Protein
Protein
Protein
Introduction
Proteins are very large molecules with molecular weights that range from 6000 to millions of grams per mole. While proteins can be used as an energy source by the body, this is not their primary role. Proteins are essential for the catalysis of most of the body's chemical reactions, for structural support and for the transport/storage of vital nutrients. As proteins and amino acids (the components of proteins) are not stored in the body, some protein intake is required each day.
Isoelectric Point (pI): is the pH at which the amino acid has no net charge. The isoelectric point of an amino acid is the average of the pKa values of the protonation transitions on either side of the isoelectric species. For example, aspartic acid isoelectric species exists in the pH domain between pKa1 (2.1) and pKa2 (3.9). Thus, the pI of aspartic acid is 3.0. Reactive groups in amino acids include -NH2 and -COOH groups and groups present on side R chains. In peptides and proteins only the side chain is available for reactions besides amino and carboxylic groups at the terminal ends. When amino acids are linked together, amide or peptide bonds are formed. The formation of an amide group is shown in the reaction below, in which two amino acids react to form a dipeptide.
- H2O
Reactions of this type can continue to link many amino acids together to form polypeptides. When the number of amino acids in the molecule reaches about 50, it is considered a protein. Proteins can be classified as simple or complex. A simple protein is composed only of amino acids. Complex proteins, which are far more common, incorporate other non-amino acid groups in their structure.
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Imino acids (Proline and hydroxyproline) yield a yellow product (absorption maximum 440 nm). Ninhydrin reaction is very sensitive and is ideal for the detection of amino acids on chromatograms and their quantitative determination.
Ninhydrin reaction is very sensitive and is ideal for the detection of amino acids on chromatograms and their quantitative determination in column fractions. Materials and reagents: 1. Amino acids(1g/lglycine, tyrosine, and tryptophan) 2. Ninhydrin (2g/l prepare fresh) Method: 1- Place 1 ml of the amino acid solution in a test tube. 2- Adjust the pH to about neutrality. 3- Add five drops of Ninhydrin solution. 4- Boil for 2min. Optional: Determine the limits of sensitivity of the reaction by carrying out the test on serial dilutions of glycine until a negative result is obtained. Exp. #3 The xanthoproteic reaction. Principle: Xanthoproteic comes from the Greek word xanthos which means yellow. Boiling concentrated nitric acid reacts with tyrosine, tryptophan and phenylalanine (phenylalanine give weakly positive reaction as it contain an inactive benzene ring) to yield yellow products. The intensity of yellow color deepens upon the addition of alkaline solution that form orange colored salt in the basic medium.
Materials and reagents: 1- Amino acids (1g/l glycine, tyrosine, tryptophan and phenylalanine). 2- Phenol (1 g/l).
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3- Nitric acid (conc.) 4- Sodium hydroxide (10 mol/l) Method: 1- Add an equal volume of conc. Nitric acid to about 0.5 ml of the amino acid solution. 2- Cool, and observe the color change. 3- Add sufficient NaOH to make the solution strongly alkaline. ^-^-^- Yellow color in acid solution which turns deeper yellow then bright orange with alkali constitutes a positive result. 4- Repeat the test with the phenol solution. Phenylalanine gives a negative or weakly positive solution.
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Materials and reagents: 1. Amino acid (1g/l glycine, tyrosine, and tryptophan). 2. Glyoxylic acid; Glacial acetic acid which has been exposed to light. 3. Sulphuric acid (conc.). Method: 1- Add 2ml of glacial acetic acid to 2ml of the test solution. 2- Pour about 2 ml of conc. H2SO4 carefully down the sides of a sloping test tube so as to form two layers. 3- Observe any color change at the liquid junction. - - - A positive result is shown by the formation of a purple-violet ring at the junction of the two liquids.
