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Applications of Protein

Proteins perform a variety of biological tasks and have a specific 3D structure that determines their function. This structure can be determined through methods like X-ray crystallography and NMR. Protein splicing is a natural process where an intein protein cuts itself out of a host protein without a trace. This protein splicing process has been harnessed for protein engineering techniques. Posttranslational modifications are important for imposing functional diversity and can be achieved through various techniques including ligation methods that combine recombinant proteins with chemical synthesis to allow site-specific modifications.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
241 views3 pages

Applications of Protein

Proteins perform a variety of biological tasks and have a specific 3D structure that determines their function. This structure can be determined through methods like X-ray crystallography and NMR. Protein splicing is a natural process where an intein protein cuts itself out of a host protein without a trace. This protein splicing process has been harnessed for protein engineering techniques. Posttranslational modifications are important for imposing functional diversity and can be achieved through various techniques including ligation methods that combine recombinant proteins with chemical synthesis to allow site-specific modifications.

Uploaded by

Majid Ghaffar
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Biological Applications of Protein

Definition:
Proteins are fundamental components of all living cells,
performing a variety of biological tasks. Each protein has a particular 3D
structure that determines its function. Protein structure is more conserved
than protein sequence, and more closely related to function. To determine
the 3-D structure of protein we use some experminantel methods i.e.
X-rays crystallography.

NMR.

Others (e.g., neutron diffraction).

Description:
Protein splicing is a naturally occurring process in which a
protein editor, called an intein, performs a molecular disappearing act by
cutting itself out of a host protein in a traceless manner. In the two decades
since its discovery, protein splicing has been harnessed for the development
of several protein-engineering methods, such as X-ray crystallography and
site-directed mutagenesis have furnished countless insights, highlighting
how even the most byzantine of problems can yield to the right tools. This is
perhaps

best

illustrated

by

considering

protein

posttranslational

modifications (PTMs). Most, if not all, proteins are modified at some point; it
is nature's way of imposing functional diversity on a single polypeptide chain
The chemical modification of proteins can be accomplished
through a variety of means, including bioconjugation techniques, total
chemical synthesis, enzyme-mediated reactions, nonsense suppression
mutagenesis, and a variety of protein ligation methods. The latter group of
strategies include the protein semisynthesis methods (defined as those
where the protein is manufactured from premade fragments one or both
being

recombinant

in

origin)

expressed

protein

ligation

(EPL)

and

protein trans-splicing (PTS), These are unique technologies in that they

combine the power of biotechnology, which provides accessibility to


significant amounts of large proteins, with the versatility of chemical
synthesis, which allows the site-specific incorporation of almost any chemical
modification into the target protein.
Expressed protein ligation (EPL) allows a recombinant protein and a
synthetic peptide to be linked together under mild aqueous conditions. The
process involves a chemoselective reaction that yields a final protein product
with a native peptide bond between its two building blocks. A biological role
for protein splicing in unicellular organisms has proven elusive; modern
inteins seem to be parasitic genetic elements that are inserted into the open
reading frames of (usually) essential genes. This frustration aside, the
process has found a multitude of applications in biotechnology and quickly
attracted the interest of the peptide chemistry community, as -thioesters
were identified as crucial intermediates in the reaction mechanism (Figure 1).

Figure 1.
Mechanism of Protein Splicing
Protein splicing (A) and its variant protein trans-splicing (B).

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