Proteins () are biochemical compounds consisting of one or more polypeptides typically folded into a globular or fibrous form, facilitating a biological function. A polypeptide is a single linear polymer chain of amino acids bonded together by peptide bonds between the carboxyl and amino groups of adjacent amino acid residues. The sequence of amino acids in a protein is defined by the sequence of a gene, which is encoded in the genetic code. In general, the genetic code specifies 20 standard amino acids; however, in certain organisms the genetic code can include selenocysteine—and in certain archaea—pyrrolysine. Shortly after or even during synthesis, the residues in a protein are often chemically modified by posttranslational modification, which alters the physical and chemical properties, folding, stability, activity, and ultimately, the function of the proteins. Sometimes proteins have non-peptide groups attached, which can be called prosthetic groups or cofactors. Proteins can also work together to achieve a particular function, and they often associate to form stable protein complexes.
One of the most distinguishing features of polypeptides is their ability to fold into a globular state. The extent to which proteins fold into a defined structure varies widely. Some proteins fold into a highly rigid structure with small fluctuations and are therefore considered to be single structure. Other proteins undergo large rearrangements from one conformation to another. This conformational change is often associated with a signaling event. Thus, the structure of a protein serves as a medium through which to regulate either the function of a protein or activity of an enzyme. Not all proteins require a folding process in order to function, as some function in an unfolded state.
Like other biological macromolecules such as polysaccharides and nucleic acids, proteins are essential parts of organisms and participate in virtually every process within cells. Many proteins are enzymes that catalyze biochemical reactions and are vital to metabolism. Proteins also have structural or mechanical functions, such as actin and myosin in muscle and the proteins in the cytoskeleton, which form a system of scaffolding that maintains cell shape. Other proteins are important in cell signaling, immune responses, cell adhesion, and the cell cycle. Proteins are also necessary in animals' diets, since animals cannot synthesize all the amino acids they need and must obtain essential amino acids from food. Through the process of digestion, animals break down ingested protein into free amino acids that are then used in metabolism.
Proteins were first described by the Dutch chemist Gerardus Johannes Mulder and named by the Swedish chemist Jöns Jacob Berzelius in 1838. Early nutritional scientists such as the German Carl von Voit believed that protein was the most important nutrient for maintaining the structure of the body, because it was generally believed that "flesh makes flesh." The central role of proteins as enzymes in living organisms was however not fully appreciated until 1926, when James B. Sumner showed that the enzyme urease was in fact a protein. The first protein to be sequenced was insulin, by Frederick Sanger, who won the Nobel Prize for this achievement in 1958. The first protein structures to be solved were hemoglobin and myoglobin, by Max Perutz and Sir John Cowdery Kendrew, respectively, in 1958. The three-dimensional structures of both proteins were first determined by X-ray diffraction analysis; Perutz and Kendrew shared the 1962 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for these discoveries. Proteins may be purified from other cellular components using a variety of techniques such as ultracentrifugation, precipitation, electrophoresis, and chromatography; the advent of genetic engineering has made possible a number of methods to facilitate purification. Methods commonly used to study protein structure and function include immunohistochemistry, site-directed mutagenesis, nuclear magnetic resonance and mass spectrometry. Distributed computing is a relatively new tool researchers are using to examine the infamously complex interactions that govern protein folding; the statistical analysis techniques employed to calculate a protein's probable tertiary structure from its amino acid sequence (primary structure) are well-suited for the distributed computing environment, which has made this otherwise prohibitively expensive and time consuming problem significantly more manageable.
Biochemistry
Most proteins consist of linear
polymers built from series of up to 20 different L-α-
amino acids. All
proteinogenic amino acids possess common structural features, including an
α-carbon to which an
amino group, a
carboxyl group, and a variable
side chain are
bonded. Only
proline differs from this basic structure as it contains an unusual ring to the N-end amine group, which forces the CO–NH amide moiety into a fixed conformation. The side chains of the standard amino acids, detailed in the
list of standard amino acids, have a great variety of chemical structures and properties; it is the combined effect of all of the amino acid side chains in a protein that ultimately determines its three-dimensional structure and its chemical reactivity.
