Unit II- Forces and Structures Flashcards
Van der Waal’s interactions
- mutually induced dipole
- atoms like to be near each other
- more or less independent of atom type
- manifested in proteins by tight packing of interior atoms
- proteins fold as to maximize van der Waals energy, evident by packed cores
- Geckos use VdW forces to adhere to a variety of surfaces
- only one packing solution, if you change the shape of one of the interior pieces that leaves a gap and causes crowding, it will destabilize the protein
The hydrophobic effect
- tendency of nonpolar molecules to interact with each other rather than with water
- Nonpolar= no charges, no dipoles, no hydrogen bonding groups
- the hydrophobic effect is the major driving force for folding
Arg- water loving, 1 molecule in hexane, 300 billion in water
Leu- water hating, 1 molecule in water, 760 in hexane
-effect is due exclusively to the properties of water, clathrate-like structures are energetically costly
Secondary structures
- when you turn on the noncovalent forces
- alpha-helix, beta-sheet, beta-turn
The alpha helix
- most frequently observed secondary structure in proteins
- average protein about 31% alpha helix
- in the alpha helix the bonds are between the peptide NH of residue i and the peptide CO of residue i+4
- the side chains extend outward and spiral around the rod
- has periodicity of 3.6 residues
- rise 1.5 angstroms (4.5 if fully extended, therefore helix is compressed)
- helical rotation = 100 degrees per residues
- every forth amino acid is close in space
Why 3.6 residue repeat
- favorable backbone dihedral angles
- near optimal hydrogen bond geometry
- good van der Waals contacts between backbone atoms
- other types of helices possible, but less common
backbone-backbone interactions
backbone-side chain interactions
side chain-side chain interactions: electrostatic (e.g. Lys-Glu), H-bonding (Asn-Asp), hydrophobic (leu-Val), and van der Waals
Amino acid preference for alpha helix formation
Helix former: Ala
-lack of side chain suggests “default” backbone conformation is helical
Strong helix breaks: Pro, Gly
- Pro lacks NH to hydrogen bond
- Gly is flexible
Medium helix breakers: B-branched or bulky (Val, Thr, Trp, Phe)
-lose much rotational freedom (entropy) when in a helix
Helix indfferent: long, straight chains (Arg, Lys, Glu
-lose less rotational freedom
Alpha helix and proteins
- seldom big enough to fully bury a helix in the interior
- more often one side of the helix will face towards the interior and other will face out
- stabilized by burial of nonpolar surface on the protein face and exposure of polar groups on the solvent face
- many proteins are tightly associated with cell membranes
- most membrane anchors consist of several helicecs containing mostly nonpolar residues
- these residues strongly interact with the hydrocarbon interior of the lipid bilayer via the hydrophobic effect and generally do not dissociate unless the membrane is disrupted by detergents
The beta sheet
- the average protein contains 28 % beta sheet, the second most common type of secondary structure
- made up of two or more beta-strands
- the polypeptide chain is straight and nearly completely extended
- H -bonds are formed between peptide groups of each strand
- Beta sheets are fully hydrogen bonded structures
- pleated appearance
- pointing in the same direction (parallel) less common because H bonds are slightly bent, or head to tail (antiparallel)
Beta sheet info
- favorable backbone dihedral angles
- phi, psi angles less than 140 degrees, chain is nearly fully extended
- rise 3.5 angstrom
- periodicity=2
- straight hydrogen bonds between strands
- interaction between adjacent strands (tertiary interaction) - Amyloid
- tend to form insoluble aggregates
- amphipathic
The reverse Beta turn
- 1/4 of protein structure
- several types
- much sequence variability
- required: Gly
- preferred: Pro
- other positions: solvent exposed, polar residues
Irregular structure
- sometimes called “random coil”
- generally only random in the sense that it is not periodic
- usually has specific structure
- surface loops are critical to function
- loops help give proteins their individuality
Motifs and domains
- secondary structures are assembled in a limited number of patterns to form domains
- domains are added, deleted, and swapped to generate new structures and functions
- Motifs- small, simple structures, unstable
- Domains-visual thing, bigger more complex
Helix-turn-helix Motif
- consist of short stretches of secondary structure and are usually not stable by themselves
- used in molecular recognition-to bind other molecules tightly and specifically
- one of most common elements that recognizes specific sequences of DNA
- -found in homeodomains
- consists of a recognition alpha-helix and a support alpha-helix, connected by turn
- sits on the major groove and binds to specific sequence of polypeptide
-the i,i+3, i+4 spacing of hydrophobic residues helps determine that the polypeptide chain adopts the HTH fold
Zinc finger motif
- DNA binding motif
- bind DNA weakly
- TF proteins use 2-40 of these repeats to bind DNA
- Zn2+ is to help hold the structure together without an extensive hydrophobic core.
- hydrophobic side chains are still used to stabilize the helix which binds the major groove of DNA
Coiled-coil domain
- domains are stable, semi-independent units of structures
- residues within the domain interact more with each other than with residues outside of it
- found in fibrous proteins and transcription factors
- heptad repeat, a-f. Hydrophobic- a and d, e and g are usually opposite charge
-also used in protein-protein recognition, mechanical force transduction (myosin tails), and viral penetration