3. Urea (1g/l). Method: 1- Add 2 ml of Ehrlichs reagent to 0.5 ml of the test solution. 2- Observe the color.
Materials and reagents: 1. Sulphur amino acids (1 g/l cysteine, cystine, and methionine). 2. Sodium nitroprusside (20 g/l prepare fresh). 3. Ammonium hydroxide. Method: 1. Mix 0.5 ml of a fresh solution of sodium nitroprusside with 2ml of the test solution. 2. Add 0.5 ml of ammonium hydroxide. 3. Observe the color. Exp. # 9 The Sakaguchi reaction Principle: The only amino acid containing the guanidine group is arginine, and this reacts with ! naphthol and an oxidizing agent bromide water to give a red color. Materials and reagents: 1- Amino acids (1 g/l glycine and arginine). 2- Guanidine (1 g/l glycocyamine, methylguanidine and creatine). 3- Urea (1 g/l). 4- Sodium hydroxide(10mol/l). 5- ! Naphthol(10g/l in alcohol). 6- Bromine water (add a few drops of bromine to 100 ml of water and shake; do this in a fume chamber). Caution: Bromine gives very nasty burns if spilt on the skin. Method: 1- Mix 1 ml of strong alkali with 3 ml of the amino acid solution. 2- Add two drops of ! naphthol. 3- Mix thoroughly and add four or five drops of bromine water. 4- Note the color formed.
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growing bacteria and fungi. Glutathione Glutathione is a tripeptide thiol composed of glutamic acid, cysteine, and glycine. The sulfhydryl (thiol) group (SH) of cysteine serves as a proton donor and is responsible for the biological activity of glutathione as a scavenger for reactive oxygen species (ROS) such as free radicals and peroxides. Glutathione has been called the "master antioxidant", moreover, it regulates the actions of lesser antioxidants such as vitamin C, and vitamin E within the body. A deficiency of glutathione can cause hemolysis and oxidative stress.
In a similar chelation reaction Cu2+ reacts with protein to form Cu2+-protein complex.
In this experiment, alkaline copper sulphate reacts with compounds containing two or more peptide bonds to give the violet-colored complex. The depth of the color obtained is a measure of the number of peptide bonds present in the protein. The reaction is not absolutely specific for peptide bonds, since the compounds containing two carbonyl groups linked through hydrogen or carbon atom will give a positive result. Materials and reagents: 1. Copper sulphate (10g/l of CuSO4.5H2O). 250 ml 2. Sodium hydroxide (10mol/l). 2l 3. Proteins (5g/l albumin, casein, gelatin, and Peptone: casein is dissolved a little dilute NaOH and the other proteins in saline). 500 ml
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4.
Glutathione (5g/l).
500 ml
Method: 1- Add five drops of copper sulphate solution to 2 ml of the test solution. 2- Add 2 ml of NaOH; mix thoroughly. 3- Note the produced colors.
effective at acidic pH values where proteins are positively charged. Materials and reagents: 5- Proteins as in exp.10 . 6- Acidic reagents (20% w/v sulphosalicylic acid, saturated picric acid, 10% w/v tannic acid, and 20% w/v trichloracetic acid). Method: 1- Add five drops of the acidic reagent to 1-2 ml of the protein solution. *** What is the effect of adding an excess of the reagent? 2- Slowly add dilute NaOH. 3- Observe the result as the pH decreases.
7. Application of unknown absorbance reading to the standard curve to find the working unknown concentration. Finally, multiply the working unknown concentration with dilution factor to find the original unknown concentration.
(2) Redox reaction: Cu2+ + (Tyr, Trp, polar AAs)red ! Cu+ + (AAs)ox Is the basis for the Lowry and BCA methods. Least sensitive (100 1000 fold less sensitive than Lowry, BCA, or Bradford). Disadvantages: 1) Requires relatively large amounts of protein (1-20 mg). 2) Not suitable in the presence of ammonium salts. Lipoid materials may yield a cloudy reaction mixture which can be cleared by shaking with 1.5 ml of diethyl or petroleum ether and then centrifuge and read the aqueous phase. Bile pigments absorb light very weakly in the region of 540 560 nm.
- Dissolve each compound separately in sufficient distilled water, add (1) to (2). 3. 300 ml 10 % NaOH -Add solution from (3) with constant swirling to the solution of (1+2) 4. 1 g KI. 5. Dilute to 1 liter with distilled water. Store in paraffin-lined bottle. Note: This reagent can be kept indefinitely but must be discarded if, as a result of contamination or faulty preparation, it show signs of depositing any black or reddish precipitate. Biuret reagent may be prepared without KI, however, the addition of 0.1 % KI may prevent excessive reduction and has not detectable effect on the rate, degree, or quality of biuret color. B. Standard protein solution. Bovine serum albumin (BSA): 10mg/ml in distilled water. C. Unknown protein sample. 4ml, it will be given by your assistant.