The
amino acids in a polypeptide chain are linked by
peptide bonds. Once linked in the protein chain, an individual amino acid is called a ''residue,'' and the linked series of carbon, nitrogen, and oxygen atoms are known as the ''main chain'' or ''protein backbone.'' The peptide bond has two
resonance forms that contribute some
double-bond character and inhibit rotation around its axis, so that the alpha carbons are roughly
coplanar. The other two
dihedral angles in the peptide bond determine the local shape assumed by the protein backbone. The end of the protein with a free carboxyl group is known as the
C-terminus or carboxy terminus, whereas the end with a free amino group is known as the
N-terminus or amino terminus.
The words ''protein'', ''polypeptide,'' and ''peptide'' are a little ambiguous and can overlap in meaning. ''Protein'' is generally used to refer to the complete biological molecule in a stable conformation, whereas ''peptide'' is generally reserved for a short amino acid oligomers often lacking a stable three-dimensional structure. However, the boundary between the two is not well defined and usually lies near 20–30 residues. ''Polypeptide'' can refer to any single linear chain of amino acids, usually regardless of length, but often implies an absence of a defined conformation.
Synthesis
Proteins are assembled from amino acids using information encoded in
genes. Each protein has its own unique amino acid sequence that is specified by the
nucleotide sequence of the gene encoding this protein. The
genetic code is a set of three-nucleotide sets called
codons and each three-nucleotide combination designates an amino acid, for example AUG (
adenine-
uracil-
guanine) is the code for
methionine. Because
DNA contains four nucleotides, the total number of possible codons is 64; hence, there is some redundancy in the genetic code, with some amino acids specified by more than one codon. Genes encoded in DNA are first
transcribed into pre-
messenger RNA (mRNA) by proteins such as
RNA polymerase. Most organisms then process the pre-mRNA (also known as a ''primary transcript'') using various forms of
posttranscriptional modification to form the mature mRNA, which is then used as a template for protein synthesis by the
ribosome. In
prokaryotes the mRNA may either be used as soon as it is produced, or be bound by a ribosome after having moved away from the
nucleoid. In contrast,
eukaryotes make mRNA in the
cell nucleus and then
translocate it across the
nuclear membrane into the
cytoplasm, where
protein synthesis then takes place. The rate of protein synthesis is higher in prokaryotes than eukaryotes and can reach up to 20 amino acids per second.
The process of synthesizing a protein from an mRNA template is known as translation. The mRNA is loaded onto the ribosome and is read three nucleotides at a time by matching each codon to its base pairing anticodon located on a transfer RNA molecule, which carries the amino acid corresponding to the codon it recognizes. The enzyme aminoacyl tRNA synthetase "charges" the tRNA molecules with the correct amino acids. The growing polypeptide is often termed the ''nascent chain''. Proteins are always biosynthesized from N-terminus to C-terminus.
The size of a synthesized protein can be measured by the number of amino acids it contains and by its total molecular mass, which is normally reported in units of ''daltons'' (synonymous with atomic mass units), or the derivative unit kilodalton (kDa). Yeast proteins are on average 466 amino acids long and 53 kDa in mass. The largest known proteins are the titins, a component of the muscle sarcomere, with a molecular mass of almost 3,000 kDa and a total length of almost 27,000 amino acids.
Chemical synthesis
Short proteins can also be synthesized chemically by a family of methods known as
peptide synthesis, which rely on
organic synthesis techniques such as
chemical ligation to produce peptides in high yield. Chemical synthesis allows for the introduction of non-natural amino acids into polypeptide chains, such as attachment of
fluorescent probes to amino acid side chains. These methods are useful in laboratory
biochemistry and
cell biology, though generally not for commercial applications. Chemical synthesis is inefficient for polypeptides longer than about 300 amino acids, and the synthesized proteins may not readily assume their native
tertiary structure. Most chemical synthesis methods proceed from C-terminus to N-terminus, opposite the biological reaction.
