Essential Cell Biology: Chapter 4 Lecture Outlines
Essential Cell Biology: Chapter 4 Lecture Outlines
Essential Cell Biology: Chapter 4 Lecture Outlines
Third Edition
CHAPTER CONTENTS
THE SHAPE AND STRUCTURE OF PROTEINS HOW PROTEINS WORK HOW PROTEINS ARE CONTROLLED HOW PROTEINS ARE STUDIED
ATG met
GGA gly
GCC ala
ACC thr
TAA stop
Missense Mutation
ATG met
GGA gly
GCC ala
ATG met
GGA gly
GCT ala
CTA leu
Genetic Code
The code is redundant, some aminoacids are specified by more than one triplet
Hydrogen bond
Van der Waals atractions
Nonpolar - Hydrophobic aa (phe, leu, val, trp) tend to cluster inside in folded protein (hydrophobic oil droplets coalesce to form larger one) Polar-Hydrophilic aa (arg, glu, his) tend to arrange near outside of protein to form H bond with water or other polar molecules
Protein shape is formed to minimize free energy (G) (by spontaneous or molecular chaperons in cytoplasm) if a protein denatured to destroy folding, it will regain its shape again
Each protein is folded into one stable conformation Sometimes the shape of proteins changes by modification or interaction
Proteins Fold into a Conformation of Lowest Energy The proper structure of protein is important for its function and solubility improper folded protein aggregate in cell, destroy cell (Alzheimers disease)
Misfolded prion can convert the properly folded prion into misfolded
Figure 4-8 Essential Cell Biology ( Garland Science 2010)
Different shapes different aa sequence, different interactions Globular or fibrous shape Different size 30 aa to 10000 aa
The Alpha Helix and the Beta Sheet Are Common Folding Patterns Two common folding pattern : alpha helix, beta sheet
These structure formed by H bonding between N-H and C=O atoms in polypeptide backbone
- helix H-bond between every fourth aminoacid Abundant in proteins located in cell membrane (transport protein, receptor)
- helix
Coiled-coil structure
2 or more - helix wrap around one another
Rod-like strong fiber keratin, reinforce layer of skin Myosin, responsible for muscle contraction
Beta sheets: H bond between polypeptide chain lying side by side Antiparallel
parallel
Proteins Have Several Levels of Organization Primary structure: aminoacid sequence, long polypeptide chain Secondary structure: alpha helix, beta sheet Tertiary structure: 3-dimentional structure combination of alpha helix, beta sheet Quaternary structure: protein contain more than one polypeptide chain
GFP
RFP GFP
Proteins Can Be Classified into Families Protein families: proteins share similar features and structures
Polymerases Proteases (protein cleaving enzyme, digestive function) Kinases (add P-grup to proteins) Membrane protein, transcription factors
Large Protein Molecules Often Contain More Than One Polypeptide Chain
Different polypeptide bind each other with weak noncovalent bonds (subunits)
microtubule
Simian virus
Tightly Bound Small Molecules Add Extra Functions to Proteins Hemoglobin protein, oxygen carrying protein
Chromatin Remodeling
Negative feedback
Positive Feedback
Allosteric Enzymes Have Binding Sites That Influence One Another The activity of Allosteric Enzymes regulated by other molecules
Bio-Engineering