Procedure:
1. 2. 3. 4. Prepare several dilutions of standard (BSA) solution with water to a final volume of 1.0 ml as shown in table (1) together with a blank tube containing all reagents except the protein. Dilute the unknown protein solution to 1 ml as in table 1. Mix solutions thoroughly. Add 4 ml of Biuret reagent, mix the solutions thoroughly. Allow the samples to stand for 30 minutes at room temperature OR place all the test tubes, and contents into a water bath at 50C for 10 minutes (The color is stable for about 60 min at room temperature). Measure the intensity of the color in each tube at 540 nm against blank which is set at zero absorption. data and report the protein concentration of the unknown sample. A typical Biuret calibration curve is shown in next figure.
5.
6. Prepare the standard protein calibration curve (OD 540 versus mg/ml protein) from these
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Table 1: Preparation of Blank, Standard and Unknown samples for the Biuret assay. Tube Protein H2O (ml) Biuret O.D No. solution (ml) reagent (ml) 540 Blank Blank 1 0.0 1.0 4.0 Blank 2 0.0 1.0 4.0 Standard Std. 3 0.1 0.9 4.0 protein Std. 4 0.2 0.8 4.0 BSA Std. 5 0.5 0.5 4.0 (10 mg/ml) Std. 6 0.8 0.2 4.0 Std. 7 1.0 0.0 4.0 Unknown Ukn. 8 0.1 0.9 4.0 protein Ukn. 9 0.5 0.5 4.0 Ukn. 10 1.0 0.0 4.0 Note: Duplicates can be used to reduce any error that may be generated during preparation.
4- 0.15 mg/ml. 5- 0.20 mg/ml Standards are prepared in distilled water and can be stored in refrigerator but they should be discarded if bacterial growth is evident or if a change in a standard curve is not attributable to reagent. D. Unknown protein sample: Dilute the unknown protein sample with distilled water as in Table 2. If the sample to be analyzed contains ammonium sulfate, dilute with 10% Na2CO3. If ammonium sulfate concentration is greater than 0.25% after all reagents have been added, readings will be low.
Procedure: 1- Take 0.5 ml aliquots of BSA standard in small slender test tubes for a standard 234567calibration curve and 0.5 ml distilled water for reagent blank as shown in Table 2. Take 0.5 ml, 0.25 ml and 0.1ml aliquots of unknown sample to test tubes. Make up volume of 0.25 ml aliquots and 0.1 ml aliquots to 0.5 ml with distilled water (Table 2) Add 2.5 ml of reagent B (alkaline copper reagent) into the test tubes containing 0.5 ml of the sample or standard solutions. Mix by vortex and allow standing undisturbed for 10 minutes. Add 0.25 ml in Follin-phenol reagent rapidly. Mix immediately within 2 seconds by vortex before the addition of Follin-phenol reagent to the next tube. Allow the samples to stand for 30 minutes at room temperature OR place all the test tubes, and contents into a water bath at 50C for 10 minutes (The color is stable for at least two hours at room temperature). Cool rapidly in a beaker of tab water. Measure the intensity of color in each tube at 660 nm against Blank which is set at zero absorbance. Plot the standard calibration curve from the corresponding absorbance values of BSA standards (OD 660 versus mg protein). Calculate protein concentrations of the dilute sample solution by using the standard curve. Multiply by the dilution factor for protein concentrations of the given sample.
Table 2: Preparation of Blank, Standard and Unknown samples for Lowry assay. Tube Protein H2O, Reagent Follin O.D No. solution, ml ml B, ml Phenol, ml 660 nm Blank Blank 1 0.0 0.5 2.5 0.25 Blank 2 0.0 0.5 2.5 0.25 0.05 mg/ml BSA std. 3 0.5 2.5 0.25 0.1 mg/ml BSA std. 4 0.5 2.5 0.25 0.15 mg/ml BSA std. 5 0.5 2.5 0.25 0.2 mg/ml BSA std. 6 0.5 2.5 0.25 Unknown Ukn. 8 0.1 0.4 2.5 0.25 protein Ukn. 9 0.25 0.25 2.5 0.25 Ukn. 10 0.5 2.5 0.25 Note: Duplicates can be used to reduce any error that may be generated during preparation.
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