Title: CLINICAL CHEMISTRY CHAPTER 10
1CLINICAL CHEMISTRYCHAPTER 10
2- Introduction
- Enzymes are the chemical lubricants that make
chemical reactions go nice and easy - They help out with chemical reactions - but
they dont get used up themselves ( sort of
like the oil in your car hopefully ) - They are always proteins ! ( Remember proteins ?
) - Theyre found in cells throughout the body.
When these cells get sick the enzymes in them
tend to ooze out into the plasma - Want to diagnose heart attacks, liver disease,
muscle disease, pancreatitis, prostate cancer and
bone disease? Enzymes can do that ! - They are different because we measure them not
in terms of how many there are ( mg / dl , for
example ) but in terms of their activity ( how
well they are lubricating chemical reactions
3KEY TERMS
- Activation energy
- Activators
- Apoenzyme
- Catalyst
- Coenzyme
- Cofactor
- Enzyme
- First Order Kinetics
- Second Order Kinetics
- Isoenzymes
- Holoenzyme
- International Unit (IU) of Enzyme Activity
- Kinetic Assay
- 2 - Point Assay
- Substrate
- Substrate Depletion
- Zymogen
- Prosthetic Group
- Inhibitors
- Competitive Inhibitors
- Non - Competitive Inhibitors
- Uncompetitive Inhibitors
- Allosteric Site
- Active Site
- Michaelis - Menten Constant
- Myocardial Infarction ( MI )
- Congestive Heart Failure ( CHF )
4The Enzymes we will study
- CPK
- ALK
- AST
- ALT
- GGT
- LDH
- AMY
- LIP
- ACP
- SChE
5- OBJECTIVES
- Discuss the general structure and functions of
enzymes - Define a unit of enzyme activity ( IU )
- Discuss how temperature, pH and other factors
effect enzyme activity - Explain first - order and zero - order enzyme
kinetics and the special techniques that are
used to measure enzymes - Discuss the tissue sources, clinical
significance and Normal Values of the following - CPK, LDH, AST, ALT
- ALK, GGT
- AMYL, LIP
- ACID PHOS, Cholinesterase
6- General Properties and Definitions
- Many chemical reactions cannot occur at 37 º (
too cold ) - Many chemical reactions require added heat energy
- Biochemical reactions also require this energy ,
but proteins will denature - So how do biochemical reactions ever happen ?
They cheat !!! - Biochemical reactions can occur if there is a way
to lower the amount of energy it takes to make
the reaction happen. - So how do biochemical reactions cheat ???
7- Answer They get a catalyst
- Catalysts are substances that lessen the amount
of energy required for chemical reactions to
occur - Catalysts are not used up in the reaction
- Substrate
Product - Enzymes are protein catalysts
- Enzymes are required for the numerous metabolic
processes of all cells - When cells are damaged, enzymes leak out into
the plasma - The measurement of these enzymes are useful
diagnostic tools -
Enzyme
8Activation Energy for Chemical Reactions
Catalysts decrease the amount of energy required
to activate chemical reactions. Enzymes are
protein catalysts.
