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Bioinformatica I The amino acids

Bioinformatica I

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Bioinformatica I. The amino acids. Things to do today. Proteins (high speed sneak preview) Primary structure Secondary structure Tertiary structure The amino acids One amino acid Our first protein A closer look at the amino acids Secondary structure preferences. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bioinformatica I

Bioinformatica I

The amino acids

Page 2: Bioinformatica I

Things to do today• Proteins (high speed sneak preview)

– Primary structure– Secondary structure– Tertiary structure

• The amino acids– One amino acid– Our first protein– A closer look at the amino acids– Secondary structure preferences

Page 3: Bioinformatica I

Our goal for today:a different view on proteins

Page 4: Bioinformatica I

Protein?

Protein!

Page 5: Bioinformatica I

Proteins• Primary structure

– A.K.A. “the sequence”

• Secondary structure– Short stretches form distinct ‘substructures’

• Helices• Strands• Turns & Loops

• Tertiary structure– The arrangement of secondary structure elements with

respect to each other

Page 6: Bioinformatica I

Primary structure

Page 7: Bioinformatica I

Proteins• Primary structure

– A.K.A. “the sequence”

• Secondary structure– Short stretches form distinct ‘substructures’

• Helices• Strands• Turns & Loops

• Tertiary structure– The arrangement of secondary structure elements with

respect to each other

Page 8: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure - helix

Page 9: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure - strands

Page 10: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure - turn

Page 11: Bioinformatica I

Proteins• Primary structure

– A.K.A. “the sequence”

• Secondary structure– Short stretches form distinct ‘substructures’

• Helices• Strands• Turns & Loops

• Tertiary structure– The arrangement of secondary structure elements with respect to

each other

Page 12: Bioinformatica I
Page 13: Bioinformatica I

From sequence to structure?

Page 14: Bioinformatica I

“When you understand the amino acids, you understand everything”

Page 15: Bioinformatica I

The amino acids

A short introduction

Page 16: Bioinformatica I

One amino acid

- Cα is at the heart of the amino acid- Cα, C N and O are called backbone atoms - R can be any of the 20 side chains

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Our first protein

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Our first protein• We now have an oligomer

• Proteins are made upfrom 20 different amino acids

• String of amino acids is called“primary structure”

Page 19: Bioinformatica I

The 20 amino acidsA Ala Alanine C Cys CysteineD Asp Aspartic acid (Aspartate)E Glu Glutamic acid (Glutamate)F Phe PhenylalanineG Gly GlycineH His HistidineI Ile IsoleucineK Lys LysineL Leu LeucineM Met MethionineN Asn AsparagineP Pro ProlineQ Gln GlutamineR Arg ArginineS Ser SerineT Thr ThreonineV Val ValineW Trp TryptophanY Tyr Tyrosine

Page 20: Bioinformatica I

The 20 amino acidsThe side chains, R, determine the differences in the structural and chemical properties of the 20 ‘natural’ amino acids.

The 20 amino acids can, for example, be classified as follows:

HydrophobicAliphatic Ala, Leu, Ile, ValAromatic Phe, Tyr, Trp, (His)

HydrophilicPolar Asn, GlnAlcoholic Ser, Thr, (Tyr)Charged Arg, Lys, Asp, Glu, (His)

Inbetween:Sulfur-containing Met, CysSpecial Gly (no R), Pro (cyclic)

Several amino acids belong in more than one category.

Page 21: Bioinformatica I

•There are many ways to characterize the properties of amino acids. The ones most useful and most commonly used are:

•Hydrophobicity•Size•Charge•Secondary structure preference•Alcoholicity•Aromaticity

•And on top of that there are some special characteristics like bridge forming by cysteines, rigidity of prolines, titrating at physiological pH of histidine, flexibility of glycines, etc.

Page 22: Bioinformatica I

Hydrophobic

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Aromatic

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Hydrophilic - neutral

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Hydrophilic - charged

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Sulfur - containing

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Really special

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Cysteines are extra special

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• amino acids don’t fall neatly into classes--they are different combinations of small/large, charged/uncharged, polar/nonpolar properties

• the properties of a residue type can also vary with conditions/environment

Key points about the character of amino acid side chains

Page 30: Bioinformatica I

Obviously, there are relations between the physico-chemical characteristics of the amino

acids and their secondary structure preference.

Page 31: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure preferences

Page 32: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure - helix

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Secondary structure - helix• Helices pack because of the hydrogen bonds and because of the hydrophobic

packing of side chains along the length of the helix.

• Certain residues do this hydrophobic packing better than others, and those residues are thus good for a helix.

Remember: AMELK

Page 34: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure - strands

Page 35: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure - strands• Also strands pack because hydrophobic packing of side chains along the length of

the strand.

• Certain residues do this hydrophobic packing better than others, and those residues are thus good for a strands. -branched residues (Ile, Thr, Val) are very good for strands, and so are the large hydrophobic residues.

Remember: VITWYF

Page 36: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure - turn

Page 37: Bioinformatica I

Secondary structure - turns• To create a turn the backbone needs to be bent pretty sharply, and some residues

are really good at that.

• Glycine is special because it is so flexible, so it can easily make the sharp turns and bends needed in a -turn. Proline is special because it is so rigid; you could say that it is pre-bent for the turn. Aspartic acid, asparagine, and serine have in common that they have short side chains that can form hydrogen bonds with the own backbone. These hydrogen bonds compensate the energy loss caused by bending the chain into a

• Remember: PSDNG

Page 38: Bioinformatica I

A common theme

• Most secondary structure elements are located at the surface of the protein

• For helices and strands that means that there is a part facing the ‘outside’ and a part that’s facing the ‘inside’

Page 39: Bioinformatica I

What goes where?

Page 40: Bioinformatica I

Hydrophobicity

Hydrophobicity is the most important characteristic of amino acids. It is the hydrophobic effect that drives proteins towards folding.

Actually, it is all done by water. Water does not like hydrophobic surfaces. When a protein folds, exposed hydrophobic side chains get buried, and release water of its sad duty to sit against the hydrophobic surfaces of these side chains.

Water is very happy in bulk water because there it has on average 3.6 H-bonds and about six degrees of freedom.

So, whenever we discuss protein structure, folding, and stability, it is all the entropy of water, and that is called the hydrophobic effect.

Page 41: Bioinformatica I

When hydrophobic objects come together in water, the number of unhappy waters go down, and that is good for stability.

Free waters are happy waters.