Top Banner
1 Ooopsies & Schedule I posted Periodic Table w/ ‘normal’ deadline instead of intended of 9-12 @ 10 p.m. Kudos to all of you who did it by the posted deadline!! But for the sake of fairness, deadline now 9- 16 Next round: Read paper this weekend Assessor on Monday/due Thurs p.m.
32

Ooopsies & Schedule

Jan 18, 2016

Download

Documents

ofira

Ooopsies & Schedule. I posted Periodic Table w/ ‘normal’ deadline instead of intended of 9-12 @ 10 p.m. Kudos to all of you who did it by the posted deadline!! But for the sake of fairness, deadline now 9-16 Next round: Read paper this weekend Assessor on Monday/due Thurs p.m. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Ooopsies & Schedule

1

Ooopsies & Schedule❖ I posted Periodic Table w/ ‘normal’ deadline

instead of intended of 9-12 @ 10 p.m.

❖ Kudos to all of you who did it by the posted deadline!!

❖ But for the sake of fairness, deadline now 9-16

❖ Next round: Read paper this weekend

❖ Assessor on Monday/due Thurs p.m.

Page 2: Ooopsies & Schedule

2Quiz custodiet ipsos Quiz custodiet ipsos

custodes?custodes?

Page 3: Ooopsies & Schedule

3Who builds the builder?

❖ Machines are 3D ‘folded’* strings of amino acids: ‘proteins’

❖ What forms (folds) the machines out of strings?

❖ Does anybody see a problem with such a solution?

*Folding is the correct term for an amino acid string being brought into correct 3D shape

Page 4: Ooopsies & Schedule

4

What do to with my What do to with my string of blobs?string of blobs?

Page 5: Ooopsies & Schedule

5

Beads on a string❖ It is plausible that a string of distinct, shaped

‘feels’ would self-assemble: Prof. Nowicki’s example

❖ Potential example of amino acid ‘beads’ on a protein ‘string’ shown

http://sun.menloschool.org/~dspence/biology/chapter3/chapt3_13.html

Page 6: Ooopsies & Schedule

6

Say hello to a special friend

❖ Next week in lab, you’ll revel in the glory of histidine

❖ Today’s special pal: cysteine (recall from Easter Egg Hunt)

❖ Concept: the 20 amino acids are a collections of generalist pieces & specialists with unique capabilities!

Page 7: Ooopsies & Schedule

7Sulfur + Sulfur = SulfurSulfur

oxidize

Page 8: Ooopsies & Schedule

8On the importance of bonding ‘H’

Page 9: Ooopsies & Schedule

9On the importance of bonding ‘H’

(+)

(-)

Page 10: Ooopsies & Schedule

10

alpha helix

Page 11: Ooopsies & Schedule

11Details, details

Page 12: Ooopsies & Schedule

12One, two, three, four

Steps in assembling a Big Machine

Page 13: Ooopsies & Schedule

13

Great experimentsGreat experimentsBoiling an egg, writ small: Boiling an egg, writ small:

Scrambled ribonucleaseScrambled ribonuclease

Page 14: Ooopsies & Schedule

14The argument

❖ It is plausible that a string of distinct, shaped ‘feels’ would self-assemble

❖ alpha-helices, beta-sheets can be drawn; pairings postulated

❖ That’s different from evidence

http://sun.menloschool.org/~dspence/biology/chapter3/chapt3_13.html

How beads organize a string:

Page 15: Ooopsies & Schedule

15What it is, is...

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/c/c0/Ribonuclease_A_7rsa.png

Page 16: Ooopsies & Schedule

16

Ribonuclease the right way

❖ In a protein chain (a.k.a. polypeptide), nearby sulfur sidechains may be covalently joined

http://guweb2.gonzaga.edu/faculty/cronk/biochem/images/disulfide_bond_formation.gif

Cartoon of previous

Page 17: Ooopsies & Schedule

17What they then knew

❖ ‘it cuts up RNA’ *

❖ we can tell if RNA intact vs. cut up

❖ (heat drives proteins wild)

❖ (so do some chemicals--like urea. From the name, guess where we can find that?)

