreased pH protonates key histidine side chained at ab interface (stabilizes T)
- CO2
- reacts directly with N-terminal amino groups to form carbamate (stabilizes T)
- some Co2 is transported to lungs this way
- BPG (regulatory molecule)
- negatively charges regulatory molecule binds at positive charged hole at centre of Hb, only in T state (stabilizes T)
- BPG is increased at high altitude and in chronic anemia (favouring O2 release)
- fetus Hb doesnt bind BPG (higher affinity for O2
Molecular basis of sickle cell
- A point mutation in the DNA codes for structurally altered HbS
- In the deoxygenated state, HbS polymerizes into long, rope-like fibres
- Intracellular fibres of HbS distort the erythrocytes into sickle cell shape
- cannot carry oxygen
List of post-translational modifications
- phosphorylation
- glycosylation
- proteolysis