Title: Chapter 14 Mechanisms of Enzyme Action
1Chapter 14Mechanisms of Enzyme Action
2Outline
- What are the magnitudes of enzyme-induced rate
accelerations? - What role does transition-state stabilization
play in enzyme catalysis? - How does destabilization of ES affect enzyme
catalysis? - How tightly do transition-state analogs bind to
the active site? - What are the mechanisms of catalysis?
- What can be learned from typical enzyme
mechanisms?
314.1 What Are the Magnitudes of Enzyme-Induced
Rate Accelerations?
- Enzymes are powerful catalysts
- The large rate accelerations of enzymes (107 to
1015) correspond to large changes in the free
energy of activation for the reaction - All reactions pass through a transition state on
the reaction pathway - The active sites of enzymes bind the transition
state of the reaction more tightly than the
substrate - By doing so, enzymes stabilize the transition
state and lower the activation energy of the
reaction
414.2 What Role Does Transition-State
Stabilization Play in Enzyme Catalysis?
- The catalytic role of an enzyme is to reduce the
energy barrier between substrate S and transition
state X - Rate acceleration by an enzyme means that the
energy barrier between ES and EX must be smaller
than the barrier between S and X - This means that the enzyme must stabilize the EX
transition state more than it stabilizes ES
514.2 What Role Does Transition-State
Stabilization Play in Enzyme Catalysis?
Enzymes catalyze reactions by lowering the
activation energy. Here the free energy of
activation for (a) the uncatalyzed reaction is
larger than that of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction.
614.2 What Role Does Transition-State
Stabilization Play in Enzyme Catalysis?
- Competing effects determine the position of ES on
the energy scale - Try to mentally decompose the binding effects at
the active site into favorable and unfavorable - The binding of S to E must be favorable
- But not too favorable!
- Km cannot be "too tight" - goal is to make the
energy barrier between ES and EX small
714.3 How Does Destabilization of ES Affect Enzyme
Catalysis?
- Raising the energy of ES raises the rate
- For a given energy of EX, raising the energy of
ES will increase the catalyzed rate - This is accomplished by
- a) loss of entropy due to formation of ES
- b) destabilization of ES by
- strain
- distortion
- desolvation
814.3 How Does Destabilization of ES Affect Enzyme
Catalysis?
(a) Catalysis does not occur if ES and X are
equally stabilized. (b) Catalysis will occur if
X is stabilized more than ES.
914.3 How Does Destabilization of ES Affect
Enzyme Catalysis?
(a) Formation of the ES complex results in
entropy loss. The ES complex is a more highly
ordered, low-entropy state for the substrate.
1014.3 How Does Destabilization of ES Affect Enzyme
Catalysis?
(b) Substrates typically lose waters of hydration
in the formation in the formation of the ES
complex. Desolvation raises the energy of the ES
complex, making it more reactive.
1114.3 How Does Destabilization of ES Affect
Enzyme Catalysis?
(c) Electrostatic destabilization of a substrate
may arise from juxtaposition of like charges in
the active site. If charge repulsion is relieved
in the reaction, electrostatic destabilization
can result in a rate increase.
1214.4 How Tightly Do Transition-State Analogs Bind
to the Active Site?
- Very tight binding to the active site
- The affinity of the enzyme for the transition
state may be 10 -20 to 10-26 M! - Can we see anything like that with stable
molecules? - Transition state analogs (TSAs) are stable
molecules that are chemically and structurally
similar to the transition state - Proline racemase was the first case
1314.4 How Tightly Do Transition-State Analogs Bind
to the Active Site?
The proline racemase reaction. Pyrrole-2-carboxyla
te and ?-1-pyrroline-2-carboxylate mimic the
planar transition state of the reaction.
14Transition-State Analogs Make Our World Better
- Enzymes are often targets for drugs and other
beneficial agents - Transition-state analogs often make ideal enzyme
inhibitors - Enalapril lowers blood pressure
- Statins lower serum cholesterol
- Protease inhibitors are AIDS drugs
- Juvenile hormone esterase is a pesticide target
- Tamiflu is a viral neuraminidase inhibitor
15How many other drug targets might there be?
- The human genome contains approximately 20,000
genes - How many might be targets for drug therapy?