9- Enzyme Structure
- Similar to protein structure, because all enzymes
are proteins - 1 º Amino acid sequence
- 2 º Interaction between 2 locations on the
protein chain - 3 º Folding of chains ( 3D structure )
- 4 º 2 or more separate polypeptide chains
10- Definitions
- Active site
- Physical location on the enzyme molecule which
interacts with the substrate molecule - Allosteric Site
- Non active site , but which may interact with
other substances to change the overall enzyme 3D
shappe - Isoenzymes
- Structurally different enzymes ( proteins ) but
which catalyze the same chemical reactions
11- Cofactor
- A non protein substance required for normal
enzyme activity - Cofactors maintain enzyme 3D structure ( critical
for enzyme function ) - There are 2 types of cofactors
- Activators ( Inorganic --- Magnesium ,
Calcium ) - Coenzyme ( Organic - NADH )
12- Holoenzyme
- Enzyme coenzyme ( prosthetic group )
Active enzyme - Proenzyme ( Zymogen , Apoenzyme )
- Enzyme coenzyme Inactive enzyme
13Enzyme Structure and Substrate
14- Classification and nomenclature
- Enzyme kinetics
- Chemical reactions occur spontaneously if the
energy for reactants is higher than products - The amount of energy required to stimulate
molecules to break their chemical bonds and form
new bonds is the activation energy - Increasing the temperature can generate the
activation energy. This a problem for living
cells
15- Enzymes lower the activation energy for chemical
reactions - The enzyme substrate complex has a lower
activation energy than the substrate alone - Enzymes are usually specific as to which
chemical reactions they catalyze
E S ES
E P
Enzyme Substrate Complex
Enzyme Substrate
Enzyme Product
The enzyme is not consumed or depleted by the
chemical reaction
16- Enzymes differ in their ability to react with
different substrates - There are various enzyme specificities
- Absolute Catalyzes only 1 specific substrate
- Group Catalyzes reactions of a particular
chemical group - Bond Catalyzes reactions of particular
chemical bonds - Stereoisomerism Catalyzes reactions of
steroisomers
17- Factors that influence enzymatic factors
- First Order Kinetics
- Enzyme concentration exceeds substrate
concentration - As substrate concentration increases , the
reaction rate increases - The reaction rate is proportional to substrate
concentration - This is not a good place to measure enzyme
activity ( The
reaction rate is dependent on substrate , not
enzyme )
18- Zero Order Kinetics
- Substrate concentration is in excess
- Substrate saturates enzyme
- All enzyme reacts with the excess substrate
- The chemical reaction rate goes to maximum
velocity - Reaction rate is dependent on enzyme activity (
conc . ) - Enzymes are not measured in terms of
concentration , but activity - Zero Order conditions are suited for enzyme
measurement because this is where the reaction
rate is dependent on the enzymes ability to
catalyze a chemical reaction
19Relationship between substrate concentration and
the reaction rate in a enzymatic reaction
Zero Order conditions
Reaction Rate
First Order Conditions
Substrate concentration
20- Enzyme concentration
- Enzymes are not measured in terms of
concentration - Enzymes are measured is terms of their activity
- Enzyme activity The rate at which an enzyme
catalyzes a chemical reaction - Increased activity is proportional to increased
concentration - Activity is measured under Zero Order conditions
because this is where the reaction rate is
dependent on the work ( activity ) of the enzyme
21- MICHAELIS-MENTEN CONSTANT (Km)
- Numerical constant for each enzyme and substrate
under defined conditions - Expresses a relationship between the reaction
rate and substrate concentration
22- pH ( acidity )
- Enzymes are proteins and subject to changes in 3D
structure from pH changes - pH must be carefully controlled in enzymatic
reactions - Temperature
- Reactions rates vary dramatically with
temperature changes - Reactions rates may double per 10 ? C increase
in temperature - Temperature must be defined and regulated for
enzymatic reactions - 37 ? C is the common standardized temperature
23- Cofactors ( non-protein substances needed for
enzymatic activity ) - Activators ( Ca2 , Fe 2 , Mg 2 , Mn 2
, Zn 2 ) - Coenzymes ( Vitamins and nucleotide phosphates )
- Increased coenzyme concentration increases
reaction rate
24- Inhibitors ( Substances that decrease enzyme
reaction rates ) - Competitive Inhibitors
- Substances that bind at the enzymes active site
- Competes with substrate for the active site
- Addition of additional substrate increases the
reaction rate - Non Competitive Inhibitors
- Substances that bind at an enzymes non active
site - Enzymes 3D shape is altered, decreasing enzyme
activity - Addition of additional substrate has no effect on
reaction rate - Uncompetitive Inhibitors
- Substances that bind with enzyme substrate
complex
25- Effects of inhibitors on Km
- Competitive Inhibitors increase Km
- Non-competitive Inhibitors have no effect on Km
( maximum
velocity is not possible ) - Un-competitive Inhibitors decrease Km
26- Measuring enzyme activity
- Enzymes are not directly measured
- Enzymes are commonly measured in terms of their
catalytic activity - We dont measure the molecule
- We measure how much work it performs
- Its catalytic activity
- The rate at which it catalyzes the conversion of
substrate to product - The enzymatic activity is a reflection of its
concentration - Activity is proportional to concentration
27- Photometric measurement of activity
- E S ES
E P - Enzyme activity can be tested by measuring
- Increase of product
- Decrease of substrate
- Decrease of co-enzyme
- Increase of altered co-enzyme
- If substrate and co-enzyme are in excess
concentration, the reaction rate is controlled by
the enzyme activity.