Structure
Most proteins fold into unique 3-dimensional structures. The shape into which a protein naturally folds is known as its native conformation. Although many proteins can fold unassisted, simply through the chemical properties of their amino acids, others require the aid of molecular chaperones to fold into their native states. Biochemists often refer to four distinct aspects of a protein's structure:
''Primary structure'': the amino acid sequence.
''Secondary structure'': regularly repeating local structures stabilized by hydrogen bonds. The most common examples are the alpha helix, beta sheet and turns. Because secondary structures are local, many regions of different secondary structure can be present in the same protein molecule.
''Tertiary structure'': the overall shape of a single protein molecule; the spatial relationship of the secondary structures to one another. Tertiary structure is generally stabilized by nonlocal interactions, most commonly the formation of a hydrophobic core, but also through salt bridges, hydrogen bonds, disulfide bonds, and even posttranslational modifications. The term "tertiary structure" is often used as synonymous with the term ''fold''. The tertiary structure is what controls the basic function of the protein.
''Quaternary structure'': the structure formed by several protein molecules (polypeptide chains), usually called ''protein subunits'' in this context, which function as a single protein complex.
Proteins are not entirely rigid molecules. In addition to these levels of structure, proteins may shift between several related structures while they perform their functions. In the context of these functional rearrangements, these tertiary or quaternary structures are usually referred to as "conformations", and transitions between them are called ''conformational changes.'' Such changes are often induced by the binding of a substrate molecule to an enzyme's active site, or the physical region of the protein that participates in chemical catalysis. In solution proteins also undergo variation in structure through thermal vibration and the collision with other molecules.
Proteins can be informally divided into three main classes, which correlate with typical tertiary structures: globular proteins, fibrous proteins, and membrane proteins. Almost all globular proteins are soluble and many are enzymes. Fibrous proteins are often structural, such as collagen, the major component of connective tissue, or keratin, the protein component of hair and nails. Membrane proteins often serve as receptors or provide channels for polar or charged molecules to pass through the cell membrane.
A special case of intramolecular hydrogen bonds within proteins, poorly shielded from water attack and hence promoting their own dehydration, are called dehydrons.
Structure determination
Discovering the tertiary structure of a protein, or the quaternary structure of its complexes, can provide important clues about how the protein performs its function. Common experimental methods of structure determination include
X-ray crystallography and
NMR spectroscopy, both of which can produce information at
atomic resolution. However, NMR experiments are able to provide information from which a subset of distances between pairs of atoms can be estimated, and the final possible conformations for a protein are determined by solving a
distance geometry problem.
Dual polarisation interferometry is a quantitative analytical method for measuring the overall protein
conformation and
conformational changes due to interactions or other stimulus.
Circular dichroism is another laboratory technique for determining internal beta sheet/ helical composition of proteins.
Cryoelectron microscopy is used to produce lower-resolution structural information about very large protein complexes, including assembled
viruses; a variant known as
electron crystallography can also produce high-resolution information in some cases , especially for two-dimensional crystals of membrane proteins. Solved structures are usually deposited in the
Protein Data Bank (PDB), a freely available resource from which structural data about thousands of proteins can be obtained in the form of
Cartesian coordinates for each atom in the protein.
Many more gene sequences are known than protein structures. Further, the set of solved structures is biased toward proteins that can be easily subjected to the conditions required in X-ray crystallography, one of the major structure determination methods. In particular, globular proteins are comparatively easy to crystallize in preparation for X-ray crystallography. Membrane proteins, by contrast, are difficult to crystallize and are underrepresented in the PDB. Structural genomics initiatives have attempted to remedy these deficiencies by systematically solving representative structures of major fold classes. Protein structure prediction methods attempt to provide a means of generating a plausible structure for proteins whose structures have not been experimentally determined.
Cellular functions
Proteins are the chief actors within the cell, said to be carrying out the duties specified by the information encoded in genes. With the exception of certain types of
RNA, most other biological molecules are relatively inert elements upon which proteins act. Proteins make up half the dry weight of an ''
Escherichia coli'' cell, whereas other macromolecules such as DNA and RNA make up only 3% and 20%, respectively. The set of proteins expressed in a particular cell or cell type is known as its
proteome.
