'Deamidation' is a chemical reaction in which an
amide functional group is removed from an
organic compound. In
biochemistry, the reaction is important in the degradation of
proteins because it damages the amide-containing
side chains of the
amino acids
asparagine and
glutamine.
In the biochemical deamidation reaction, the side chain of an asparagine attacks the following peptide group (in black at top right of Figure), forming a symmetric
succinimide intermediate (in red). The symmetry of the intermediate results in two products of its hydrolysis, either
aspartate (in black at left) or in
isoaspartate, which is a
beta amino acid (in green at bottom right). This process is considered a deamidation because the amide in the asparagine side chain is replaced by a
carboxylate group. However, a similar reaction can occur in aspartate side chains, yielding a partial conversion to isoaspartate.
Kinetics of deamidation
Deamidation reactions have been conjectured to be one of the factors that limit the useful lifetime of proteins.
Deamidation proceeds much more quickly if the susceptible amino acid is followed by a small, flexible residue such as
glycine whose low
steric hindrance leaves the
peptide group open for attack. Deamidation reactions also proceed much more quickly at elevated
pH (>10) and
temperature.
References
★ Clarke S. (1987) "Propensity for spontaneous succinimide formation from aspartyl and asparaginyl residues in cellular proteins", ''Int. J., Peptide Protein Res.'', '30', 808-821.
★ Stephenson RC and Clarke S. (1989) "Succinimide Formation from Aspartyl and Asparaginyl Peptides as a Model for the Spontaneous Degradation of Proteins", ''J. Biol. Chem.'', '264', 6164-6170.
See also
★
Peptide bond
★
Post-translational modification
Robinson NE, Robinson AB. Molecular Clocks: Deamidation of Asparaginyl and Glutaminyl Residues in Peptides and Proteins. Althouse Press: Cave Junction, Ore.