Title: Columbia Biological Society
1Columbia Biological Society
- First meeting
- Tuesday Sep 25
- at 9pm
- in 702 Hamilton.
2Some prosthetic groups Particular small molecules
so tightly bound that they are always found
associated with the protein
Tetrahydrofolic acid vitamin B9
Pyridoxal phosphate vitamin B6
Riboflavin vitamin B2
Heme
3Membrane proteins
Could be size selective
Could be size and charge selective
Anion an ion that would migrate to the anode in
an electric field
4Small molecules bind with great specificity to
pockets on protein surfaces
Too far
5Estrogen receptor binding estrogen, a steroid
hormone
detail
estrogen
estrogen
6Protein separation methods
Ultracentrifugation
Mixture of proteins
7centrifugal force m(omega)2r
Causing sedimentation
m mass omega angular velocity r distance
from the center of rotation
Opposing sedimentation friction foV.
Constant velocity is soon reached centrifugal
force frictional force
So m(omega)2r  foV fo frictional
coefficient (depends on shape)
And V m(omega)2r/fo,
V proportional to mass (MW) V inversely
proportional to fo (shape) V inversely
proportional to non-sphericity (Spherical shape
moves fastest)
Or V (omega)2r x m / fo
Note formulas wil be provided on exams, as will
formulae
8Ultracentrifuge
9Glass plates
Large, high positive charge
Large, low positive charge
Small, High positive charge
Small, Low positive charge
Molecules shown after several hours of
electrophoresis
10Glass plates
Glass plates
Winner Small, High positive charge
Loser Large, low positive charge
Intermediate Large, high positive charge
Intermediate Small, Low positive charge
Molecules shown after several hours of
electrophoresis
Molecules shown after several hours of
electrophoresis
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12Clamped glass sandwich
Electrode connection
Reservoir for buffer
13Power supply
Happy post-doc
Electrodes
Tracking dyes
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15SDS PAGE SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
- sodium dodecyl sulfate, SDS (or SLS)
CH3-(CH2)11- SO4- - CH3-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-CH2-SO
4-
SDS
All the polypeptides are denatured and behave as
random coils All the polypeptides have the same
charge per unit length All are subject to the
same electromotive force in the electric
field Separation based on the sieving effect of
the polyacrylamide gel Separation is by molecular
weight only SDS does not break covalent bonds
(i.e., disulfides)
16Summary of SDS PAGE Separates on MW only, no
shape no charge High resolution. Can measure
the MW of a protein (subunit MW) by comparig
mobiltiy to that of standards. Must first
reduce any disulfides to get true subunit MW
(e.g., with mercaptoethanol).
17Molecular sieve chromatography (gel filtration,
Sephadex chromatography)
Sephadex bead
18Molecular sieve chromatography
Sephadex bead
19Molecular sieve chromatography
Sephadex bead
20Molecular sieve chromatography
Sephadex bead
21Molecular sieve chromatography
Sephadex bead
22Plain column of Sephadex
Fancy column of Sephadex
23Handout 4-3 protein separations
Handout
24Largest and most spherical
Lowest MW
Winners
Largest and most spherical
Similar to handout, but Winners Native PAGE
added
Most chargedand smallest
25Enzymes protein catalysts
26Each arrow an ENZYME
27Chemical reaction between 2 reactants
Spontaneous reaction Energy released Goes to
the right H-I is more stable than H-H or I-I
here Thats why it goes to the right, i.e., it
will end up with more products than reactants
28Change in Energy (Free Energy)
H2 I2
-3 kcal/mole
2 HI
Reaction goes spontaneously to the right
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302H 2I
say, 100 kcal/mole
say, 103 kcal/mole
Change in Energy (Free Energy)
H2 I2
-3 kcal/mole
2 HI
31 322H 2I
100 kcal/mole
Change in Energy
H-H I-I (TS)
Say, 20 kcal/mole
H2 I2
Activation Energy
-3 kcal/mole
2 HI
33HHII (TS)
Allows it to happen
Energy needed to bring molecules together to
form a TS complex
Change in Energy (new scale)
determines speed VELOCITY rate of a
reaction
Activation energy
H2 I2
3 kcal/mole
2 HI
Net energy change Which way it will end up
DIRECTION of the reaction, independent of the rate
34Biosynthesis of a fatty acid
3 glucose
18-carbon fatty acid
Free energy change 300 kcal per mole of
glucose is REQUIRED
3 glucose
18-carbon fatty acid
So getting a reaction to go in the direction you
want is a problem (to be discussed next time)
35Concerns about the cells chemical reactions
- Direction
- We need it to go in the direction we want
- Speed
- We need it to go fast enough to have the cell
double in one generation - Catalysts deal with this second problem, which we
will now consider
36The velocity problem is solved by catalysts
The catalyzed reaction
The catalyst takes part in the reaction, but it
itself emerges unchanged
37HHII (TS)
Activation energy without catalyst
TS complex with catalyst
Change in Energy
Activation energy WITH the catalyst
H2 I2
2 HI
38Reactants in an enzyme-catalyzed reaction
substrates
39Reactants (substrates)
Active site or substrate binding site (not
exactly synonymous, could be part of the active
site)
Not a substrate
40Unlike inorganic catalysts, Enzymes are specific
- Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â succinic
dehydrogenase - HOOC-HCCH-COOH lt--------------------------------gt
HOOC-CH2-CH2-COOH
2H - fumaric acid                                 Â
                   succinic acid - NOT a substrate for the enzyme
- 1-hydroxy-butenoate   HO-CHCH-COOH
- (simple OH instead of one of the carboxyls)
- Maleic acid
- Platinum will work with all of these,
indiscriminantly
41- Enzymes work as catalysts for two reasons
- They bind the substrates putting them in close
proximity. - They participate in the reaction, weakening the
covalent bonds - of a substrate by its interaction with the
enzymes amino acid side groups (e.g.,
stretching).