28- Coupled enzyme reactions
- Some enzyme testing utilizes other enzymatic
reactions in a sequence of reactions. - These other accessory enzymes are not being
measured. - Auxillary enzymes are used as reagents and
added in excess so they do not become rate
limiting factors in the overall process. - All enzymatic reactions in a coupled assay must
be performed at zero order kinetics.
29- Example of a coupled assay
- S1 E1 S1 E1
E1 P1 ( RXN 1) - P1 E2 P1 E2
E2 P2 ( RXN 2 ) - P2 E3 P2 E3
E3 P3 ( RXN 3) - E1 Enzyme we want to measure ( patient )
- E2 Auxiliary enzyme ( reagent )
- E3 Indicator enzyme ( reagent )
- There are 3 reactions with 3 different enzymes
- P1 becomes the substrate for reaction rxn 2
- P2 becomes the substrate for reaction rxn 3
- We end up measuring reaction 3, but its reaction
rate is determined by reaction rate of rxn 1
30- Enzymatic reactions are measured in terms of the
rate at which substrate is converted into
product. This can be done in 2 different ways. - Fixed Time Assay ( 2 Point )
- Zero Order Kinetics
- Substrate concentration is measured at set timed
intervals to determine enzyme activity - A slight delay from the beginning of the reaction
to maximum velocity is the lag phase - These times intervals may not be short enough to
detect sudden changes - Extreme elevations in enzyme activity may deplete
the substrate between measured intervals -
Substrate Depletion - Substrate depletion causes falsely decreased
activity results.
31Two Point Enzyme Methodology
32- Multipoint Continuous Monitoring ( Kinetic Assay
) - Continuous measurements of substrate product
concentration are recorded by the
spectrophotometer of an automated analyzer - Substrate depletion is detected because the
analyzer is always looking and will see any
sudden dramatic changes
33Multipoint Enzyme Method
34Comparison of 2 Point and Multipoint Enzyme
Techniques
35Enzyme Activity can be measured as a function of
the change of absorbance values over a period of
time
Remember that enzymes are measured in terms of
activity How much work is getting done? How
fast are chemical reactions taking place? A
large change in absorbance per unit of time
indicates that the reaction was occurring at a
rapid rate, meaning that enzyme activity is high
36- Calculation of enzyme activity
- Remember, its not concentration its activity
- Enzymes are measured in terms of how fast they
convert substrate into product - Activity is a measurement of how fast they work
- The common unit of enzyme activity is the
International Unit ( IU ) - 1 IU That amount of enzyme that will convert 1
micromole (1 ?mole ) of substrate to product
per minute under defined conditions - These conditions are such things as
- pH
- Temperature
- Substrate
37- Mathematical expression of enzyme activity
- ?A The rate of change in Absorbance ( A )
of the substance being measured - MIN Time the reaction is measured
- TV Total sample volume ( patient plasma
reagents ) - SV Volume of patient plasma
- 106 Conversion of moles into micromoles
- L Length of the light path
- ? Molar absorptivity
38- Example of Molar Absorptivity calculation
- NADH ( a common co-enzyme ) absorbs light at 340
NM - NAD ( the reduced form ) does not absorb
light at 340 nm - Increased ( or decreased ) NADH concentration in
a solution will cause the Absorbance ( A ) to
change. - A 0.05 X 10-3 Molar NADH solution placed in a 1
cm light path has an absorbance of 0.311
The molar absorptivity of NADH is 6.22 x 103
Moles / Liter Each chemical substance has its
own unique molar absorptivity
39- Enzymes as reagents
- Enzymes are used as reagents in a wide variety of
methodologies to measure other non-enzyme
substances - Enzymes help to produce substances that can be
easily measured - Enzyme specificity helps to eliminate interfering
substances - If the enzyme is used as a reagent, we do not
want the enzyme concentration to be a affect the
chemical reaction - To avoid this the enzyme is added in excess so
that it cannot become a rate limiting factor .
