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The document discusses the Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation which is used to determine the molecular and ionic species present in aqueous solutions at different pH levels. It explains that the isoelectric point (pI) of an amino acid is the pH at which the net charge is zero as the positively and negatively charged groups are balanced. For alanine, the pI is calculated to be 6.02 based on averaging the pKa values of its carboxyl and ammonium groups. Additional details are provided on chiral forms of amino acids, the meaning of pKa values, and secondary protein structures.
The document discusses the Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation which is used to determine the molecular and ionic species present in aqueous solutions at different pH levels. It explains that the isoelectric point (pI) of an amino acid is the pH at which the net charge is zero as the positively and negatively charged groups are balanced. For alanine, the pI is calculated to be 6.02 based on averaging the pKa values of its carboxyl and ammonium groups. Additional details are provided on chiral forms of amino acids, the meaning of pKa values, and secondary protein structures.
The document discusses the Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation which is used to determine the molecular and ionic species present in aqueous solutions at different pH levels. It explains that the isoelectric point (pI) of an amino acid is the pH at which the net charge is zero as the positively and negatively charged groups are balanced. For alanine, the pI is calculated to be 6.02 based on averaging the pKa values of its carboxyl and ammonium groups. Additional details are provided on chiral forms of amino acids, the meaning of pKa values, and secondary protein structures.
HH: In order to determine the nature of the molecular and ionic species that
are present in aqueous solutions at different pH's, we make use of
the Henderson-Hasselbalch Equation, written below. Here, the pKa represents the acidity of a specific conjugate acid function (HA). When the pH of the solution equals pKa, the concentrations of HA and A(-) must be equal (log 1 = 0). pKa = pH + log10([HA]/[A-]) At a pH greater than 10, the amine exists as a neutral base and the carboxyl as its conjugate base, so the alanine molecule has a net negative charge. At intermediate pH's the zwitterion concentration increases, and at a characteristic pH, called the isoelectric point (pI), the negatively and positively charged molecular species are present in equal concentration. This behavior is general for simple (difunctional) amino acids. Starting from a fully protonated state, the pKa's of the acidic functions range from 1.8 to 2.4 for -CO2H, and 8.8 to 9.7 for -NH3(+). The isoelectric point, pI, is the pH of an aqueous solution of an amino acid (or peptide) at which the molecules on average have no net charge. In other words, the positively charged groups are exactly balanced by the negatively charged groups. For simple amino acids such as alanine, the pI is an average of the pKa's of the carboxyl (2.34) and ammonium (9.69) groups. Thus, the pI for alanine is calculated to be: (2.34 + 9.69)/2 = 6.02, the experimentally determined value. If additional acidic or basic groups are present as side-chain functions, the pI is the average of the pKa's of the two most similar acids. Chiral: enantiomer that bends towards light, due to asymmetric carbon in amino acids. (Optically active & asymmetric forms) The pKa value is one method used to indicate the strength of an acid. pKa is the negative log of the acid dissociation constant or Ka value. A lower pKa value indicates a stronger acid. That is, the lower value indicates the acid more fully dissociates in water. Low pKa = strong acid, donates hydrogen pH > pKa protonated; pH = pKa deprotonated; pH < pKa 0 net charge proline destabilizes a-helices. Group 1 nonpolar, Group 2 polar, Group 3 acidic, group 4 basic. GENERAL Post Modification Amino Acids: Side Chains: Secondary Structure: P/G: a helice breakers Triple helix (Collagen helix): 3.3 residues per turn Histidine: imidazole Alpha-Helix: 3.6 residues per term group (amphipathic) 3/10 helix: 3.0 residues per term …. Pi-helix: 4.1 residues per turn Pi-helix derived from insertion of 1 aa into an a-helix The aa insertion is very destabilizing, mostly selected against. 3/10 helices are extensions of a-helices at N&C-termini Parallel beta sheets: slanted H-bonds Antiparallel beta sheets: 180 deg H-bonds
Physical Organic Chemistry—Ii: Specially Invited Lectures Presented at the Second IUPAC Conference on Physical Organic Chemistry Held at Noordwijkerhout, Netherlands, 29 April–2 May 1974