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Unit 3

Unit 3. Enzymes. Catalysis and enzyme kinetics. OUTLINE. 3.1. Characteristics of biological catalysts. Coenzymes, cofactors, vitamins Enzyme nomenclature and classification 3.2. Enzyme catalysis. Transition state Active site Enzyme-substrate complex

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Unit 3

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  1. Unit 3 Enzymes. Catalysis and enzyme kinetics.

  2. OUTLINE 3.1. Characteristics of biological catalysts. Coenzymes, cofactors, vitamins Enzyme nomenclature and classification 3.2. Enzyme catalysis. Transition state Active site Enzyme-substrate complex Factors involved in enzyme catalysis 3.3. Enzyme kinetics. Steady-state assumption and Michaelis-Menten equation Factors affecting the enzymatic activity Enzymatic inhibition • Reversible inhibition • Irreversible inhibition 3.4. Enzyme regulation. Allosteric behaviour Covalent modification Proteolysis

  3. 3.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOLOGICAL CATALYSTS The biological catalysts are: – Proteins (enzymes) – Catalytic RNA (ribozymes) What characteristics features define enzymes? • High catalytic power: ratio of the catalysed rate to the uncatalysed rate of the reaction = 106-1020 • Enzymes are recover after each catalytic cycle. • High specificity: (even stereospecifivity) • Regulation

  4. 3.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOLOGICAL CATALYSTS Ejemplos de reacciones catalizadas Carbonic anhydrase Protease • 1011 times faster than the uncatalysed reaction • The specificity depends on the R1 group. • It converts 6x105 molecules per second • • 107 times faster than the uncatalysed reaction

  5. 3.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOLOGICAL CATALYSTS COFACTORS, COENZYMES AND VITAMINS Nonprotein components required for the enzymatic activity: cofactor – Apoenzyme + cofactor = holoenzyme – Two types of cofactors: • Metal ions: Mg2+, Zn2+, Cu2+, Mn2+, ... • Coenzymes: small organic molecules synthesised from vitamins. Prosthetic groups: tightly bound coenzymes Cofactors deficiency promotes some health problems.

  6. 3.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOLOGICAL CATALYSTS COFACTORS, COENZYMES AND VITAMINS

  7. 3.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOLOGICAL CATALYSTS COFACTORS, COENZYMES AND VITAMINS

  8. 3.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOLOGICAL CATALYSTS ENZYME NOMENCLATURE AND CLASSIFICATION

  9. 3.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOLOGICAL CATALYSTS ENZYME NOMENCLATURE AND CLASSIFICATION • Traditional Nomenclature • urease: urea hydrolysis • amylase: starch hydrolysis • DNA polymerase: Nucleotides polymerization • Trivial designations (Ambiguity) • Systematic Nomenclature (identify the substrate and the reaction) • ATP + D-glucose  ADP + D-glucose 6-phosphate • ATP: D-hexose 6-phosphotransferase • hexokinase (traditional nomenclature)

  10. 3.1. CHARACTERISTICS OF BIOLOGICAL CATALYSTS ENZYME NOMENCLATURE AND CLASSIFICATION A series of four number serves to specify a particular enzyme. The numbers are preceded by the letters EC (enzyme commission). First number: class Second number: subclass (electron donors, type of substrate, etc.) Third number: characteristics of the reaction (functional groups, etc.) Fourth number: order of the individual entries Carboxipeptidase A (peptidyl-L-amino acid hydrolase) EC 3.4.17.1 Class: 3  Hydrolases. Subclass: 4  peptide bond 17  metallocarboxypeptidases. Entry number: 1

  11. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS Transition state A….B….C The conversion of S to P occurs because a fraction of the S molecules has the energy necessary to achieve a reactive condition known as the transition state (S-P intermediate) A-B + C Ej. A-B + C A + B-C A + B-C Enzymes (catalysts) work by lowering the free energy of activation related to the transition state

  12. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS Active site Specificity Catalytic power Substrate binds at the active site of the enzyme through relatively weak forces (chymotrypsin)

  13. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS Enzyme-substrate complex interactions Lock and key theory (Fisher, 1890) Induced fit theory (Koshland y Neet, 1968)