- Remember, we are just using the enzyme to measure
something else
40- Creatine Kinase ( CK , CPK )
- CPK catalyzes
- Creatine ATP Creatine
phosphate ADP - High concentrations of CPK in muscle, cardiac and
brain tissues - Increased plasma CPK activity is associated with
damage to these tissues - ? CPK is especially useful to diagnose
- AMIs
- Skeletal muscle diseases ( Muscular Dystrophy )
CPK
41- CPK ( cont )
- CPK has 3 isoenzymes
- Each isoenzyme is composed of two different parts
( dimers ) - CK - BB BRAIN
- CK - MB CARDIAC
- CK - MM SKELETAL MUSCLE
- Skeletal muscle CPK is 99 CK-MM
- Cardiac muscle CPK is 80 CK-MM and 20 CK-MB
42- CPK ( cont )
- Most normal plasma CPK is CK-MM
- Because of CK MBs association with cardiac
tissue, increased CPK MB ( gt 6 of the total
CPK activity ) is a strong indication of AMI - Post AMI CPK - MB
- CK-MB increases 4 8 hours post AMI
- Peaks at 12 - 24 hours post AMI
- Returns to normal 24 - 48 hours later
43- CPK ( cont )
- CPK assays are often coupled assays CPK
- In the example below, the rate at which NADPH is
produced is a function of CPK activity in the
first reaction. - Hexokinase and G6PD are auxiliary enzymes
Creatine Phosphate ADP
Creatine ATP
ATP Glucose
Glucose 6 - Phosphate
G 6 - P
NADP 6 -
Phosphogluconate NADPH
CPK
Hexokinase
G6PD
44- CPK ( cont )
- RBCs lack CPK, but hemolyzed RBCs release
adenylate kinase into the plasma, causing falsely
increased CPK activity - Hemolyzed specimens must be recollected
- Reference ranges
- Males Total CPK 15 - 160 IU / L
- Females Total CPK 15 - 130 IU / L
- Lets remember 15 150 IU / L
- CK - MB lt 6 of Total CPK
45- Lactate dehydrogenase ( LDH , LD )
- LDH is found in many different tissues
- Skeletal muscle
- Cardiac muscle
- Renal tissue
- RBCs
- Plasma LDH activity is elevated in a variety of
conditions - Liver disease
- Cancers
- AMI
- Hemolytic diseases
46- LDH ( cont )
- Lactate NAD
Pyruvate NADH H - At pH 9.0 the reactions moves to the right
- At pH 6.8 the reaction moves to the left
- NADH absorbs light at 340 nm NAD does not
- The reaction can be performed either direction
LD
47- LDH ( cont )
- LDH post AMI
- Increases 12 24 hours post AMI
- Peaks at 48 72 hours
- May remain elevated for 10 days
- RBC hemolysis falsely increases plasma LDH
- Reference range 100 - 225 IU / L ( L ?
