Title: ENZYME KINETICS
1ENZYME KINETICS
- Medical Biochemistry, Lecture 24
2Lecture 24, Outline
- Michaelis-Menten kinetics
- Interpretations and uses of the Michaelis-Menten
equation - Enzyme inhibitors types and kinetics
3Enzyme Kinetics Equation
4Michaelis-Menten Equation
5Initial Velocity (vo) and S
- The concentration of substrate S present will
greatly influence the rate of product formation,
termed the velocity (v) of a reaction. Studying
the effects of S on the velocity of a reaction
is complicated by the reversibility of enzyme
reactions, e.g. conversion of product back to
substrate. To overcome this problem, the use of
initial velocity (vo) measurements are used. At
the start of a reaction, S is in large excess
of P, thus the initial velocity of the reaction
will be dependent on substrate concentration
6Michaelis-Menten Curve
7Initial Velocity (vo) and S (cont)
- When initial velocity is plotted against S, a
hyperbolic curve results, where Vmax represents
the maximum reaction velocity. At this point in
the reaction, if S gtgt E, all available enzyme
is "saturated" with bound substrate, meaning only
the ES complex is present.
8Michaelis-Menten Curve
9Substrate Saturation of an Enzyme
A. Low S B. 50 S or Km C. High,
saturating S
10Steady State Assumption
- The M-M equation was derived in part by making
several assumptions. An important one was the
concentration of substrate must be much greater
than the enzyme concentration. In the situation
where S gtgt E and at initial velocity rates,
it is assumed that the changes in the
concentration of the intermediate ES complex are
very small over time (vo). This condition is
termed a steady-state rate, and is referred to as
steady-state kinetics. Therefore, it follows
that the rate of ES formation will be equal to
the rate ES breakdown.
11Michaelis-Menten Equation Derivation
- Rate of ES formation k1(ET - ES)S (where
ET is total concentration of enzyme E and k-2
is considered neglible) - Rate of ES breakdown to product k-1ES k2ES
12Michaelis-Menten Equation Derivation (cont)
- Thus for the steady state assumption
- k1(ET - ES)S k-1ES k2ES
- This equation is the basis for the final
Michaelis-Menten following algebraic
rearrangement and substitution of Km and Vmax
terms.
13Meaning of Km
- An important relationship that can be derived
from the Michaelis-Menten equation is the
following If vo is set equal to 1/2 Vmax, then
the relation Vmax /2 VmaxS/Km S can
be simplied to Km S 2S, or Km S.
This means that at one half of the maximal
velocity, the substrate concentration at this
velocity will be equal to the Km. This
relationship has been shown experimentally to be
valid for many enzymes much more complex in
regards to the number of substrates and catalytic
steps than the simple single substrate model used
to derive it.
14Meaning of Km (cont)
- The significance of Km will change based on the
different rate constants and which step is the
slowest (also called the rate-limiting step). In
the simplest assumption, the rate of ES breakdown
to product (k2) is the rate-determining step of
the reaction, so k-1 gtgt k2 and Km k-1/k1. This
relation is also called a dissociation constant
for the ES complex and can be used as a relative
measure of the affinity of a substrate for an
enzyme (identical to Kd). However if k2 gtgt k-1
or k2 and k-1 are similar, then Km remains more
complex and cannot be used as a measure of
substrate affinity.
15 Uses of Km
- Experimentally, Km is a useful parameter for
characterizing the number and/or types of
substrates that a particular enzyme will utilize
(an example will be discussed). It is also useful
for comparing similar enzymes from different
tissues or different organisms. Also, it is the
Km of the rate-limiting enzyme in many of the
biochemical metabolic pathways that determines
the amount of product and overall regulation of a
given pathway. Clinically, Km comparisons are
useful for evaluating the effects mutations have
on protein function for some inherited genetic
diseases.
16Meaning of Vmax
- The values of Vmax will vary widely for different
enzymes and can be used as an indicator of an
enzymes catalytic efficiency. It does not find
much clinical use. - There are some enzymes that have been shown to
have the following reaction sequence - In this situation, the formation of product is
dependent on the breakdown of an enzyme-product
complex, and is thus the rate-limiting step
defined by k3.
17Derivation of kcat
- A more general term has been defined, termed
kcat, to describe enzymes in which there are
multiple catalytic steps and possible multiple
rate-limiting steps. The Michaelis-Menten
equation can be substituted with kcat
18Definition and Use of kcat
- The constant, kcat (units of sec-1), is also
called the turnover number because under
saturating substrate conditions, it represents
the number of substrate molecules converted to
product in a given unit of time on a single
enzyme molecule. In practice, kcat values (not
Vmax) are most often used for comparing the
catalytic efficiencies of related enzyme classes
or among different mutant forms of an enzyme.
19Two Substrate Reactions
- Many enzyme reactions involve two or more
substrates. Though the Michaelis-Menten equation
was derived from a single substrate to product
reaction, it still can be used successfully for
more complex reactions (by using kcat).
Random
Ordered
Ping-pong
20Two Substrate Reactions (cont)
- In random order reactions, the two substrates do
not bind to the enzyme in any given order it
does not matter which binds first or second. - In ordered reactions, the substrates bind in a
defined sequence, S1 first and S2 second. - These two reactions share a common feature termed
a ternary complex, formed between E, ES1, ES2
and ES1S2. In this situation, no product is
formed before both substrates bind to form ES1S2.
21Two Substrate Reactions (cont)
- Another possibility is that no ternary complex is
formed and the first substrate S1 is converted to
product P1 before S2 binds. These types of
reactions are termed ping-pong or double
displacement reactions.