  14. D-glucose • Unligaded form of hexoquinase • and free glucose (b) Conformation of hexokinase with glucose bound 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS Enzyme-substrate complex interactions Glucose induced conformational change of hexokinase

  15. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS FACTORS INVOLVED IN ENZYME CATALYSIS • Proximity and orientation • Surface phenomena • Bounds tension • Presence of reactive groups

  16. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS FACTORS INVOLVED IN ENZYME CATALYSIS Proximity and orientation

  17. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS FACTORS INVOLVED IN ENZYME CATALYSIS Bounds tension

  18. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS FACTORS INVOLVED IN ENZYME CATALYSIS Presence of reactive groups • General acid-base catalysis: proton transference in the transition state (from or towards the substrate) • Covalent catalysis: transitory covalent bond between enzyme and substrate • Metal ion catalysis: it acts as electrophilic catalysts, it promotes redox reactions, it stabilised charges, the polarity of certain bounds can change because of the metals… Mechanisms of catalysis

  19. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS FACTORS INVOLVED IN ENZYME CATALYSIS

  20. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS FACTORS INVOLVED IN ENZYME CATALYSIS Presence of reactive groups General acid-base catalysis and covalent catalysis: protease

  21. 3.2. ENZYME CATALYSIS FACTORS INVOLVED IN ENZYME CATALYSIS Enolase General acid-base catalysis and metal ion catalysis

  22. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS It is the analysis of the velocity (or rate) of a chemical reaction catalysed by an enzyme, and how the velocities can change on the basis of environmental parameters modifications. • WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO KNOW? • How the rate of an enzyme-catalysed reaction can be defined in a mathematical way • Velocity units • What is the order of a reaction (first-order reaction/second order reaction?

  23. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS The rate of a enzymatic reactions depends on the substrate concentration Hypothetical enzyme catalyzing: SP The rate of the reaction decreased when S is converted into P. Initial velocity: slope of tangent to the line at time 0

  24. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS The rate of a enzymatic reactions depends on the substrate concentration

  25. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS STEADY-STATE ASSUMPTION AND MICHAELIS-MENTEN EQUATION Michaelis-Menten equation describes a curve known as a rectangular hyperbola k1 k2 E + S ES E + P k-1 The velocity of the product formation is: [ES] depends on: the velocity of ES formation from E + S the velocity of its dissociation to regenerate E+S or to form E + P.

  26. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Steady-state Under experimental conditions [S]>>>[E]. The [ES] quickly reaches a constant value in such dynamic system, and remains constant until complete P formation: Steady State assumption Concentration 0 Time Early stage ES formation Steady state [ES] is constant

  27. d [ ES ] = = + so 0 , k [ E ][ S ] k [ ES ] k [ ES ] - 1 1 2 dt 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Steady-state KM, Michaelis constant Maximal velocity is obtained when the enzyme is saturated: [E]T=[ES] Michaelis-Menten Equation

  28. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS

  29. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS What does KM mean? k1 k2 When [S]=KM, v=Vmax/2 E + S ES E + P k-1 KM is the substrate concentration that gives a velocity equal to one—half the maximal velocity. Units of molarity. It indicates how efficient in an enzyme selecting substrates (specificity) Usually KM is used as a parameter to estimate the affinity of an enzyme for their substrates. KM is similar to the ES dissociation constant when k2<<k-1.

  30. Michaelis-Menten 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS The rate of a enzymatic reactions depends on the substrate concentration

  31. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Turnover number, Kcat Kcat of an enzyme is a measure of its maximal catalytic activity. It represents the kinetic efficiency of the enzyme k1 k2 E + S ES E + P k-1 In the reaction kcat = k2 First order velocity constant. Units: s-1 Kcat: turnover number: number of substrate molecules converted into product per enzyme molecule per unit time, when the enzyme is saturated with substrate

  32. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Turnover number, Kcat

  33. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS kcat/KM defines the catalytic efficiency of an enzyme It provides information about two combined facts: substrate binding and catalysis (substrate conversion into product). Kcat/Km is the velocity constant of the E +S conversion into E + P. Second order constant. Units: M-1s-1 When [S]<<KM, The catalytic efficiency of an enzyme cannot exceed the diffusion-controlled rate of combination of E and S to form ES.

