amino acid Nonstandard amino acidschemical compound

Nonstandard amino acids

Red blood cells (erythrocytes) trapped in a mesh of fibrin threads. The glycoprotein prothrombin, …[Credits : Eye of Science / Photo Researchers, Inc.]Nonstandard amino acids refer to those amino acids that have been chemically modified after they have been incorporated into a protein (termed a “posttranslational modification”) and those amino acids that occur in living organisms but are not found in proteins. Among these modified amino acids is γ-carboxyglutamic acid, a calcium-binding amino acid residue found in the blood-clotting protein prothrombin (as well as in other proteins that bind calcium as part of their biological function). The most abundant protein by mass in vertebrates is collagen. Significant proportions of the amino acids in collagen are modified forms of proline and lysine: 4-hydroxyproline and 5-hydroxylysine.

Arguably, the most important posttranslational modification of amino acids in eukaryotic organisms (including humans) is the reversible addition of a phosphate molecule to the hydroxyl portion of the R groups of serine, threonine, and tyrosine. This event is known as phosphorylation and is used to regulate the activity of proteins in their minute-to-minute functioning in the cell. Serine is the most commonly phosphorylated residue in proteins, threonine is second, and tyrosine is third.

Proteins with carbohydrates (sugars) covalently attached to them are called glycoproteins. Glycoproteins are widely distributed in nature and provide the spectrum of functions already discussed for unmodified proteins. The sugar groups in glycoproteins are attached to amino acids through either oxygen (O-linked sugars) or nitrogen atoms (N-linked sugars) in the amino acid residues. The O-linked sugars are attached to proteins through the oxygen atoms in serine, threonine, hydroxylysine, or hydroxylproline residues. The N-linked sugars are attached to proteins through the nitrogen atom in asparagine.

Finally, there is the case of selenocysteine. Although it is part of only a few known proteins, there is a sound scientific reason to consider this the 21st amino acid because it is in fact introduced during protein biosynthesis rather than created by a posttranslational modification. Selenocysteine is actually derived from the amino acid serine (in a very complicated fashion), and it contains selenium instead of the sulfur of cysteine.

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