The chief characteristic of proteins that also allows their diverse set of functions is their ability to bind other molecules specifically and tightly. The region of the protein responsible for binding another molecule is known as the binding site and is often a depression or "pocket" on the molecular surface. This binding ability is mediated by the tertiary structure of the protein, which defines the binding site pocket, and by the chemical properties of the surrounding amino acids' side chains. Protein binding can be extraordinarily tight and specific; for example, the ribonuclease inhibitor protein binds to human angiogenin with a sub-femtomolar dissociation constant (<10−15 M) but does not bind at all to its amphibian homolog onconase (>1 M). Extremely minor chemical changes such as the addition of a single methyl group to a binding partner can sometimes suffice to nearly eliminate binding; for example, the aminoacyl tRNA synthetase specific to the amino acid valine discriminates against the very similar side chain of the amino acid isoleucine.
Proteins can bind to other proteins as well as to small-molecule substrates. When proteins bind specifically to other copies of the same molecule, they can oligomerize to form fibrils; this process occurs often in structural proteins that consist of globular monomers that self-associate to form rigid fibers. Protein–protein interactions also regulate enzymatic activity, control progression through the cell cycle, and allow the assembly of large protein complexes that carry out many closely related reactions with a common biological function. Proteins can also bind to, or even be integrated into, cell membranes. The ability of binding partners to induce conformational changes in proteins allows the construction of enormously complex signaling networks.
Importantly, as interactions between proteins are reversible, and depend heavily on the availability of different groups of partner proteins to form aggregates that are capable to carry out discrete sets of function, study of the interactions between specific proteins is a key to understand important aspects of cellular function, and ultimately the properties that distinguish particular cell types.
Enzymes
The best-known role of proteins in the cell is as
enzymes, which
catalyze chemical reactions. Enzymes are usually highly specific and accelerate only one or a few chemical reactions. Enzymes carry out most of the reactions involved in
metabolism, as well as manipulating DNA in processes such as
DNA replication,
DNA repair, and
transcription. Some enzymes act on other proteins to add or remove chemical groups in a process known as posttranslational modification. About 4,000 reactions are known to be catalyzed by enzymes. The rate acceleration conferred by enzymatic catalysis is often enormous—as much as 10
17-fold increase in rate over the uncatalyzed reaction in the case of
orotate decarboxylase (78 million years without the enzyme, 18 milliseconds with the enzyme).
The molecules bound and acted upon by enzymes are called substrates. Although enzymes can consist of hundreds of amino acids, it is usually only a small fraction of the residues that come in contact with the substrate, and an even smaller fraction—three to four residues on average—that are directly involved in catalysis. The region of the enzyme that binds the substrate and contains the catalytic residues is known as the active site.
Cell signaling and ligand binding
Many proteins are involved in the process of
cell signaling and
signal transduction. Some proteins, such as
insulin, are extracellular proteins that transmit a signal from the cell in which they were synthesized to other cells in distant
tissues. Others are
membrane proteins that act as
receptors whose main function is to bind a signaling molecule and induce a biochemical response in the cell. Many receptors have a binding site exposed on the cell surface and an effector domain within the cell, which may have enzymatic activity or may undergo a
conformational change detected by other proteins within the cell.
Antibodies are protein components of an adaptive immune system whose main function is to bind antigens, or foreign substances in the body, and target them for destruction. Antibodies can be secreted into the extracellular environment or anchored in the membranes of specialized B cells known as plasma cells. Whereas enzymes are limited in their binding affinity for their substrates by the necessity of conducting their reaction, antibodies have no such constraints. An antibody's binding affinity to its target is extraordinarily high.
Many ligand transport proteins bind particular small biomolecules and transport them to other locations in the body of a multicellular organism. These proteins must have a high binding affinity when their ligand is present in high concentrations, but must also release the ligand when it is present at low concentrations in the target tissues. The canonical example of a ligand-binding protein is haemoglobin, which transports oxygen from the lungs to other organs and tissues in all vertebrates and has close homologs in every biological kingdom. Lectins are sugar-binding proteins which are highly specific for their sugar moieties. Lectins typically play a role in biological recognition phenomena involving cells and proteins. Receptors and hormones are highly specific binding proteins.
