Chapter 23. Organic Chemistry. The Organic Chemistry of Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins. 6 th Edition. Paula Yurkanis Bruice

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Organic Chemistry 6 th Edition Chapter 23 Paula Yurkanis Bruice The Organic Chemistry of Amino Acids, Peptides, and Proteins 1

Peptides and proteins are polymers of amino acids linked together by amide bonds: 2

Classification of Amino Acids Hydrophobic: water-fearing, nonpolar side chains Alkyl side chain Hydrophilic: water-loving side chains Polar, neutral side chains Anionic Cationic 3

* * * * Nonpolar Side Chains * 4

* Polar, Neutral Side Chains * 5

Polar, Acidic Side Chains 6

Basic, Polar Side Chains * * * 7

8

Configuration of Amino Acids (R-configuration) (S-configuration) 9

Acid Base Properties of Amino Acids An amino acid can never exist as an uncharged compound 10

11

Some amino acids have ionizable hydrogens on their side chains: 12

The isoelectric point (pi) of an amino acid is the ph at which it has no net charge: 13

The pi of an amino acid that has an ionizable side chain is the average of the pk a values of ionized groups of the same charge: 14

A mixture of amino acids can be separated by electrophoresis on the basis of their pi values: When deciding the charge on an amino acid at a certain ph Consider the medium as effectively basic if ph is greater than the pi Consider the medium as effectively acidic if ph is less than the pi (regardless of the numerical value of the ph) Ninhydrin is used to detect the individual amino acids 15

16

A mixture of amino acids can also be separated on the basis of polarity: 17

Ion-exchange chromatography can be used to perform preparative separation of amino acids: Negatively charged resin binds selectively to positively charged amino acids 18

Ion-Exchange Chromatography Cations bind most strongly to cation-exchange resins. Anions bind most strongly to anion-exchange resins. An amino acid analyzer is an instrument that automates ion-exchange chromatography. 19

Synthesis of Amino Acids HVZ reaction followed by reaction with ammonia: Reductive amination: 20

A more efficient way of synthesizing amino acids: 21

The Strecker Synthesis 22

Resolution of Racemic Mixtures of Amino Acids 23

Formation of a Peptide 24

A peptide bond has 40% double-bond character: 25

Formation of Disulfide Bonds Disulfides can be reduced to thiols 26

The disulfide bridge in proteins contributes to the overall shape of a protein: 27

28

Peptide Examples ENKEPHALINS Natural ligands for opioid receptors Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Leu Tyr-Gly-Gly-Phe-Met NUTRASWEET Peptide-based sweetener GLUTATHIONE Antioxidant and electrophile trap 29

Because amino acids have two functional groups, amide bond formation with a mixture of two amino acids affords four products: 30

Strategy for Making a Specific Peptide Bond 31

t-boc protection of an amine group: The t-boc protecting group is stable during amide bond formation but is removed under acidic conditions 32

Carboxylic acid activation by DCC: 33

Amide bond formation: 34

Amino acids can be added to the growing C-terminal end by repeating these two steps: 35

When the desired number of amino acids has been added to the chain, the protecting group can be removed: 36

An Improved Peptide Synthesis Strategy Merrifield Automated Solid-Phase Synthesis or Merrifield Synthesis of Peptides C-terminal amino acid Attachment of N- protected amino acid to resin 37

Removal of t-boc protecting group Carboxylic acid activation of second amino acid 38

Amide bond formation Removal of t-boc protecting group 39

Carboxylic acid activation of N-terminal amino acid Amide bond formation Removal of t-boc protecting group 40

Release of tripeptide from Merrifield resin 41

Sequencing Proteins N-terminal amino acid? C-terminal amino acid? What is in between? 42

The first step in determining the sequence of amino acids in a peptide or protein is to cleave the disulfide bridges: 43

The next step is to determine the number and kinds of amino acids in the peptide or protein by hydrolysis and then analysis of the mixture: 44

The N-terminal amino acid of a peptide or a protein can be determined by Edman degradation: 45

The particular PTH amino acid can be identified by chromatography using known standards 46

Exopeptidases used in peptide structure determination The C-terminal amino acid can be identified by treating the protein with carboxypeptidase: Carboxypeptidase B: ONLY Arg and Lys Carboxypeptidase A: ALL amino acids EXCEPT Arg and Lys 47

Endopeptidases for partial hydrolysis of the peptide: Trypsin: C-side of Arg and Lys Chymotrypsin: C-side of Phe, Tyr, Trp Elastase: C-side of Gly and Ala No cleavage for any endopeptidase if Pro on either side Example of trypsin hydrolysis: 48

49

Cyanogen bromide causes the hydrolysis of the amide bond on the C-side of a methionine residue: 50

Mechanism for cleavage of a peptide bond by cyanogen bromide: 51

Secondary Structure of Proteins Describes the repetitive conformations assumed by segments of the backbone of a peptide or protein Three factors determine the choice of secondary structure: The regional planarity about each peptide bond Maximization of the number of peptide groups that engage in hydrogen bonding Adequate separation between nearby R groups 52

The -helix is stabilized by hydrogen bonds: 53

Not all amino acids are able to fit into an -helix: Prolines distort the helix. Two adjacent Val, Ile, or Thr cannot fit into a helix. Two adjacent residues with the same charges cannot fit into a helix. 54

Two Types of -Pleated Sheets 55

Most globular proteins have coil or loop conformations: 56

The tertiary structure is the three-dimensional arrangement of all the atoms in the protein: 57

The tertiary structure is defined by the primary structure The stabilizing interactions include covalent bonds, hydrogen bonds, electrostatic attractions, and hydrophobic interactions Disulfide bonds are the only covalent bonds that can form when a protein folds 58

Quaternary Structure of Proteins Proteins that have more than one polypeptide chain are called oligomers The individual chains are called subunits 59