P )
48- LDH Isoenzymes
- Because increased total LDH is relatively
non-specific, LDH isoenzymes can be useful - 5 isoenzymes composed of a cardiac ( H ) and
muscle ( M ) component - LD - 1 ( HHHH ) Cardiac , RBCs
- LD - 2 ( HHHM )
- LD - 3 ( HHMM ) Lung, spleen, pancreas
- LD - 4 ( HMMM ) Hepatic and skeletal
- LD - 5 ( MMMM )
- A flipped LD - 1 / LD - 2 ( LD-1 gt LD-2 )
consistent with AMI
49- Aspartate Aminotransferase ( AST, SGOT, GOT )
- High concentrations of AST are found in
- Skeletal muscle
- Cardiac muscle
- Liver tissue
- Lung tissue
- Post AMI
- Rises 6 8 hours
- Peaks at 24 hours
- Returns to normal by day 5
50- AST ( cont )
- AST assays usually utilize a coupled enzyme
technique - Aspartate ? - Keto - Glutarate
Oxaloacetate Glutamate
-
- Oxaloacetate NADH H
Malate NAD - MD is an auxiliary enzyme
- NADH absorbs light at 340 nm NAD does not
- Reference Range 5 - 30 IU / L
AST
MD
51- Alanine aminotransferase ( ALT, SGPT )
- Highest concentrations in the liver
- Increased plasma ALT closely associated with
liver disease
Alanine ?- Ketoglutarate
Pyruvate Glutamate Pyruvate NADH
H Lactate
NAD NADH absorbs light at 340 nm NAD
does not Reference range 5 - 35 IU / L
ALT
LD
52Chemical reactions of the amino-transferases AST
and ALT
53- Alkaline phosphatase ( ALK, ALK PHOS )
- Optimal pH at 9.0 10.0 ( alkaline )
- Removes phosphates ( PO4 ) from organic compounds
- Requires Mg as an activator
- High concentrations in
- Bone
- Liver
- Best utilized to diagnose bone and liver disease
- Reference range 30 90 IU / L
54- Amylase ( AMY, AMYL )
- Catalyzes breakdown of starch and glycogen to
glucose - High concentrations in
- Pancreas
- Saliva Chew on some bread !!!
- Amylase is filtered into the urine ( unusual for
a protein ) - Urine amylases are occasionally ordered
- Increased plasma or urine amylase is very
suggestive of pancreatitis or pancreatic
malignancy
55- Amylase ( cont )
- Because amylase is concentrated and excreted in
the urine, urine amylase values may be more
diagnostic that plasma - Many different amylase methodologies varying in
the types of substrates used - Reference range 60 180 SU / dl
56- Acid phosphatase ( ACP, Acid Phos )
- Same function as ALK PHOS, but at a different pH
- Optimal pH is 5.0 ( acid )
- High concentrations in the prostate gland made it
a useful test for the diagnosis of prostate
cancer - Its use is declining because of other, better
tests for prostate cancer ( Prostate Specific
Antigen - PSA )
57- Gamma Glutamyltransferase ( GGT )
- High concentrations in liver tissue
- Increased plasma GGT is associated with
- Hepatobiliary disease
- Alcoholic cirrhosis
- Insurance companies utilize GGT to detect
alcoholism - Reference range 6 45 IU / L
GGT Glutathione amino acid
Glutamyl peptide L-Cysteine
58- Lipase ( LIP )
- Hydrolyze ( breaks down ) fat
- High concentrations in the pancreas .
- Increased plasma lipase associated with
pancreatitis - Lipase is more specific than amylase for the
detection of pancreatitis - Reference range 0.0 - 1.0 U / ml
59- Pseudocholinesterase ( SChE )
- Considered a screening test for exposure to
organophosphate exposure ( pesticides) - SChE is found in plasma, liver, pancreas and
brain - Reference Range 4,000 - 12000 IU / L
60- Diagnosis of AMI ( Acute Myocardial Infarction
) - Remember cardiac disease is the 1 cause of
death in the United States - 1 Symptoms, physical examination , and patient
history But there are many
causes of chest pain other than AMI - 2 EKG only 50 reliable - may be normal
even during AMI - 3 Laboratory tests ( Troponin I , CKMB ,
Myoglobin , BNP ) - Cardiac cellular necrosis following ischemic
event causes soluble proteins to leak into the
plasma - Rephrased When coronary arteries are blocked
( ischemic event ) cardiac tissue is deprived of
oxygen and dies, and dead cardiac tissue cells
spill their guts into the plasma
61- Myoglobin
- Soluble heme protein
- Present in all muscle cells, cardiac and
skeletal - Plasma myoglobin is elevated in various forms of
