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INTERACTIONS IN PROTEINS AND THEIR ROLE IN STRUCTURE FORMATION

Interactions in proteins and their role in structure formation

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Interactions in proteins and their role in structure formation. Levels of protein structure organization. Dominant forces in protein folding. Electrostatic forces Hydrogen bonding and van der Waals interactions Intrinsic properties Hydrophobic forces - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

INTERACTIONS IN PROTEINS AND THEIR ROLE IN

STRUCTURE FORMATION

Page 2: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Levels of protein structure organization

Page 3: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation
Page 4: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Dominant forces in protein folding

• Electrostatic forces

• Hydrogen bonding and van der Waals interactions

• Intrinsic properties

• Hydrophobic forces

• Conformational entropy (opposes folding)

Page 5: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Can we say that there are „dominant” forces in protein folding?

Hardly. Proteins are only marginally stable (5 – 20 kBT/molecule). For comparison: water-water H-bond has about 5 kcal/mol (9 kBT/molecule) Consequently, even the tiniest force cannot be ignored.

However, different types of interactions play different roleHydrophobic interaction: compactnessLocal interactions: chain stiffnessHydrogen bonds: architecture

Page 6: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Local and nonlocal interactions

Page 7: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Long-range vs. short-range interactions

nij

ij rE

1 n<=3: long range interactions

n>3: short-range interactions

Long-range: electrostatic (charge-charge, charge-dipole, and dipole-dipole) interactions

Short-range: van der Waals repulsion and attraction, hydrophobic interactions

Page 8: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Electrostatic interactions

Page 9: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

• Lots of like-charges (e.g., side-chain ionization by pH decrease/increase) destabilize protein structure

• Increase of ionic strength destabilizes protein structure

• 5 – 10 kcal/mol / counter-ion (salt-bridge) pair

• A protein contains only a small number of salt bridges, mainly located on the surface (nevertheless, they can be essential).

Page 10: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Example of a surface salt bridge: salt bridge triad between Asp8, Asp12 and Arg110 on the surface of barnase

Page 11: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Replacement of charged residues with hydrophobic residues can increase the stability by 3-4 kcal/mol. Example: ARC

repressor

Wild type: salt triad between R31, E36, and R40

Mutant: hydrophobic packing between M31, Y36, and L40

Page 12: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation
Page 13: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Potentials of mean force

Page 14: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Maksimiak et al., J.Phys.Chem. B, 107, 13496-13504 (2003)

Page 15: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Masunov & Lazaridis, J.Am.Chem.Soc., 125, 1722-1730 (2003)

Page 16: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation
Page 17: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Hydrogen-bonding and van der Waals forces

Page 18: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Aw+Bw

An+Bn

(AB)w

(AB)n

G1=-2.40 kcal/mol

G3=+3.10 kcal/mol

Free energies of N-methylamide dimerization in water (w) and CCl4 (n) solution and transfer between these solvents

Page 19: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Local interactions are largely determined by Ramachandran map

Page 20: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Conformations of a terminally-blocked amino-acid residue

C7eq

C7ax

E Zimmerman, Pottle, Nemethy, Scheraga, Macromolecules, 10, 1-9 (1977)

Page 21: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Energy maps of Ac-Ala-NHMe and Ac-Gly-AHMe obtained with the ECEPP/2 force field

Page 22: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Energy curve of Ac-Pro-NHMe obtained with the ECEPP/2 force field

L-Pro-68o

Page 23: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Energy minima of therminally-blocked alanine with the ECEPP/2 force field

Page 24: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Hydrophobic forces

Page 25: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation
Page 26: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation
Page 27: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation
Page 28: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation
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Page 30: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Sobolewski et al., J.Phys.Chem., 111, 10765-10744 (2008)

Page 31: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation
Page 32: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Dependence of the PMF and cavity contribution to the PMF of two methane molecules on temperature (Sobolewski et al., PEDS, 22, 547-552 (2009)

Page 33: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

S. Miyazawa & R.L. Jernigan, R. L. 1985. Estimation of effective interresidue contact energies from protein crystal structures: quasi-chemical approximation. Macromolecules, 18:534-552, 1985.

Page 34: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

C M F I L V W Y A G T S Q N E D H R K P

P

K

R

H

D

E

N

Q

S

T

G

A

Y

W

V

L

I

F

M

C

Color map of the MJ table

Page 35: Interactions in proteins  and  their  role  in structure formation

Conformational entropy