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Date: 3-10-2021
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Date: 15-9-2021
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Date: 3-9-2021
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Peptide bond
In proteins, amino acids are joined covalently by peptide bonds, which are amide linkages between the α-carboxyl group of one amino acid and the α-amino group of another. For example, valine and alanine can form the dipeptide valylalanine through the formation of a peptide bond (Fig. 1).
Peptide bonds are resistant to conditions that denature proteins, such as heating and high concentrations of urea . Prolonged exposure to a strong acid or base at elevated temperatures is required to break these bonds nonenzymically .
Figure 1. A. Formation of a peptide bond, showing the structure of the dipeptide valylalanine. B. Characteristics of the peptide bond. [Note: Peptide bonds involving proline may have a cis configuration.]
1. Naming the peptide: By convention, the free amino end (N-terminal) of the peptide chain is written to the left and the free carboxyl end (Cterminal) to the right. Therefore, all amino acid sequences are read from the N- to the C-terminal end. For example, in Figure 1A, the order of the amino acids in the dipeptide is valine, alanine. Linkage of ≥50 amino acids through peptide bonds results in an unbranched chain called a polypeptide, or protein. Each component amino acid is called a residue because it is the portion of the amino acid remaining after the atoms of water are lost in the formation of the peptide bond. When a peptide is named, all amino acid residues have their suffixes (-ine, -an, -ic, or -ate) changed to -yl, with the exception of the C-terminal amino acid. For example, a tripeptide composed of an N-terminal valine, a glycine, and a C-terminal leucine is called valylglycylleucine.
2. Peptide bond characteristics: The peptide bond has a partial double-bond character, that is, it is shorter than a single bond and is rigid and planar (Fig. 1B). This prevents free rotation around the bond between the carbonyl carbon and the nitrogen of the peptide bond. However, the bonds between the α-carbons and the α-amino or α-carboxyl groups can be freely rotated (although they are limited by the size and character of the R groups). This allows the polypeptide chain to assume a variety of possible conformations. The peptide bond is almost always in the trans configuration (instead of the cis; see Fig. 1B), in large part because of steric interference of the R groups (side chains) when in the cis position.
3. Peptide bond polarity: Like all amide linkages, the −C = O and −NH groups of the peptide bond are uncharged, and neither accept nor release protons over the pH range of 2–12. Thus, the charged groups present in polypeptides consist solely of the N-terminal (α-amino) group, the Cterminal (α-carboxyl) group, and any ionized groups present in the side chains of the constituent amino acids. The −C = O and −NH groups of the peptide bond are polar, however, and are involved in hydrogen bonds (for example, in α-helices and β-sheets).
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