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Peptides ammo acid analysis

Automated ammo acid analysis of peptides containing asparagine (Asn) and glutamine (Gin) residues gives a peak corresponding to ammonia Why" ... [Pg.1153]

Jones B. N., Paabo S., and Stem S, (1981) Ammo acid analysis and enzymatic sequence determination of peptides by an improved o-phthaldialdehyde precolumn labeling procedure /. Liq,... [Pg.114]

Several chemical methods have been devised for identifying the N terminal ammo acid They all take advantage of the fact that the N terminal ammo group is free and can act as a nucleophile The a ammo groups of all the other ammo acids are part of amide linkages are not free and are much less nucleophilic Sanger s method for N terminal residue analysis involves treating a peptide with 1 fluoro 2 4 dimtrobenzene which is very reactive toward nucleophilic aromatic substitution (Chapter 23)... [Pg.1131]

A major advance was devised by Pehr Edman (University of Lund Sweden) that has become the standard method for N terminal residue analysis The Edman degrada tion IS based on the chemistry shown m Figure 27 12 A peptide reacts with phenyl iso thiocyanate to give a phenylthwcarbamoyl (PTC) denvative as shown m the first step This PTC derivative is then treated with an acid m an anhydrous medium (Edman used mtromethane saturated with hydrogen chloride) to cleave the amide bond between the N terminal ammo acid and the remainder of the peptide No other peptide bonds are cleaved m this step as amide bond hydrolysis requires water When the PTC derivative IS treated with acid m an anhydrous medium the sulfur atom of the C=S unit acts as... [Pg.1134]

This reaction forms the basis of one method of terminal residue analysis A peptide is treated with excess hydrazine in order to cleave all the peptide linkages One of the terminal amino acids is cleaved as the free amino acid and identified all the other ammo acid residues are converted to acyl hydrazides Which amino acid is identified by hydrazmolysis the N terminus or the C terminus ... [Pg.1154]

Sequential analysis of amino acids in purified peptides and proteins is best initiated by analysis of the terminal amino acids. A peptide has one amino acid with a free a-amino group (NH2-terminus) and one amino acid with a free a-carboxyl group (COOH-terminus). Many chemical methods have been developed to selectively tag and identify these terminal ammo acids. [Pg.230]

The COOH-terminal amino acid of a peptide or protein may be analyzed by either chemical or enzymatic methods. The chemical methods are similar to the procedures for NH2-termmal analysis. COOH-terminal amino acids are identified by hydrazinolysis or are reduced to amino alcohols by lithium borohydnde. The modified ammo acids are released by acid hydrolysis and identified by chromatography. Both of these chemical methods are difficult, and clear-cut results are not readily obtained The method of choice is peptide hydrolysis catalyzed by carboxypeptidases A and B. These two enzymes catalyze the hydrolysis of amide bonds at the COOH-terminal end of a peptide (Equation E2.3), since carboxypeptidase action requires the presence of a free -carboxyl group in the substrate. [Pg.233]

Even more versatile than the dansyl method is the Edman method (Figure E2.4) The NH2-termmal amino acid is removed as its phenylthiohydan-toin (PTH) derivative under anhydrous acid conditions, while all other amide bonds in the peptide remain intact. The derivatized amino acid is then extracted from the reaction mixture and identified by paper, thin-layer, gas, or high-performance liquid chromatography. The intact peptide (minus the original NH2-terminal ammo acid) may be isolated and recycled by reaction with phenylisothiocyanate. Since this method is nondestructive to the remaining peptide (aqueous acid hydrolysis is not required) and results in good yield, it can be used for stepwise sequential analysis of peptides The method is now automated. [Pg.238]


See other pages where Peptides ammo acid analysis is mentioned: [Pg.1130]    [Pg.237]    [Pg.25]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.232]    [Pg.139]    [Pg.234]    [Pg.408]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.1130 ]




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