Transmembrane proteins can also serve as ligand transport proteins that alter the permeability of the cell membrane to small molecules and ions. The membrane alone has a hydrophobic core through which polar or charged molecules cannot diffuse. Membrane proteins contain internal channels that allow such molecules to enter and exit the cell. Many ion channel proteins are specialized to select for only a particular ion; for example, potassium and sodium channels often discriminate for only one of the two ions.
Structural proteins
Structural proteins confer stiffness and rigidity to otherwise-fluid biological components. Most structural proteins are
fibrous proteins; for example,
actin and
tubulin are globular and soluble as monomers, but
polymerize to form long, stiff fibers that make up the
cytoskeleton, which allows the cell to maintain its shape and size.
Collagen and
elastin are critical components of
connective tissue such as
cartilage, and
keratin is found in hard or filamentous structures such as
hair,
nails,
feathers,
hooves, and some
animal shells.
Other proteins that serve structural functions are motor proteins such as myosin, kinesin, and dynein, which are capable of generating mechanical forces. These proteins are crucial for cellular motility of single celled organisms and the sperm of many multicellular organisms which reproduce sexually. They also generate the forces exerted by contracting muscles.
Methods of study
As some of the most commonly studied biological molecules, the activities and structures of proteins are examined both ''in vitro'' and ''in vivo''. ''In vitro'' studies of purified proteins in controlled environments are useful for learning how a protein carries out its function: for example, enzyme kinetics studies explore the chemical mechanism of an enzyme's catalytic activity and its relative affinity for various possible substrate molecules. By contrast, ''in vivo'' experiments on proteins' activities within cells or even within whole organisms can provide complementary information about where a protein functions and how it is regulated.
Protein purification
In order to perform ''
in vitro'' analysis, a protein must be purified away from other cellular components. This process usually begins with
cell lysis, in which a cell's membrane is disrupted and its internal contents released into a solution known as a
crude lysate. The resulting mixture can be purified using
ultracentrifugation, which fractionates the various cellular components into fractions containing soluble proteins; membrane
lipids and proteins; cellular
organelles, and
nucleic acids.
Precipitation by a method known as
salting out can concentrate the proteins from this lysate. Various types of
chromatography are then used to isolate the protein or proteins of interest based on properties such as molecular weight, net charge and binding affinity. The level of purification can be monitored using various types of
gel electrophoresis if the desired protein's molecular weight and
isoelectric point are known, by
spectroscopy if the protein has distinguishable spectroscopic features, or by
enzyme assays if the protein has enzymatic activity. Additionally, proteins can be isolated according their charge using
electrofocusing.
For natural proteins, a series of purification steps may be necessary to obtain protein sufficiently pure for laboratory applications. To simplify this process, genetic engineering is often used to add chemical features to proteins that make them easier to purify without affecting their structure or activity. Here, a "tag" consisting of a specific amino acid sequence, often a series of histidine residues (a "His-tag"), is attached to one terminus of the protein. As a result, when the lysate is passed over a chromatography column containing nickel, the histidine residues ligate the nickel and attach to the column while the untagged components of the lysate pass unimpeded. A number of different tags have been developed to help researchers purify specific proteins from complex mixtures.
Cellular localization
The study of proteins ''in vivo'' is often concerned with the synthesis and localization of the protein within the cell. Although many intracellular proteins are synthesized in the
cytoplasm and membrane-bound or secreted proteins in the
endoplasmic reticulum, the specifics of how proteins are
targeted to specific organelles or cellular structures is often unclear. A useful technique for assessing cellular localization uses genetic engineering to express in a cell a
fusion protein or
chimera consisting of the natural protein of interest linked to a "
reporter" such as
green fluorescent protein (GFP). The fused protein's position within the cell can be cleanly and efficiently visualized using
microscopy, as shown in the figure opposite.