- More than 3000 experimental drugs are presently
under study and testing - These and many future drugs will be designed as
transition-state analog inhibitors - See the DrugBank http//drugbank.ca
1614.5 What Are the Mechanisms of Catalysis?
- Enzymes facilitate formation of near-attack
complexes - Protein motions are essential to enzyme catalysis
- Covalent catalysis
- General acid-base catalysis
- Low-barrier hydrogen bonds
- Metal ion catalysis
17Enzymes facilitate formation of near-attack
complexes
- X-ray crystal structure studies and computer
modeling have shown that the reacting atoms and
catalytic groups are precisely positioned for
their roles - Such preorganization selects substrate
conformations in which the reacting atoms are in
van der Waals contact and at an angle resembling
the bond to be formed in the transition state - Thomas Bruice has termed such arrangements
near-attack conformations (NACs) - NACs are precursors to reaction transition states
18Enzymes facilitate formation of near-attack
complexes
- Thomas Bruice has proposed that near-attack
conformations are precursors to transition states - In the absence of an enzyme, potential reactant
molecules adopt a NAC only about 0.0001 of the
time - On the other hand, NACs have been shown to form
in enzyme active sites from 1 to 70 of the time
19Enzymes facilitate formation of near-attack
complexes
Figure 14.7 NACs are characterized as having
reacting atoms within 3.2 Ã… and an approach angle
of 15 of the bonding angle in the transition
state.
20Figure 14.8 The active site of liver alcohol
dehydrogenase a near-attack complex.
21Protein Motions Are Essential to Enzyme Catalysis
- Proteins are constantly moving bonds vibrate,
side chains bend and rotate, backbone loops
wiggle and sway, and whole domains move as a unit - Enzymes depend on such motions to provoke and
direct catalytic events - Protein motions support catalysis in several
ways. Active site conformation changes can - Assist substrate binding
- Bring catalytic groups into position
- Induce formation of NACs
- Assist in bond making and bond breaking
- Facilitate conversion of substrate to product
22Covalent Catalysis
- Some enzymes derive much of their rate
acceleration from formation of covalent bonds
between enzyme and substrate - The side chains of amino acids in proteins offer
a variety of nucleophilic centers for catalysis - These groups readily attack electrophilic centers
of substrates, forming covalent enzyme-substrate
complexes - The covalent intermediate can be attacked in a
second step by water or by a second substrate,
forming the desired product
23Covalent Catalysis
Examples of covalent enzyme-substrate
intermediates.
24Covalent Catalysis
25General Acid-Base Catalysis
- Catalysis in which a proton is transferred in the
transition state - "Specific" acid-base catalysis involves H or OH-
that diffuses into the catalytic center - "General" acid-base catalysis involves acids and
bases other than H and OH- - These other acids and bases facilitate transfer
of H in the transition state
26General Acid-Base Catalysis
Catalysis of p-nitrophenylacetate hydrolysis can
occur either by specific acid hydrolysis or by
general base catalysis.
27Low-Barrier Hydrogen Bonds (LBHBs)
- The typical H-bond strength is 10-30 kJ/mol, and
the O-O separation is typically 0.28 nm - As distance between heteroatoms becomes smaller
(lt0.25 nm), H bonds become stronger - Stabilization energies can approach 60 kJ/mol in
solution - pKa values of the two electronegative atoms must
be similar - Energy released in forming an LBHB can assist
catalysis
28Low-Barrier Hydrogen Bonds (LBHBs)
Energy diagrams for conventional H bonds (a), and
low-barrier hydrogen bonds (b and c). In (c),
the O-O distance is 0.23 to 0.24 nm, and bond
order for each O-H interaction is 0.5.
29Quantum Mechanical Tunneling
- Tunneling provides a path around the usual
energy of activation for steps in chemical
reactions - Many enzymes exploit this
- According to quantum theory, there is a finite
probability that any particle can appear on the
other side of an activation barrier for a
reaction step - The likelihood of tunneling depends on the
distance over which a particle must move - Only protons and electrons have a significant
probability of tunneling
30Quantum Mechanical Tunneling
- The de Broglie equation relates the de Broglie
wavelength to the mass and energy of a particle - Tunneling can only play a significant role in a
reaction when the wavelength of the transferring
particle is similar to the distance over which it
is transferred - de Broglie wavelengths for protons and electrons
are 0.9Ã… and 38Ã…, respectively - Tunneling probably contributes to most, if not
all, hydrogen transfer reactions
31Tunneling between donor and acceptor
If the distance for particle transfer is
sufficiently small, overlap of probability
functions (red) permit efficient quantum
mechanical tunneling between donor (D) and
acceptor (A)
32Metal Ion Catalysis
Thermolysin is an endoprotease with a catalytic
Zn2 ion in the active site. The Zn2 ion
stabilizes the buildup of negative charge on the
peptide carbonyl oxygen, as a glutamate residue
deprotonates water, promoting hydroxide attack on
the carbonyl carbon.