42Chemical kinetics
- Substrate ? Product (reactants in enzyme
catalyzed reactions are called substrates) - S ? P
- Velocity V ?P/ ? t
- So V also -?S/ ?t (disappearance)
- From the laws of mass action
- ?P/ ?t - ?S/ ?t k1S k2P
- For the INITIAL reaction, P is small and can be
neglected - ?P/ ?t - ?S/ ?t k1S
- So the INITIAL velocity Vo k1S
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44Vo the slope in each case
Vo the slope in each case
Effect of different initial substrate
concentrations
0.6
S4
S3
0.4
P
S2
0.2
S1
0.0
t
45Considering Vo as a function of S (which wil be
our usual useful consideration)
46Now, with an enzyme
We can ignore the rate of the non-catalyzed
reaction
47Enzyme kinetics (as opposed to simple chemical
kinetics)
Vo independent of S
Vo proportional to S
48Michaelis and Menten mechanism for the action of
enzymes (1913)
49Michaelis-Menten mechanism
X
- Assumption 1. E S lt--gt ES this is how enzymes
work, via a complex - Assumption 2. Reaction 4 is negligible, when
considering INITIAL velocities (Vo, not V). - Assumption 3. The ES complex is in a
STEADY-STATE, with its concentration unchanged
with time during this period of initial rates. -
- (Steady state is not an equilibrium condition, it
means that a compound is being added at the same
rate as it is being lost, so that its
concentration remains constant.)
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51E S
ES
E P
52Michaelis-Menten Equation(s)
See handout at your leisure for the derivation
(algebra)
k3EoS
Vo
(k2k3)/k1 S
If we let Km (k2k3)/k1, just gathering 3
constants into one, then
53All the ks are constants for a particular enzyme
At high S (compared to Km), Rate is constant Vo
k3Eo
At low S (compared to Km), rate is proportional
to S Vo k3EoS/Km
54At high S, Vo here Vmax k3Eo
So the Michaelis-Menten equation can be written
Vmax S
Vo
Simplest form
Km S
55- Now, Vmax k3Eo
- So k3 Vmax/Eo
- the maximum (dP/dt)/Eo, the maximum
(-dS/dt)/Eo - k3 the TURNOVER NUMBER
- the maximum number of moles of substrate
converted to product per mole of enzyme per
second - max. molecules of substrate converted to product
per molecule of enzyme per second - Turnover number then is a measure of the
enzyme's catalytic power.
56Some turnover numbers
- Succinic dehydrogenase 19 (below average)
- Most enzymes 100 -1000
- The winner
- Carbonic anhydrase (CO2 H20 H2CO3)
- 600,000
- Thats 600,000 molecules of substrate per
molecule of enzyme per second. - Picture it!
- You cant.
57Km ?
Vmax/2 is achieved at a S that is numerically
equal to Km
So Km is numerically equal to the concentration
of substrate required to drive the reaction at ½
the maximal velocity Try it Set Vo ½ Vmax and
solve for S.
58Another view of Km
Consider the reverse of this reaction (the
DISsociation of the ES complex)
The equilibrium constant for this dissociation
reaction is
Kd ES/ES k2/k1
(Its the forward rate constant divided by the
backward rate constant. See the Web lecture if
you want to see this relationship derived)
59Consider in reverse
Kd k2/k1
Km (k2k3)/k1
IF k3 ltlt k2, then Km k2/k1 But Kd k2/k1
(from last graphic) so Km Kd for the
dissociation reaction
(and 1/Km the association constant)
So the lower the Km, the more poorly it
dissociates. That is, the more TIGHTLY it is held
by the enzyme
And the greater the Km, the more readily the
substrate dissociates, so the enzyme is binding
it poorly
60Km ranges
- 10-6M is good
- 10-4M is mediocre
- 10-3M is fairly poor
So Km and k3 quantitatively characterize how an
enzyme does the job as a catalyst
61-
Inhibitor looks like the substrate and like the
substrate binds to the substrate binding site
62Competitive inhibitor resembles the substrate
63Competitive inhibitor can be swamped out at high
substrate concentrations
64-
Inhibition eventually swamped out as S is
increased
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66Zocor
67 A competitive inhibitor as a drug
On handout
68½ Vmax w/o inhibitor
½ Vmax withyet more inhibitor
Km remains unchanged. Vmax decreases.
69Substrate
Non-competitive inhibitor
70Allosteric inhibition
Inhibitor binding site
Active
Inactive
Active
allosteric inhibitor
substrate
Allosteric inhibitor binds to a different site
than the substrate, So it need bear no
resemblance to the substrate
The apparent Km OR the apparent Vmax or both may
be affected.
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72Allosteric inhibitors are used by the cell for
feedback inhibition of metabolic pathways
Feedback inhibition of enzyme activity, or End
product inhibition
End product
End product
End product
First committed step is usually inhibited
73              Thr deaminaseglucose ...... --gt
--gt threonine -----------------gt
alpha-ketobutyric acid --gt A --gt B --gt C --gt
isoleucine (and no other aa)
?
Allosteric inhibitor, Feedback inhibitor (is
dissimilar from substrate)
Substrate
7460 minutes, in a minimal medium
20 minutes !, in a rich medium