Other methods for elucidating the cellular location of proteins requires the use of known compartmental markers for regions such as the ER, the Golgi, lysosomes/vacuoles, mitochondria, chloroplasts, plasma membrane, etc. With the use of fluorescently tagged versions of these markers or of antibodies to known markers, it becomes much simpler to identify the localization of a protein of interest. For example, indirect immunofluorescence will allow for fluorescence colocalization and demonstration of location. Fluorescent dyes are used to label cellular compartments for a similar purpose.
Other possibilities exist, as well. For example, immunohistochemistry usually utilizes an antibody to one or more proteins of interest that are conjugated to enzymes yielding either luminescent or chromogenic signals that can be compared between samples, allowing for localization information. Another applicable technique is cofractionation in sucrose (or other material) gradients using isopycnic centrifugation. While this technique does not prove colocalization of a compartment of known density and the protein of interest, it does increase the likelihood, and is more amenable to large-scale studies.
Finally, the gold-standard method of cellular localization is immunoelectron microscopy. This technique also uses an antibody to the protein of interest, along with classical electron microscopy techniques. The sample is prepared for normal electron microscopic examination, and then treated with an antibody to the protein of interest that is conjugated to an extremely electro-dense material, usually gold. This allows for the localization of both ultrastructural details as well as the protein of interest.
Through another genetic engineering application known as site-directed mutagenesis, researchers can alter the protein sequence and hence its structure, cellular localization, and susceptibility to regulation. This technique even allows the incorporation of unnatural amino acids into proteins, using modified tRNAs, and may allow the rational design of new proteins with novel properties.
Proteomics and bioinformatics
The total complement of proteins present at a time in a cell or cell type is known as its
proteome, and the study of such large-scale data sets defines the field of
proteomics, named by analogy to the related field of
genomics. Key experimental techniques in proteomics include
2D electrophoresis, which allows the separation of a large number of proteins,
mass spectrometry, which allows rapid high-throughput identification of proteins and sequencing of peptides (most often after
in-gel digestion),
protein microarrays, which allow the detection of the relative levels of a large number of proteins present in a cell, and
two-hybrid screening, which allows the systematic exploration of
protein–protein interactions. The total complement of biologically possible such interactions is known as the
interactome. A systematic attempt to determine the structures of proteins representing every possible fold is known as
structural genomics.
The large amount of genomic and proteomic data available for a variety of organisms, including the human genome, allows researchers to efficiently identify homologous proteins in distantly related organisms by sequence alignment. Sequence profiling tools can perform more specific sequence manipulations such as restriction enzyme maps, open reading frame analyses for nucleotide sequences, and secondary structure prediction. From this data phylogenetic trees can be constructed and evolutionary hypotheses developed using special software like ClustalW regarding the ancestry of modern organisms and the genes they express. The field of bioinformatics seeks to assemble, annotate, and analyze genomic and proteomic data, applying computational techniques to biological problems such as gene finding and cladistics.
Structure prediction and simulation
Complementary to the field of structural genomics, protein structure prediction seeks to develop efficient ways to provide plausible models for proteins whose structures have not yet been determined experimentally. The most successful type of structure prediction, known as
homology modeling, relies on the existence of a "template" structure with sequence similarity to the protein being modeled; structural genomics' goal is to provide sufficient representation in solved structures to model most of those that remain. Although producing accurate models remains a challenge when only distantly related template structures are available, it has been suggested that
sequence alignment is the bottleneck in this process, as quite accurate models can be produced if a "perfect" sequence alignment is known. Many structure prediction methods have served to inform the emerging field of
protein engineering, in which novel protein folds have already been designed. A more complex computational problem is the prediction of intermolecular interactions, such as in
molecular docking and
protein–protein interaction prediction.
The processes of protein folding and binding can be simulated using such technique as molecular mechanics, in particular, molecular dynamics and Monte Carlo, which increasingly take advantage of parallel and distributed computing (Folding@Home project; molecular modeling on GPU). The folding of small alpha-helical protein domains such as the villin headpiece and the HIV accessory protein have been successfully simulated ''in silico'', and hybrid methods that combine standard molecular dynamics with quantum mechanics calculations have allowed exploration of the electronic states of rhodopsins.
