Protein Structure Levels
Introduction
Section titled “Introduction”Proteins have a hierarchical structure organized into four levels: primary, secondary, tertiary, and quaternary. Each level is stabilized by specific forces and interactions. Understanding these levels is fundamental to predicting protein function and designing therapeutic peptides.
Primary Structure
Section titled “Primary Structure”The primary structure is the linear sequence of amino acids in a polypeptide chain. It is determined by the genetic code and represents the most basic level of protein organization. The primary structure dictates the folding pathway, final three-dimensional structure, and biological function. A single amino acid change can cause disease (e.g., sickle cell anemia).
Stabilizing forces: Peptide bonds (covalent) between amino acids, and disulfide bonds between cysteine residues.
Secondary Structure
Section titled “Secondary Structure”Secondary structure refers to local folding patterns of the polypeptide backbone. The two major types are alpha-helices and beta-sheets.
- Alpha-helix: Right-handed coil, 3.6 residues per turn, hydrogen bonds between residues i and i+4
- Beta-sheet: Extended chains with hydrogen bonds between adjacent strands; parallel or antiparallel
- Beta-turns: Connect beta-strands, often contain proline
- 3₁₀ helix: Tighter than alpha-helix, 3 residues per turn
Stabilizing forces: Hydrogen bonds between backbone N-H and C=O groups, and dipole interactions from alignment of peptide bond dipoles.
Tertiary Structure
Section titled “Tertiary Structure”Tertiary structure is the overall three-dimensional shape of a single polypeptide chain. It results from interactions between amino acid side chains.
| Force Type | Description | Strength |
|---|---|---|
| Hydrophobic interactions | Nonpolar side chains cluster in protein interior | Moderate |
| Hydrogen bonds | Between polar side chains | Weak-Moderate |
| Ionic bonds (salt bridges) | Between charged side chains | Weak |
| Disulfide bonds | Covalent bonds between cysteines | Strong |
| Van der Waals forces | Weak attractions between all atoms | Weak |
Common motifs include alpha-helical bundles, beta-barrels, and alpha/beta proteins. Proteins fold through secondary structure formation, hydrophobic collapse, tertiary contact formation, and final structure optimization. Most proteins are marginally stable (ΔG ≈ 20-60 kJ/mol).
Quaternary Structure
Section titled “Quaternary Structure”Quaternary structure is the arrangement of multiple polypeptide chains (subunits) into a functional protein complex. Chains can be identical (homo-oligomers) or different (hetero-oligomers).
- Hemoglobin: Tetramer (α₂β₂) for oxygen transport
- Antibodies: Four chains (2 heavy, 2 light) for immune function
- DNA polymerase: Multiple subunits for replication
Quaternary structures include dimers (2 subunits), trimers (3), tetramers (4), hexamers (6), and larger oligomers. Stabilized by the same forces as tertiary structure.
Structure-Function Relationship
Section titled “Structure-Function Relationship”Protein structure directly determines function. Enzyme active sites require specific 3D arrangements of catalytic residues. Binding sites provide complementary shape for ligand binding. Signaling proteins undergo conformational changes for signal transduction. Misfolding diseases (Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s) result from loss of proper structure.