33How Do Active-Site Residues Interact to Support
Catalysis?
- About half of the amino acids engage directly in
catalytic effects in enzyme active sites - Other residues may function in secondary roles in
the active site - Raising or lowering catalytic residue pKa values
- Orientation of catalytic residues
- Charge stabilization
- Proton transfers via hydrogen tunneling
3414.5 What Can Be Learned From Typical Enzyme
Mechanisms?
- First Example the serine proteases
- Enzyme and substrate become linked in a covalent
bond at one or more points in the reaction
pathway - The formation of the covalent bond provides
chemistry that speeds the reaction - Serine proteases also employ general acid-base
catalysis
35The Serine Proteases
- Trypsin, chymotrypsin, elastase, thrombin,
subtilisin, plasmin, TPA - All involve a serine in catalysis - thus the name
- Ser is part of a "catalytic triad" of Ser, His,
Asp - Serine proteases are homologous, but locations of
the three crucial residues differ somewhat - Enzymologists agree, however, to number them
always as His57, Asp102, Ser195 - Burst kinetics yield a hint of how they work
36The Catalytic Triad of the Serine Proteases
Structure of chymotrypsin (white) in a complex
with eglin C (blue ribbon structure), a target
substrate. His57 (red) is flanked by Asp102
(gold) and Ser195 (green). The catalytic site is
filled by a peptide segment of eglin. Note how
close Ser195 is to the peptide that would be
cleaved in the reaction.
37The Catalytic Triad of the Serine Proteases
The catalytic triad at the active site of
chymotrypsin (and the other serine proteases.)
38Serine Protease Binding Pockets are Adapted to
Particular Substrates
The substrate-binding pockets of trypsin,
chymotrypsin, and elastase. Asp189 (aqua)
coordinates Arg and Lys residues of substrates in
the trypsin pocket. Val216 (purple) and Thr226
(green) make the elastase pocket shallow and able
to accommodate only small, nonbulky residues. The
chymotrypsin pocket is hydrophobic.
39Serine Proteases Cleave Simple Organic Esters,
such as p-Nitrophenylacetate
Chymotrypsin cleaves simple esters, in addition
to peptide bonds. p-Nitrophenylacetate has been
used in studies of the chymotrypsin mechanism.
40Serine Protease Mechanism
- A mixture of covalent and general acid-base
catalysis - Asp102 functions only to orient His57
- His57 acts as a general acid and base
- Ser195 forms a covalent bond with peptide to be
cleaved - Covalent bond formation turns a trigonal C into a
tetrahedral C - The tetrahedral oxyanion intermediate is
stabilized by the backbone N-H groups of Gly193
and Ser195
41The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism binding
of a model substrate.
42The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism the
formation of the covalent ES complex (E-Ser195S
complex) involves general base catalysis by His57
43The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism His57
stabilized by a LBHB.
44The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism collapse
of the tetrahedral intermediate releases the
first product.
45The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism The
amino product departs, making room for an
entering water molecule.
46The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism
Nucleophilic attack by water is facilitated by
His57, acting as a general base.
47The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism Collapse
of the tetrahedral intermediate cleaves the
covalent intermediate, releasing the second
product.
48The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism Carboxyl
product release completes the serine protease
mechanism.
49The Serine Protease Mechanism in Detail
Figure 14.21 The chymotrypsin mechanism At the
completion of the reaction, the side chains of
the catalytic triad are restored to their
original states.
50Transition-State Stabilization in the Serine
Proteases
- The chymotrypsin mechanism involves two
tetrahedral oxyanion transition states - These transition states are stabilized by a pair
of amide groups that is termed the oxyanion
hole - The amide N-H groups of Ser195 and Gly193 provide
primary stabilization of the tetrahedral oxyanion
51The oxyanion hole
The oxyanion hole of chymotrypsin stabilizes the
tetrahedral oxyanion transition state seen in the
mechanism of Figure 14.21.