  34. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Experimental determination of KM and Vmax Several rearrangements of the Michaelis-Menten equation transform it into a straight-line equation: Lineweaver-Burk double-reciprocal plot:

  35. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Factors affecting the enzymatic activity • Enzyme concentration • Enzymatic activity international unit (U): quantity of enzyme able to transform 1.0 mol substrate per minute at 25ºC (under optimal conditions) • - Specific enzymatic activity (U/mg): number of enzymatic unit per mg of purified protein. It indicates how pure the enzyme is. Balls: they represent proteins Red balls: enzyme molecules Both cylinders: same activity units Right cylinder shows higher specific activity than the left cylinder

  36. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Factors affecting the enzymatic activity Temperature The rates of enzyme-catalysed reactions generally increase with increasing temperature. However, at high temperatures the activity declines because of the thermal denaturation of the protein structure. pH Enzymes in general are active only over a limited pH range, and most have a particular pH at which their catalytic activity is optimal. pH changes can modify side chain, prosthetic groups and substrate charges, and consequently, the activity of the enzyme.

  37. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Enzymatic inhibition • Inhibition: velocity of an enzymatic reaction is decreased or inhibited by some agent (inhibitors) – Irreversible • Inhibitor causes stable, covalent alterations in the enzyme – Examples: » Ampicillin: causes covalent modification of a transpeptidase catalysing the synthesis of the bacterial cellular wall » Aspirin: causes covalent modification in a cyclooxygenase involved in inflammation – Reversible • Inhibitor interact with the enzyme through noncovalent association/dissociation reactions.

  38. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS REVERSIBLE INHIBITION Competitive Inhibition • The inhibitor binds reversibly to the enzyme at the same site as substrate. The inhibitor resemble S structurally. • S-binding and I-binding are mutually exclusive, competitive processes. • The inhibition is blocked when the substrate concentration increases. • Kmapp increases and V is unaffected

  39. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Competitive Inhibition REVERSIBLE INHIBITION

  40. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS REVERSIBLE INHIBITION Noncompetitive inhibition • Inhibitor interacts with both E and ES. • The inhibition is not blocked when the substrate concentration increases. • Vapp decreases and Km is unaffected

  41. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS REVERSIBLE INHIBITION Noncompetitive inhibition

  42. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Uncompetitive inhibition REVERSIBLE INHIBITION • Inhibitor only combines with ES • It does not bind in the active site. • Vapp and Kmapp decrease

  43. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS Uncompetitive inhibition REVERSIBLE INHIBITION

  44. 3.3. ENZYME KINETICS IRREVERSIBLE INHIBITION Chymotrypsin inhibition by diisopropylfluorophosphate (DIFP) Ciclooxigenase inhibition by aspirin

  45. 3.4. ENZYME REGULATION • Living systems must regulate the enzymatic catalytic activity to: • - Coordinate metabolic processes • Promote adaptations to environmental changes • Growth and complete the living cycle in the correct way • Two mechanisms of regulation: • 1.- Control of the enzyme availability • 2.- Control of the enzymatic activity, by means of modifications of the conformation or structure

  46. 3.4. ENZYME REGULATION ALLOSTERIC REGULATION Allosteric enzyme: Oligomeric organization (more than one active site and more than one effector-binding site) The regulatory effects exerted on the enzyme’s activity are achieved by conformational changes occurring in the protein when effector metabolites bind Conformational states for a protein (monomer): Taut state (T): Low substrate affinity Relaxed state (R) : High substrate affinity

  47. 3.4. ENZYME REGULATION ALLOSTERIC REGULATION Homotropic effect: The ligand-induced conformational change in one subunit can affect the adjoining subunit: Cooperativity Usually, it is positive regulation No Michaelis-Menten kinetics Sigmoidal curves

  48. 3.4. ENZYME REGULATION ALLOSTERIC REGULATION Heterotropic effect: The effectors do not bind in the active site Activator: R state is stabilised Inhibitors: T state is stabilised

  49. Feedback inhibition 3.4. ENZYME REGULATION As product accumulates, the rate of the enzymatic reaction decreases (negative effect) Aspartate carbamoyltransferase: allosteric enzyme

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