1 / 30

Amino Acids, Peptides & Proteins

Amino Acids, Peptides & Proteins. a -amino acid:. Amino Acids. Are >500 naturally occurring amino acids identified in living organisms Humans synthesize 10 of the 20 they use. The other 10 are called essential amino acids. Amino Acids, Peptides & Proteins. Peptides & proteins:

dayton
Télécharger la présentation

Amino Acids, Peptides & Proteins

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Amino Acids, Peptides & Proteins a-amino acid:

  2. Amino Acids • Are >500 naturally occurring amino acids identified in living organisms • Humans synthesize 10 of the 20 they use. The other 10 are called essential amino acids.

  3. Amino Acids, Peptides & Proteins • Peptides & proteins: • Derived from amino acids through peptide or amide bonds. • The amine and acid ends of amino acids couple to form amide (peptide) bonds • in peptides/proteins/enzymes. • Proteins fold into well-defined structures. The hydrophobic residues • segregate to the water-free interior, while the polar/charged residues favor • the exterior.

  4. Peptides: Coupling AAs Together • Peptides & Proteins: Linear oligomers of the 20 amino acids • Peptides ≤ 20 amino acids; Proteins > 20 amino acids • Functions: • Catalysis - enzymes • Membrane channels • Structural support (boundaries) • Regulate metabolites (storage & transport) • Antibodies; cellular signaling (recognition & binding)

  5. Aspartame • Discovery story: • In 1965 by Jim Schlatter • working on discovering new • treatments for gastric • ulcers. • Made a dipeptide intermediate, • which he spilled on his hand • Tested the dipeptide in coffee Aspartame • 4 calories per gram • 180 times sweeter than sugar

  6. Aspartame: A Dipeptide Two main constituents: Phenylalanine Aspartic acid Goal: Make the methyl ester of phenylalanine 2. Make a peptide (amide) bond between phenylalanine and aspartic acid Overall - two main steps to this synthesis

  7. Dipeptides: Coupling of 2 AAs Consider the synthesis of the dipeptide val-ala (valine-alanine): • Coupling of amino acids is an application of nucleophilic acyl substitution • Issue of selectivity arises: • val + ala  val-ala + ala-val + • val-val + ala-ala • A mixture of 4 possible amide • products

  8. Merrifield’s Solid-Phase Synthesis In order to get the desired peptide (val-ala), the appropriate NH2 and CO2 units must be joined. The selectivity is accomplished through the use of protecting groups. Merrifield’s approach: Protect N-terminus of valine Protect C-terminus of alanine Couple valine and alanine Deprotect to get dipeptide

  9. Merrifield’s Solid-Phase Synthesis 1. Protection of valine’s N-terminus:

  10. Merrifield’s Solid-Phase Synthesis 2. Protection of alanine’s C-terminus: Attach the C-terminus to a plastic bead (solid-phase synthesis!) • Benefits of solid-phase: • Ease of attachment • Ease of removal; just filter away from product solution

  11. Merrifield’s Solid-Phase Synthesis 3. Couple valine and alanine:

  12. Merrifield’s Solid-Phase Synthesis 3. Deprotection of Fmoc & bead:

  13. Proteins • Amino acid polymers; when long enough, they fold back on themselves to • create intricate, well-defined 3D structures • The structure of a protein specifies its function. • The AA sequence specifies its structure. • The AA chain typically adopts regional sub-structures which sum together • to deliver the overall structure of the protein. • Forces/Factors that dictate protein folding: • Planarity of amide bonds • H-bonding • Hydrophobic interactions • Electrostatic Attraction • Disulfide linkages

  14. Proteins 1. Planarity of amide bonds:

  15. Proteins 2. H-bonding: H-bond worth ~ 5 kcal/mol H-bonds orient the chain

  16. Proteins 3. Hydrophobic Interactions: Lots of hydrophobic interactions between Rs and H2O - unstable Protein folds to “clump” R groups together in the interior of protein to avoid H2O - very energetically favored

  17. Proteins 4. Electrostatic Attraction:

  18. Proteins 5. Disulfide Linkages: • Covalent S-S • Drastically alters shape • Worth ~ 50 kcal/mol

  19. Proteins • Overall, these 5 structural/energetic features leads to the final 3D protein • structure. However, predicting the structure from the amino acid sequence • is still a challenge. • Hierarchy of Structural Elements of Proteins • Primary structure: AA sequence • Secondary structure: discrete sub-structural elements (modules) a-helix & b-sheet a-helix: see board for depiction Note: Internal H-bonding The way the side chains line up 3.6 AAs per turn b-sheet: see board for depiction Note: Chain-to-chain H-bonding Alternating (up-down, up-down) Pattern of R groups

  20. Proteins • Hierarchy of Structural Elements of Proteins 3. Teritary Structure: the individual secondary structural elements organized in 3D. See board for depiction. 4. Quaternary Structure: non-covalent complexation of different proteins.

  21. Lipids • Structurally diverse, derived from living organisms • Functional theme is hydrophobicity - water avoiding due to long alkyl chains • Often found at the interface of aqueous compartments • 3 Major Classes of Lipids: • Fats and oils • Phospholipids • Cholesterol & derivatives (steroids)

  22. Lipids Fats & Oils Derived from glycerol and fatty acids: Weak intra- molecular attractive forces between chains

  23. Lipids • Fats & Oils • In order for a fat to melt, these weak dispersive forces must be broken. • More contacts, the better the packing and the higher the m.p. of the fat • Less contacts, worse packing of chains, the lower the m.p. Unsaturated Fats: Oils are polyunsaturated - lots of alkenes & have low mp due to less packing Butter has very little unsaturated & has higher mp

  24. Lipids Soaps & Detergents • Hydrolyzed fats • A long chain carboxylate molecule:

  25. Lipids Soaps & Detergents In H2O, forms a micelle. Grease & dirt get trapped in the interior. Micelle is H2O soluble so can wash out dirt.

  26. Lipids 2. Phospholipids: • Have hydrophobic and hydrophilic regions • Forms membranes • Precursors to prostaglandins

  27. Lipids 2. Phospholipids: • Forms membranes: self-organize at certain concentrations to form bilayers • Membranes are largely impermeable to charged species that exist in biological environments. Cell membrane

  28. Lipids 3. Cholesterol & Steroids Cholesterol: 27 carbons 4 rings 8 stereocenters Derived from terpenes Cholesterol is a precursor to several steroidal hormones: Testosterone (male hormone) Estrone (female hormone)

  29. Lipids Cholesterol is a precursor to several steroidal hormones: Testosterone (male hormone) Estrone (female hormone) These hormones operate at the genetic level (turn genes on and off) to control biochemistry. They are recognized by specific protein receptors.

  30. Antioxidants & Chocolate • Antioxidants: • Protect against cardiovascular disease, cancer and cataracts • Thought to slow the effects of aging • Chocolate: • High levels of antioxidants - complex mixtures of phenolic comounds • By weight, has higher concentration of antioxidants than red wine or • Green tea • 20x higher concentration of antioxidants than tomatoes Dark chocolate has more than 2x the level of antioxidants as milk chocolate. Side note: The main fatty acid in chocolate, stearic acid, does not appear to raise blood cholesterol levels the way other saturated fatty acids do.

More Related