Protein Structure, Folding, Proteostasis (L2,3) Flashcards
How are IgG monoclonal antibodies made?
An antigen binds to one immature B cell among a pool of 1E8 immature B cells (each presenting UNIQUE antigen binding sites). Then the B cell matures and proliferates secreting IgG which can only bind to that single epitope.
Describe the 3D structure of IgG
It is a tetramer with 2 identical light chains and 2 identical heavy chains held together by disulfide bonds.
The antibody-binding surface is ____ and recognizes antigens via what interactions?
small;
1.Complimentary H bonding, 2.Electrostatic & VDW interactions
What is an epitope?
It is the site on the antigen to which an antibody binds to.
What do chaperonins do?
What are the 3 main types and which is most common?
They can help the particularly stubborn proteins (eg ACTIN and TUBULIN) attain a native fold.
- Group I (most common)
- HSP60 (eukaryotic cells)
- GroEL-GroES (bacteria)
Describe the problem that can arise with Islet Amyloid Polypeptide (IAPP)
IAPP, AKA Amylin, is an intrinsically disoredered peptide hormon that is co-secreted from pancreatic Islet cells w/ insulin at a 100:1 ratio (along w/ its precursor, proamylin).
Type II diabetes increases insulin demand which causes high levels of amylin and proamylin that form fibrillar amyloid plaques (by adopting beta-strand secondary structure) that lead to islet cell death from apoptosis.
Why is Protein Disulfide Isomerase (PDI) formed in the ER?
B/c lots of extracellular membrane proteins have disulfide bonds, and they are formed in the ER, so that is where the chaperone protein PDI needs to be to make sure everything goes smoothly.
What do Protein Disulfide Isomerases do?
They are a type of chaperone that reduce disulfide bonds so proper bonds can form
What do Peptidyl Prolyl Isomerases do?
Give an example
They are a type of chaperone that will change stereo isoforms from trans to cis or vice-versa.
15% of X-Prolyl peptide bonds in native proteins have cis conformations (85% have trans). But conversion from trans to cis is very slow so the PPIs will help the kinetically trapped (of the 15%) go from trans to cis.
What is glycosylation?
What is the purpose?
What are the 2 main types of glycosylation to amino acids?
The addition of sugar residues (oligosaccharaides) to proteins.
Purpose: alter solubility, promote protein-protein or cell-cell interactions, or PROTECT AGAINST PROTEOLYSIS.
1) O-linked glycosylation: occurs on OH groups (eg side chains of Ser and Thr)
2) N-linked glycosylation: occurs on amide groups (eg side chains of Asn and Gln)
Describe the HAT selection process
Use immortal myeloma cells that have mutations in enzymes required for the sythensis of Deoxyribonucleotides via the “salvage pathway” (Thus cells must sythesize them de novo). These myeloma cells will die in Hypoxanthine-aminopterin-thymadine (HAT) media b/c AMINOPTERIN INHIBITS DE NOVO SYNTHESIS.
After fusing mortal spleenic B-cells w/ immortal HAT-sensitive myeloma cells, select for them in HAT media b/c only the hybrids will be able synthesize DNA due to restored kinase function and they will have immortality from myeloma cells.
What are the 3 main causes of proteins to form amyloid filaments?
1) Amyloid diseases are inherited due to mutations in the gene that encode proteins that ultimately form fibrils
2) Some mutations inster poly glutamine (which is polar) into non-polar parts of proteins (eg huntingtin and ataxin proteins)
3) Some proteolytic fragments of the amyloid protein forms (eg aggregation of tau protein)
What do chaperone proteins do?
Name the 4 main types of chaperone proteins.
They rescue folded intermediates from kinetic traps (ie improperly folded states that have a lower free energy than the native state)
- Protein Disulfide Isomerase (PDIs)
- Peptidyl Prolyl Isomerase (PPIs)
- Non-ribosome Heat Shock Protein 70 (HSP70)
- Chaperonins
1) What is an Intrisically Disordered Protein (IDP)?
2) How do regulatory IDPs enhance their range of activity?
3) Why do many regulatory IDPs have “reversible regulation”?
1) An IDP is a protein with NO defined structure.
2) They adapt to diff binding partners b/c regulatory proteins exhibit varying degrees of disorder or unstructured regions.
3) Regulatory IDPs bind to targets relatively weakly allowing reversible regulation
What do Non-ribosome Heat Shock Protein 70s do?
How do they do this?
They help partially folded, stable intermediates that have more hydrophobic side chains on their surface than the native fold does go back to normal.
They do this through the hydrolysis of ATP