Title: Chapter 6 Protein Function : Enzymes Part 1
1Chapter 6Protein Function Enzymes Part 1
2Enzymes
Enzyme Learning Goals to Know
- Physiological significance of enzymes
- Catalytic power of enzymes
- Chemical mechanisms of catalysis
- Mechanism of chymotrypsin
- Description of enzyme kinetics and inhibition
3Enzymes
Mostly Proteins (a few RNAs are capable of
catalysis) Active Site Substrate Binding
Reaction ? Products Some require Cofactors
(metals) or Coenzymes (organic cpds) Some
enzymes have other binding sitesinvolved in
regulation, we will see later, Part 2 EOC
Problem 1 involves the sweetness of corn affected
by corn enzymes and Problem 2 calculates the
average molar concentration of enzymes in a
bacterial cell you can take it further to find
the number of molecules of each enzyme present in
a cell.
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6Enzyme Pioneers
First Cell Free Prep First to Crystallize
Urease Weak bonding at active
site results
in catalysis
7Why biocatalysis over inorganic catalysts?
- Greater reaction specificity avoids side
products - Milder reaction conditions conducive to
conditions in cells - Higher reaction rates in a biologically useful
timeframe - Capacity for regulation control of biological
pathways
- Metabolites have many potential pathways of
decomposition - Enzymes make the desired one most favorable
EOC Problem 4 Examines the thermal protection
of hexokinase that a substrate brings to the
table maintaining conformation under harsh
conditions. Later in Part 2 of this chapter we
will see X ray data backing this up.
8Enzymatic Substrate Selectivity Phenylalanine
hydroxylase
Binding but no reaction
9Class Is the First Part of E.C. Number
EC 2.7.1.1 ATPglucose phosphotransferase or
Hexokinase 2 Transferase 7
Phosphotransferase 1 Transferred to a
hydroxyl 1 Glucose is the acceptor
10Enzyme Search By Class
Bacterial Luciferase Rxn
FMNH2 O2 RCHO ? FMN RCOOH H2O light
11Continuing with the EC Numbers-1
12Continuing with EC Numbers-2
13NiceZyme
14Enzyme with an Active Site
Active Site
Chymotrypsin
15Thermodynamics of a Reaction
S E ?? ES ? E P
16Enzyme Catalyzed Reaction
E S ? ES ? EP ? E P
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18EOC Problem 3 A rate enhancement problem using
Urease, the enzyme that converts Urea ? CO2
2 NH3. The calculation demonstrates how long
it would take if urease were not present !
19Dihydrofolate ReductaseSubstrate Binds in a Fold
or Pocket
NADP
?
Folic Acid
?GB binding energy
20Enzyme Reactions Bind Substrate then Change Shape
to Transition State
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22Triose Phosphate Isomerase
Terribly Slow rate with Glyceraldehydephosphate
important in stabilizing binding.
23Rate Enhancement Due to Proximity (Entropy
Reduction)
24Acid/Base Catalysis
25Catalytic Mechanisms
- acid-base catalysis give and take protons
- covalent catalysis change reaction paths
- metal ion catalysis use redox cofactors, pKa
shifters - electrostatic catalysis preferential
interactions with Transition State.
26Acid Base Catalysis Involve Proteins R groups
27Formation of a Covalent Intermediate
28Michaelis Menten Curve
29Michaelis Menten Equation
L. Michaelis and Miss Maud L. Menten. 1913. "Die
Kinetik der Invertinwerkung" Biochemische
Zeitschrift Vol. 49.
Vmax S Km S
vo
Invertase Reaction sucrose H2O ? glucose
fructose
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31Michaelis Menten Experiment
Measure Rate (v) at several concentrations of
Substrate (S) Here is one tube with one beginning
concentration of S
E
S ? P
This enzyme, triosephosphate isomerase is a one
substrate, one product enzyme.
Calculate ?S/min or ?P/min.
32Michaelis Menten Experiment Real Data
At each S, the concentration of enzyme is
exactly the SAME. Calculate ?S/min for each
S EOC Problem 6 is about using 340nm light to
measure dehydrogenase reactionsthe classic
lactate dehydrogenase. Do this at more
concentrations of S to get a larger data set used
for ?
33Initial Velocites are the Dashed Line
A
34Michaelis Menten Plot
35Michaelis Menten Equation is Non-Linear
Vmax S KM S
vo
Straightened Out by reciprocalsLineweaver Burke
Equation 1/vo (KM/Vmax)(1/S) 1/Vmax the
Equation of a Straight Line y mx b Thus, y
1/vo , x 1/S and m (the slope)
KM/Vmax Lets Plot this Outnext slide
36Lineweaver-Burke PlotDouble Reciprocal
Data Points are in this range
Origin is Zero
37There Are Other Equations to Convertthe
Michaelis Menten Equation to a Straight Line
Eadie Hofstie v -Km(v/S) Vmax Hanes
Wolf S/v (1/Vmax)(S) Km/Vmax all are y
mx b
38KM is an Intrinsic Property of an enzyme What
does this mean? Intrinsic vs Extrinsic?
39Vmax is an Extrinsic Property of Enzymes
At a high S, varying only the enzyme conc
40To get an Intrinsic Catalytic Constant from Vmax
kcat comes from Vmax and Enz Vmax
is molar/sec Enz in molar
kcat Vmax/ Enz
41kcat/Km
42Calculation of Km and Vmax
The enzyme, Practicase Studentose ?
Productate Studentose, mM velocity,
µmoles/ml/sec 1 12 2 20 4 29 8
35 12 40 Assay volume 1 ml/tube Whats in
the tube buffer enzyme, then add substrate at
time Zero. EOC Problems 11(dead easy to do by
inspection) and 13 to do by Lineweaver Burke plot
43Calculation of Km and Vmax
Studentose, mM 1/S
Velocity, 1/v
µmoles/ml/sec 1 1 12
0.083 2 0.5 20 0.050 4
0.25 29 0.034 8 0.125 35
0.029 12 0.083 40
0.025 Now Plot this on Lineweaver Burk
Plot.remember Zero is near the middle of the
graph!
44Lineweaver Burke Plot of Practicase
1/
1
45Practicase kcat an Intrinsic Property
In the enzyme assay (one ml), each tube had 10 µg
of practicase. The molecular weight of
practicase is 20,000 D. Thus, each tube had 10
µg / 20,000 µg/µmole 0.0005 µmole
practicase kcat Vmax/ Enz (50 µmole/sec)/
0.0005 µmole 1 x 105 s-1 Thus one enzyme
reaction takes 1/ 1x 105 s-1 10-5 sec or
10 µ sec.
46What is Wrong with this L-B graph?
47What is Wrong with this L-B graph?
48Things to Know and Do Before Class
- Principles of catalysis.
- Enzyme naming concepts.
- Intrinsic and Extrinsic values of Enzyme
kinetics. - Be able to do a Michaelis Menten graph.
- Be able to do a Lineweaver Burke graph.
- To do EOC problems 1-6, 11, 13.