muscle damage - surgery, strenuous exercise,
degenerative muscle diseases and physical trauma - Myoglobin can also be elevated from decreased
renal clearance - Relatively low molecular weight , water
solubility and high cellular cytoplasm
concentrations cause myoglobin to be the first
marker to be released from damaged cells
62- Troponin I
- Contractile protein associated with cardiac and
skeletal tissue - Two forms Troponin I and Troponin T
- Troponin I from cardiac tissue has a unique
antigenic structure that differentiates it from
skeletal Troponin I and facilitates its
measurement - Of all the cardiac markers , Troponin I is the
most specific for cardiac injury - CK-MB
- Iso-enzyme found in cardiac and skeletal tissue
- Plasma CKMB concentrations are increased in AMI
and various forms of skeletal muscle trauma - Although not absolutely specific, very high
concentrations in cardiac tissue make it a good
marker for AMI
63- B- Type Natremic Protein ( BNP )
- Increased plasma BNP is associated with
Congestive Heart Failure ( CHF ) - CHF is one of the most common reasons for
hospitalization in patients greater than 70 years
old - BNP assays are often ordered with AMI markers to
differentiate between AMIs and CHF - BNP in normal in AMI
64- Cardiac enzymes
- In the good old days , AMIs were diagnosed with
the cardiac enzymes - The cardiac enzymes consisted of Total CPK,
LDH and AST - Although still useful, the more specific markers
such as Troponin I, Myoglobin and CK-MB have
largely replaced the cardiac enzymes
65TRIAGE CARDIAC PANEL FOR RAPID QUANTIFICATION
OF CK-MB, MYOGLOBIN , TROPONIN I and
BNP
- TRIAGE is a common commercial test package that
quantitates the three most significant laboratory
markers for AMI - CK-MB , Troponin I and
Myoglobin - Procedure summary
- Lithium heparin whole blood is added to the
cartridge system - Plasma separates from RBCS after passing through
a filter - Plasma ( CK-MB , Troponin I and Myoglobin )
reacts with fluorescent tagged anti-CKMB,
anti-Troponin and anti-Myoglobin monoclonal
antibodies in the reaction chamber - Concentration of the analyte is directly
proportional to fluorescence that is measured on
the Triage Meter
66- Triage system cut - off ranges for cardiac
markers . Values above the cut-off ranges
indicate possible AMI - Troponin I lt 0.6 ng / ml
- Myoglobin lt 107 ng / ml
- CK-MB lt 4.3 ng / ml
- Reference ranges for the cardiac enzymes
- Total CPK 15 - 150 U / L
- LDH 100 - 225 U / L
- AST 5 - 30 U / L
67Summary of Triage cardiac markers after AMI
The interpretation of cardiac markers can be
difficult because blood specimens are not always
collected soon after patients suffer chest pains
- delays of hours to days are common before
patients seek medical attention
The most common symptom of a heart attack is
.
Although any single analyte may not be adequate
to diagnose an AMI, the collective information
from all three analytes can be very useful
68Enzyme Top 10
- Enzymes are protein catalysts that lower
activation energy of chemical reactions - Enzymes are not consumed in the reactions they
catalyze - Enzymes are measured in terms of activity ( know
the definition of an IU ) - Enzymes are measured at zero order kinetics
- CPK ? Cardiac and skeletal muscle
- ALK ? Bone and hepatic tissue
- GGT and ALP ? Hepatic tissue
- AMY and LIP ? Pancreas
- LDH ? Hepatic, Cardiac ,
RBCs ( lots of others ) - AST ? Cardiac, Hepatic and skeletal
- CK-MB ? Cardiac ( good to
diagnose AMI )
69- REFERENCE RANGES
- ALT 5 - 35 IU/L
- AST 5 - 30 IU/L
- CPK 15 - 150 IU/L
- GGT 5 - 45 IU/L
- LDH 100 - 225 IU/L
- ALK 30 - 90 IU/L
- AMYL 60 - 180 SU/Dl
- LIPASE 0.0 - 1.0 IU/ML
- CK-MB LESS THAN 6 OF CPK
- ACID PHOS 3.0 - 12.0 IU/L
- MYOGLOBIN 30 90 mg/dl
- TROPONIN I lt 0.6 ng/ml
- BNP lt 100 pg/ml
70Enzyme Links
http//www.bact.wisc.edu/microtextbook/Metabolism/
Enzymes.html http//med6.bham.ac.uk/teaching/clin
year3/enzymslide/ http//ull.chemistry.uakron.edu
/genobc/Chapter_20/ http//users.rcn.com/jkimball
.ma.ultranet/BiologyPages/E/Enzymes.html