Amino acids peptides and proteins

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Transcript of Amino acids peptides and proteins

Page 1: Amino acids   peptides and proteins

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Page 2: Amino acids   peptides and proteins

Amino Acids, Peptides and Proteins

Page 3: Amino acids   peptides and proteins

The Proteins speak:

“We are the basis of structureand function of life;

Composed of twenty amino acids,the building blocks;

Organized into primary, secondary, tertiary

and quaternary structure;Classified as simple, conjugated

and derived proteins.”

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AMINO ACIDS

- group of organic compounds containing two functional groups:

amino group (-NH2) basiccarboxyl group (-COOH) acidic

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General Structure of Amino Acids

H H

R C COOH R C COOH

NH2 NH3

General Structure Exists as ion

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⍺ - amino acids

aminogroups – attached to

thecarboxyl same carbon Atom

⍺ - carbon atom binds to a side chain represented by R (different for

each of the 20 amino acids found in proteins)

Ionized forms how they exist

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Classification of Amino Acids based on polarity

of the R group

4 groups

Polarity reflects the functional role of AA in protein structure

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1. Non-polar AA

hydrophobic (water hating)No charge on the ‘R’ groupExamples are:

Alanine MethionineLeucine

PhenylalanineIsoleucine

TryptophanValine Proline

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3. Polar AA with (+) ‘R’ group

carries (+) charge Examples:

Histidine Arginine Lysine

4. Polar AA with (-) ‘R’ group

• carries (-) charge• Examples:

Glutamic Acid Aspartic Acid

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2. Polar AA with no charge on ‘R’ group

no charge on the ‘R’ group possess groups hydroxyl

sulfhydrylamide

participate in hydrogen bonding of protein structure

Examples:Asparagine Glycine

Cysteine Tyrosine Serine Threonine Glutamine

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A.Physical Properties

1. Solubility - soluble in water and insoluble in organic solvents

2. Melting Points - melt at higher temperatures often 200°C

3. Tastesweet (Gly, Ala, Val)tasteless (Leu)bitter (Arg, Ile)Sodium Glutamate – salt of Glutamic Acid – flavoring

agent

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4. Optical Properties

- Assymetric a carbon atom is attached to 4 different groups

exhibiting optical isomerism

4 distinct groups R H - held by an

COOH ⍺-carbon NH3໋

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All AA except Glycine possess optical isomers due to asymmetric ⍺-carbon atom

Some AA (Isoleucine, Threonine) 2nd asymmetric carbon

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D- and L- forms of AA based onthe structure of glyceraldehyde

CHO CHO

H C OH OH C H

CH2OH CH2OH

D-Glyceraldehyde L-Glyceraldehyde

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R R

H C NH2 H2N C H

COOH COOH

D-Amino Acid L-Amino Acid

The proteins are composed of L-⍺ amino acids

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5. Amino acids as ampholytes

can donate a proton or accept a

proton

AA contain both acidic (-COOH) and basic (-NH2) groups

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Zwitterion or dipolar ion:

Zwitter from German word – means

“hybrid”

Zwitter ion (or dipolar ion) a hybrid molecule containing

(+) and (-) ionic groups

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AA rarely exist in a neutral form with free carboxylic (-COOH) and free Amino (-NH2) groups

Strongly acidic pH (low pH) AA (+) charged (cation)

Strongly alkaline pH (high pH) AA (-) charged (anion)

Each AA has a characteristic pH (e.g. Leucine, pH – 6.0), at which it carries both (+) and (-) charges and exist as zwitterion

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Existence of an amino acid as Cation, Anion and Zwitterion

H

H໋ R C COOH H໋

NH2

H Amino Acid H

R C COOH R C COO ¯

NH3 ໋ H NH2

Cation H໋ H໋ Anion (low pH) R C COO ¯ (high pH)

NH3 ໋Zwitterion

(Isoelectric pH)

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B. Chemical Properties

General Reactions mostly due to the 2 functional groups

Reactions due to - COOH group

1. AA from salts (-COONa) with bases and esters (-COOR’) with alcohols

2. Decarboxylation - AA undergo decarboxylation to produce corresponding amines

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3. Reaction with Ammonia

- the carboxyl group of dicarboxylic AA reacts with NH3 to form amide

Asparatic Acid + NH3 AsparagineGlutamic Acid + NH3 Glutamine

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Reactions due to -NH2 group

4. The Amino groups behave as bases and combine with acids (e.g. HCl) to form salts (-NH3 + Cl¯)

5. Reaction with NINHYDRIN- the ⍺-AMINO ACIDS react with

Ninhydrin to form a purple, blue or pink colour complex (Ruhemann’s purple)

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Amino acid + Ninhydrin Keto acid + NH3 + CO2 + Hydrindantin

Hydrindantin + NH3 + Ninhydrin Ruhemman’s purple

Ninhydrin reaction – quantitative determination of AA and proteins

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6. Colour reactions of Amino Acids

- AA can be identified by specific colour reactions

Color Reactions of proteins / AA

Reaction Specific group or AA

1. Buiret Reaction Two peptide linkages2. Ninhydrin Reaction ⍺-Amino acids3. Xanthoproteic Reaction Benzene ring of

aromatic AA (Phe, Tyr, Trp)

4. Million’s reaction Phenolic Group (Tyr)5. Hopkins – Cole Reaction Indole Ring (Trp)

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6. Sakaguchi Reaction Guanidino Group (Arg)

7. Nitroprusside Reaction Sulfhydryl groups (Cys)

8. Paulys’ test Imidazole ring (His)

9. Sulfur test Sulfhydryl groups (Cys)

10. Folin – Coicalteau’s Phenolic groups test (Tyr)

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7. Transamination

- important reaction in AA metabolism

- transfer of an amino group from an amino acid to a keto acid to form a new AA

8. Oxidative deamination

- AA undergo oxidative deamination to liberate free ammonia

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