Nutrition
Most
microorganisms and plants can biosynthesize all 20 standard
amino acids, while animals (including humans) must obtain some of the amino acids from the
diet. The amino acids that an organism cannot synthesize on its own are referred to as
essential amino acids. Key enzymes that synthesize certain amino acids are not present in animals — such as
aspartokinase, which catalyzes the first step in the synthesis of
lysine,
methionine, and
threonine from
aspartate. If amino acids are present in the environment, microorganisms can conserve energy by taking up the amino acids from their surroundings and
downregulating their biosynthetic pathways.
In animals, amino acids are obtained through the consumption of foods containing protein. Ingested proteins are then broken down into amino acids through digestion, which typically involves denaturation of the protein through exposure to acid and hydrolysis by enzymes called proteases. Some ingested amino acids are used for protein biosynthesis, while others are converted to glucose through gluconeogenesis, or fed into the citric acid cycle. This use of protein as a fuel is particularly important under starvation conditions as it allows the body's own proteins to be used to support life, particularly those found in muscle. Amino acids are also an important dietary source of nitrogen.
History and etymology
Proteins were recognized as a distinct class of biological molecules in the eighteenth century by
Antoine Fourcroy and others, distinguished by the molecules' ability to
coagulate or
flocculate under treatments with heat or acid. Noted examples at the time included albumin from
egg whites, blood
serum albumin,
fibrin, and wheat
gluten. Dutch chemist
Gerardus Johannes Mulder carried out
elemental analysis of common proteins and found that nearly all proteins had the same
empirical formula, C
400H
620N
100O
120P
1S
1. He came to the erroneous conclusion that they might be composed of a single type of (very large) molecule. The term "protein" to describe these molecules was proposed in 1838 by Mulder's associate
Jöns Jacob Berzelius; protein is derived from the
Greek word πρωτεῖος (''proteios''), meaning "primary", "in the lead", or "standing in front". Mulder went on to identify the products of protein degradation such as the
amino acid leucine for which he found a (nearly correct) molecular weight of 131
Da.
The difficulty in purifying proteins in large quantities made them very difficult for early protein biochemists to study. Hence, early studies focused on proteins that could be purified in large quantities, e.g., those of blood, egg white, various toxins, and digestive/metabolic enzymes obtained from slaughterhouses. In the 1950s, the Armour Hot Dog Co. purified 1 kg of pure bovine pancreatic ribonuclease A and made it freely available to scientists; this gesture helped ribonuclease A become a major target for biochemical study for the following decades.
Linus Pauling is credited with the successful prediction of regular protein secondary structures based on hydrogen bonding, an idea first put forth by William Astbury in 1933. Later work by Walter Kauzmann on denaturation, based partly on previous studies by Kaj Linderstrøm-Lang, contributed an understanding of protein folding and structure mediated by hydrophobic interactions. In 1949 Fred Sanger correctly determined the amino acid sequence of insulin, thus conclusively demonstrating that proteins consisted of linear polymers of amino acids rather than branched chains, colloids, or cyclols. The first atomic-resolution structures of proteins were solved by X-ray crystallography in the 1960s and by NMR in the 1980s.
Footnotes
References
External links
Databases and projects
Comparative Toxicogenomics Database curates protein–chemical interactions, as well as gene/protein–disease relationships and chemical-disease relationships.
Bioinformatic Harvester A Meta search engine (29 databases) for gene and protein information.
The Protein Databank (see also PDB Molecule of the Month, presenting short accounts on selected proteins from the PDB)
Proteopedia – Life in 3D: rotatable, zoomable 3D model with wiki annotations for every known protein molecular structure.
UniProt the Universal Protein Resource
neXtProt – Exploring the universe of human proteins: human-centric protein knowledge resource
The Protein Naming Utility
Human Protein Atlas
NCBI Entrez Protein database
NCBI Protein Structure database
Human Protein Reference Database
Human Proteinpedia
Folding@Home (Stanford University)
Tutorials and educational websites
"An Introduction to Proteins" from HOPES (Huntington's Disease Outreach Project for Education at Stanford)
Proteins: Biogenesis to Degradation – The Virtual Library of Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Category:Molecular biology
Category:Nutrition
Category:Proteins
Category:Proteomics
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