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Protein Structure and Bioinformatics

Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

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What is protein structure?

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Page 1: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Protein Structure and Bioinformatics

Page 2: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Chapter 2

• What is protein structure?

• What are proteins made of?

• What forces determines protein structure?

• What is protein secondary structure?

• What are the primary secondary structures?

• How are protein structures determined experimentally?

• How can structures be predicted in silico?

Page 3: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

What is protein structure?

Page 4: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Proteins are linear polymers that fold up by themselves…mostly.

Page 5: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

What are proteins made of?

Page 6: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

The parts of a protein

H

OH

“Backbone”: N, C, C, N, C, C…

R: “side chain”

Page 7: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Two or more Amino Acids:Polypeptide

Page 8: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Peptide Bond

Page 9: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

The amino acidsThey can be grouped by properties in many ways according to the chemical and physical properties (e.g. size) of the side chain.

Here is one grouping based on chemical properties:

•Basic: proton acceptors•Acidic: proton donors•Uncharged polar: have polar groups like CONH2 or CH2OH•Nonpolar: tend to be hydrophobic•Weird: proline links to the N in the main chain•Strong: Cysteine can make “disulphide bridges”

Page 10: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Simplest Side Group: hydrogenGlycine

Page 11: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

All others start with a methyl groupSimplest is Alanine

Page 12: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Add phenyl group to Alanine:Phenylalanine

Page 13: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Add hydroxyl group to Alanine:Serine

Page 14: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Add SH group to Alanine:Cysteine

Page 15: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Add carboxyl group to Alanine:Aspartic Acid

Page 16: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

What forces determine protein structure?

Page 17: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Minimum free energy

• Proteins tend to fold naturally to the state of minimum free energy (Christian Anfinsen).

• This state is determined by forces due to interactions among the residues.

• Proteins usually fold in an aqueous environment, so interactions with water molecules are key.

• Some proteins fold in membranes, so interactions with lipids are important.

Page 18: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Atomic Bonds

• Covalent bonds – strong!– Single bonds can usually rotate freely– Double bonds are rigid

• Hydrogen bonds – weak – Oxygen and Nitrogen share a proton (Hydrogen)

• Van der Waals forces – weaker still

Page 19: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Planar Peptide bondFlexible C-alpha bonds

Single bondsrotate

Resonance makes Peptide bonds planar

The C-alpha bonds havetwo free rotation angles: phi and psi

Page 20: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

If you plot phi vs. psi, you see that some combinations are prefered

Ramachandran Plots

Ideal Real (a kinase)

Page 21: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

What is secondary structure?

Page 22: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Certain repetitive structures are energetically favorable

• These make lots of hydrogen bonds among residues.

• They don’t encounter lots of steric hindrances.• They occur over and over again in natural

proteins.• Some combinations of secondary structures

are so common they are called “folds” (e.g., the SCOP database of protein folds).

Page 23: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

What are the primary secondary structures?

Page 24: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Alpha Helix

• 3.6 amino acid (residues) per turn

• O(i) hydrogen bonds to N(i+4)

From book…correct?

Wikipedia

Page 25: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Beta Sheet

A. Three strands shownB. Anti-parallel sheetC. Parallel sheet

Sheets are usually curved and can even form barrels.

Page 26: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Beta Turns: getting around tight corners

• Steric hindrance determines whether a tight turn is possible

• R3’s side chain is usually Hydrogen (R3 is glycine)

Page 27: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Supersecondary Structure

A: beta-alpha-betaB: beta-meanderC: Greek-keyD: Greek-key

Page 28: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Tertiary Structure

Page 29: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Folds• Folds are way to classify proteins by tertiary structure• SCOP: Structural Classification of Proteins

Page 30: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

How is protein structure determined experimentally?

Page 31: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

X-ray crystallography• Needs crystallized proteins• Hard to get crystals• Very tough for hydrophobic

(e.g. transmembrane) proteins

• Better accuracy than NMR• Expensive:

$100,000/protein

Page 32: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

NMR spectroscopy

• Protons resonate at a frequency that depends on their chemical environment.

• This can be used to predict structure.• Does not require crystallization; protein may

be in solution.• Lower resolution than X-ray crystallography

Page 33: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Protein DataBank (PDB)

X-ray: 58,000NMR: 7,400

Page 34: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

How can protein structure be predicted in silico?

Page 35: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Tertiary structure prediction is still too hard

• Ab initio modeling– Uses primary sequence only– E.g., Rosetta

• Comparative modeling– Uses sequence alignment to

protein of known structure– E.g., Modeller

Rosetta prediction

Page 36: Protein Structure and Bioinformatics. Chapter 2 What is protein structure? What are proteins made of? What forces determines protein structure? What is

Secondary Structure Prediction

• Much simpler to predict a small set of classes than to predict 3-D coordinates of atoms.

• Amino acids have different propensities for alpha helices, turns and beta sheets.

• Homology can also be used since fold is more conserved than sequence.