22Km and kcat ExampleHSV-1 Thymidine Kinase
- A phosphorylation kinase reaction T (thymidine)
ATP is converted to TMP (thymidine
monophosphate) ADP - In herpesvirus infected cells, this viral encoded
TK phosphorylates the antiviral drug acyclovir
this is the pharmacological basis of most
herpesvirus treatments - In the last 10 years, this approach has been
applied to cancer gene therapies with HSV-TK and
ganciclovir
23Thymidine Kinetic Constants for HSV-1 Thymidine
Kinase (ONLY AN EXAMPLE!!)
24Ganciclovir Kinetic Constants for HSV-1 Thymidine
Kinase (ONLY AN EXAMPLE!)
25Lineweaver-Burk (double reciprocal plot)
- If the reciprocal (1/X) of the Michaelis-Menten
equation is done, after algebraic simplification
the following equation results - This relation is written in the format of the
equation for a straight line, y mx b, where
y 1/vo, m (slope) Km/Vmax, x 1/S and the
y-intercept, b 1/Vmax. When this relation is
plotted,the result is a straight line graph
26Lineweaver-Burk (double reciprocal plot) (cont)
27Uses of double reciprocal plot
- The x intercept value is equal to -1/Km. The
biggest advantage to using the double reciprocal
plot is a more accurate determination of Vmax,
and hence Km. It is also useful in
characterizing the effects of enzyme inhibitors
and distinguishing between different enzyme
mechanisms.
28Enzyme Inhibitor Types
- Inhibitors of enzymes are generally molecules
which resemble or mimic a particular enzymes
substrate(s). Therefore, it is not surprising
that many therapeutic drugs are some type of
enzyme inhibitor. The modes and types of
inhibitors have been classified by their kinetic
activities and sites of actions. These include
Reversible Competitive Inhibitors, Reversible
Non-Competitive Inhibitors, and Irreversible
Inhibitors
29Definition of Ki
- For reversible inhibitors, a term Ki can be
determined. - For competitive inhibitors, the following
relation can be used Km I Km (1 I / Ki
) (where Km I is the determined Km in the
presence of I). - Determining the Ki for other inhibitor types is
related but much more complex and not within the
scope of this lecture or course
30Uses of Ki
- Ki values are used to characterize and compare
the effectiveness of inhibitors relative to Km.
This parameter is especially useful and important
in evaluating the potential therapeutic value of
inhibitors (drugs) of a given enzyme reaction.
For example, Ki values are used for comparison of
the different types of HIV protease inhibitors.
In general, the lower the Ki value, the tighter
the binding, and hence the more effective an
inhibitor is.
31Competitive Inhibition
Vmax - No change Km INCREASES - indicates a
direct interaction of the inhibitor in the active
site
32Reversible Competitive Inhibition
- Competitive inhibitors compete with the substrate
for binding at the active site (as E I). In the
double reciprocal plot for a competitive
inhibitor acting at the substrate site for the
following reasons, notice with increasing
concentration of inhibitor, the Vmax does not
change however, the Km of the substrate is
increased. This also reflects the reversible
nature of the inhibitor there is always some
concentration of substrate which can displace the
inhibitor.
33Non-Competitive Inhibition
Vmax DECREASES - inhibitor affects rate of
reaction by binding to site other than substrate
active-site Km - No change
34Reversible Non-Competitive Inhibition
- Non-competitive inhibitors combine with both the
enzyme (E I) and the enzyme-substrate (EI S)
complex. The inhibitor binds to a site other that
the substrate site, and is thus independent of
the presence or absence of substrate. This action
results in a conformational change in the protein
that affects a catalytic step and hence decreases
or eliminates enzyme activity (formation of P).
Notice in the reciprocal plot, a non-competitive
inhibitor does not affect the binding of the
substrate (Km), but it does result in a decrease
in Vmax. This can be explained by the fact that
since inhibitor bound to an enzyme inactivates
it, the more EI formed will lower ES and thus
lower the overall rate of the reaction Vmax.
35Irreversible Inhibitors
- Irreversible inhibitors generally result in the
destruction or modification of an essential amino
acid required for enzyme activity. Frequently,
this is due to some type of covalent link between
enzyme and inhibitor. These types of inhibitors
range from fairly simple, broadly reacting
chemical modifying reagents (like iodoacetamide
that reacts with cysteines) to complex inhibitors
that interact specifically and irreversibly with
active site amino acids. (termed suicide
inhibitors). These inhibitors are designed to
mimic the natural substrate in recognition and
binding to an enzyme active site. Upon binding
and some catalytic modification, a highly
reactive inhibitor product is formed that binds
irreversibly and inactivates the enzyme. Use of
suicide inhibitors have proven to be very
clinically effective
36Irreversible Inhibitor Allopurinol
37Irreversible Inhibitor Penicillin (Ex)
38Diisopropyl Phosphofluoridate Irreversible
Acetylcholinesterase Inhibitor (Example)
39Inhibitor Summary
- REMEMBER - The types of enzyme inhibitors
described have been for relatively simple, single
substrate-product reactions that obey
Michaelis-Menten kinetics. However, not all
enzyme inhibitors will necessarily be one type of
inhibitor. Especially for some multi-substrate
reactions, a particular inhibitor can be
competitive for one substrate and non-competitive
with a second or third substrate. Also, suicide
inhibitors by design are generally competitive
inhibitors of a substrate, and therefore must
first bind in the active site.