Unit II- Forces and Structures Flashcards

1
Q

Van der Waal’s interactions

A
  • 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
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2
Q

The hydrophobic effect

A
  • 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

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3
Q

Secondary structures

A
  • when you turn on the noncovalent forces

- alpha-helix, beta-sheet, beta-turn

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4
Q

The alpha helix

A
  • 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
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5
Q

Why 3.6 residue repeat

A
  • 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

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6
Q

Amino acid preference for alpha helix formation

A

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

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7
Q

Alpha helix and proteins

A
  • 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
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8
Q

The beta sheet

A
  • 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)
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9
Q

Beta sheet info

A
  • 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
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10
Q

The reverse Beta turn

A
  • 1/4 of protein structure
  • several types
  • much sequence variability
  • required: Gly
  • preferred: Pro
  • other positions: solvent exposed, polar residues
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11
Q

Irregular structure

A
  • 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
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12
Q

Motifs and domains

A
  • 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
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13
Q

Helix-turn-helix Motif

A
  • 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

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14
Q

Zinc finger motif

A
  • 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
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15
Q

Coiled-coil domain

A
  • 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

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16
Q

DNA binding domain of GCN4 TF

A
  • DNA binding domain of GCN4 transcription factor is a parallel, coiled-coil homodimer
  • the C terminal half of the molecule is a classical heptad repeat “leucine zipper”
  • in absence of DNA, the DNA binding half of GCN4 is not structured, the extensive interactions with DNA (electrostatic, H-bonding, hydrophobic, van der Waals) is what causes the N-terminal half to adopt the fully helical structure shown
17
Q

Influenza haemmagglutin

A
  • trimer of identical subunits, made of two domains
  • the stalk domain is comprised of a triple-stranded coiled coil with each monomer contributing one helix
  • it is a molecular harpoon, binds to human cells via the head domain
  • virus is endocytosed into the cell and in vesicles below -5.0, a conformational change take place in which an extended loop folds into an alpha helix
  • the coiled coil can then length and then it can get out of the vacuolar membrane, release viral RNA into the cell
18
Q

Structure based design of viral entry inhibitors

A
  • many viruses in addition to influenza use similar harpooning mechanisms to gain entry into cells (HIV, SARS, ebola)
  • the mechanism of entry involves membrane distortion mediated by the harpoon protein
  • small molecule inhibitors can be developed that specifically target different steps in this mechanism

HIV gets in via gp120 and gp41 binding CD4 and CXCR4/CCR5 coreceptors, harpooning because of receptor
-FDA fusion inhibitors

19
Q

Gp41 bound to a mirror image peptide inhibitor

A
  • D-amino acids; L-amino acids are the normal enanatiomer
  • D version of the peptide will bind to the L version of gp41 with exactly the same affinity and specificity
  • the D peptide inhibitor above binds to gp 41 more tightly than Fuzeon and is not degraded by body proteins
20
Q

Bacterial pore-forming toxin

A
  • how hydrophobic/ hydrophilic amino acid patterning determines structure-function relationships
  • how different representations of protein structure are useful to visualize structure-function relationships
  • one mechanism by which pathogenic microorganisms cause sickness and death
  • how small molecules may be devised to combat these microorganisms
  • pore forming proteins self associate to and insert into the plasma membrane of the host cells, forming channels of up to several nanometers
  • this effectively pokes a hole in the cell membrane, causing leakage and cell death
21
Q

Solvent accessible surface area of hemolysin

A
  • gives the most accurate view of how a protein actually looks in the cell or in solution
  • the outside of the beta barrel domain interacts with the plasma membrane- is completely devoid of charges and is exclusively and is hydrophobic
  • the regions of the protein that interact with aqueous solution are speckled with charages
22
Q

Proteins going wrong

A
  • when something goes wrong in the body, a protein defect is almost always to blame
  • protein folding in virto and in vivo
  • no cellular factors required
  • native structures is lowest energy state
  • 3D structure is encoded in 1D sequence
23
Q

Protein misfolding

A
  • clear that is a complex process which involves formation of intermediates
  • many causes folding follows a sequential mechanism
  • the protein is vulnerable to aggregation when in the partially folded formations because they tend to expose hydrophobic residues that have yet to be buried in the hydrophobic core

-the cell is extremely crowded- competition between hydrophobic collapse within the same molecule and with other protein and membrane molecules (aggregate formation)