Humboldt State University ® Department of Chemistry

Richard A. Paselk

Chem 431

Biochemistry

Fall 2007

Lecture Notes: 12 September

© R. Paselk 2007
 
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Amino Acids 2

Amino Acid Chemistry: All aa's share two chemically functional groups, the carboxyl group and the amino group. Thus they will share the chemical reactions of these groups familiar from organic chemistry. Many of these reactions are exploited in the laboratory manipulation of amino acids, peptides, and proteins. Note that these reactions are also common to the side chains of asp, glu (-COOH), and lys (-NH2). Another side-chain with important chemistry is cys (-SH). Biologically the most important reactions are those required for protein formation, particularly the peptide bond (text Figure 3.13).
pKa's: Note that the pKa's for carboxylic acids tend to have values of about 5, while the pKa of the amino acid -COOH is around 2 (text Table 3.1). What's going on? The shift in pKa can be assigned to the nearby protonated amine. Recall that 'naked' charges are very unstable, while nearby counter-charges stabilize them. Also, from organic chemistry you may recall that negative charges can be stabilized by inductive effects of nearby electron withdrawing groups, such as a protonated, positively charged, nitrogen. Because of the extra intervening carbons the side chain -COOH's of asp and glu are not similarly stabilized, and thus have pKa values closer to the expected 5. Of course we would also expect analogous effects of the negative charge on the carboxyl group on the charged amine. Note the titration curve for amino acids with titratable side groups as exemplified by histidine (text Figure 3.12)
 

Peptides and Amino Acid Chemistry

Peptide Analysis and Amino Acid Chemistry

Let's begin by looking at a well known exemplar of protein structure, Insulin (text Figure 3.24). Note that insulin has two peptides linked together with disulfide bonds. Too successfully analyse the structure of this peptide we first need to break the disulfide bonds (text Figure 3.26) and separate the peptides, most commonly by chromatography. We need to do this to prevent the confusion which would result from analysing the raw protein and discovering multiple N-terminii etc.

We can next analyse the separate peptides by first doing an N-terminal analysis to find the N-terminal amino acid and then doing an Edman degradation which sequentially cleaves amino acids off with repeated chemistry. (text Figure 3.25) Unfortunately this process is limited by the lack of 100% yields in the process so it is only effective for short peptides.

As a result most proteins are hydrolyzed into short peptides by enzymatic and specific chemical cleavage reactions. The cleavage reactions are picked to give a high likelyhood of overlapping peptide fragments. These fragments are then analyzed as above. (text Figure 3.27).


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Last modified 12 September 2007