*nomenclature moment: ‘enzyme’ = hastenerprotein that does this: -ase

Page 18: Ooopsies & Schedule

18

Like & unlike an egg

Biochemstry, 5th ed.Berg, Tymoczko &

Stryer

❖ Break disulfide (Cys-Cys through their sulfurs)

❖ ‘Denature’ (unfold)

❖ Cool fast

❖ freezes current state

❖ allow disulfides to reform

❖ It ‘locks in’ to inactive states

Page 19: Ooopsies & Schedule

19

Like & unlike an egg

Biochemstry, 5th ed. Berg, Tymoczko & Stryer

❖ Disconnect the disulfides

❖ Allow to re-discover its ‘comfy’ shape (re-fold on its own)

❖ Allow disulfides to re-lock

❖ Function!

Page 20: Ooopsies & Schedule

20

Finding yourself… protein style

Page 21: Ooopsies & Schedule

21

What’s going on in What’s going on in there?there?

Techniques for seeing that which cannot be Techniques for seeing that which cannot be seenseen

Page 22: Ooopsies & Schedule

22

From the lab❖ By detection of different smells, you deduced

❖ The presence of molecules

❖ Their flightiness

❖ Their structural distinctness

❖ Your possession of receptors & pathways

Page 23: Ooopsies & Schedule

23An important idea

❖ To understand a paper, you don’t necessarily need to understand every component

❖ If I tell you that…

❖ amount of habooxiebooble directly reflects the number of hydrophobic residues in a protein

❖ Protein A has a greater habooxiebooble than Protein B

❖ What can you tell me?

Page 24: Ooopsies & Schedule

24How can we know the

shape of a protein?❖ X-ray crystallography: the ultimate in (frozen)

truth

❖ Circular dichroism (rotation of polarized light)

❖ All you need to know: it happens, and it happens different for different shapes [conformations] of same 1˚ sequence

❖ Cysteine locking

❖ Tyrosine wiggling

Page 25: Ooopsies & Schedule

25

Prions: protein Prions: protein folding diseasesfolding diseases

Giving a protein a choice isn’t always a good Giving a protein a choice isn’t always a good ideaidea

Page 26: Ooopsies & Schedule

26

What is life?

❖ Replicates

❖ Instructs

Page 27: Ooopsies & Schedule

27Mystery diagnosis

❖ Diseases with LOOOONG onset times--years or decade+

❖ Infectious particles resistant to UV treatments that blow DNA, RNA out of the water

Kuru is an incurable degenerative neurological disorder (brain disease) that is a type of transmissible spongiform encephalopathy, caused by a prion found in humans.[1] The term "kuru" derives from the Fore word "kuria/guria", 'to shake'.[2], a reference to the body tremors that are a classic symptom of the disease; it is also known among the Fore as the laughing sickness due to the pathologic bursts of laughter people would display when afflicted with the disease. It is now widely accepted that Kuru was transmitted among members of the Fore tribe of Papua New Guinea via cannibalism.[3]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kuru_(disease)

Page 28: Ooopsies & Schedule

28What’s a ‘prion’?

❖ Alas ‘ protein infectious particle’

❖ !?! How can this be?

❖ I will later argue that genetic material must be ‘base like’ with rigid presentation of binary information

❖ Proteins do not qualify! How can they direct reproduction?

❖ We may talk viruses & such much later, but this is specifically a protein folding issue, so it’s here

Page 29: Ooopsies & Schedule

29Deadly alternatives

The secret: conversion of pre-existing material to the dark side; not de novo creation

Still, this very much blurs the distinction about which structures can & cannot instruct

Biologic Science, Scott Freeman, Fig. 3.15

Shown is a small section of a much larger protein--but this is the source of the trouble

Page 30: Ooopsies & Schedule

30But wait! There’s more...

❖ Note that besides the bonds between the two, each offers donors & acceptors to the outside

❖ Imagine this going on and on and on...

❖ One ‘prionized’ protein converts another, and they convert others...

Page 31: Ooopsies & Schedule

31

Prion diseases: FYI

❖ http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dvrd/prions/

Page 32: Ooopsies & Schedule

32Homework

❖ Assessor drops on Mon.

❖ I challenge you to read on your own 1st

❖ Vocal linked from homepage

ContCent => Resources =>Words, Refs & Writing => References & Writing