Title: HOW ENZYMES WORK
1HOW ENZYMES WORK
2ENZYMES SPEED UP CHEMICAL REACTIONS
Enzymes are biological catalysts substances
that speed a reaction without being altered in
the reaction.
Most enzymes are proteins.
Enzymes are essential for life.
3- Enzymes
- ?? Cofactors
- ?? Coenzymes
- ?? Holoenzyme
- ?? Apoenzyme
4How Enzymes Work?
- Body conditions(temperature, pressure etc.) not
good for reaction - Only enzymes can catalyse the reactions
- in this conditions
- A special environment inside enzymes for
- reaction ACTIVE SITE
- Molecule binds active site SUBSTRATE
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8Enzymes Lower a Reactions Activation Energy
9Each reaction has a transition state where
thesubstrate is in an unstable,
short-livedchemical/structural state.
Free Energy of Activation is symbolized by ?G.
Enzymes act by lowering the free energy of the
transition state
10Enzymes speed up metabolicreactions by lowering
energy barriers
- Enzyme speed reactions by lowering EA.
- The transition state
- can be reached at
- moderate temperatures.
- Enzymes do not change
- delta G.
- It speed-up reactions
- that would occur eventually.
- Because enzymes are
- so selective, they determine which
- chemical processes will occur
- at any time
11- Enzymes lower the free energy of activation by
binding the transition state of the reaction
better than the substrate - The enzyme must bind the substrate in the
correct orientation otherwise there would be no
reaction - Not a lock key but induced fit the enzyme
and/or the substrate distort towards the
transition state
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13Induced Fit
- A change in the shape of an enzymes active site
- Induced by the substrate
14Lock and Key Model
- An enzyme binds a substrate in a region called
the active site - Only certain substrates can fit the active site
- Amino acid R groups in the active site help
substrate bind - Enzyme-substrate complex forms
- Substrate reacts to form product
- Product is released
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16Enzyme Kinetics
- - Kinetics The study of the rate of
change. - - Enzyme Kinetics Rate of chemical
- reactions mediated by enzymes. Enzymes can
increase reaction rate by favoring or - enabling a different reaction pathway with
- a lower activation energy, making it easier
- for the reaction to occur.
17Michaelis-Menten kinetics
Vmax approached asymptotically
V0 varies with S
V0 is moles of product formed per sec. when
P is low (close to zero time)
E S?ES?E P
Michaelis-Menten Model
V0 Vmax xS/(S Km)
Michaelis-Menten Equation
18Determining initial velocity (when P is low)
19Steady-state pre-steady-state conditions
At pre-steady-state, P is low (close to zero
time), hence, V0 for initial reaction velocity
At equilibrium, no net change of S P or of
ES E
At pre-steady state, we can ignore the back
reactions
20Michaelis-Menten kinetics (summary)
- Enzyme kinetics (Michaelis-Menten Graph)
- At fixed concentration of enzyme, V0 is
almost linearly proportional to S when S is
small, but is nearly independent of S when S
is large
Proposed Model E S ? ES ? E P
ES complex is a necessary intermediate
Objective find an expression that relates rate
of catalysis to the concentrations of S E, and
the rates of individual steps
Start with V0 k2ES, and derive, V0 Vmax
xS/(S Km) This equation accounts for graph
data. At low S (S lt Km), V0 (Vmax/Km)S At
high S (S gt Km), V0 Vmax When S Km, V0
Vmax/2. Thus, Km substrate
concentration at which the reaction rate (V0) is
half max.
21Range of Km values
Km provides approximation of S in vivo for many
enzymes
22Lineweaver-Burk plot (double-reciprocal)
23Eadie-Hofstee plot
24Hanes-Woolf Plot
25Allosteric Enzymes
- Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric
sites - Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct
from an enzymes active site or substrate-binding
site - Molecules that bind to allosteric sites are
called effectors or modulators - Binding to allosteric sites alters the activity
of the enzyme. This is called cooperative
binding. Allosteric enzymes display sigmoidal
plot of Vo vs S - Effectors may be positive or negative
- Effectors may be homotropic or heterotropic
- Regulatory enzymes of metabolic pathways are
allosteric enzymes (eg feedback inhibition)
26Allosteric enzymes
- Allosteric enzymes tend to be
- multi-sub unit proteins
- The reversible binding of an
- allosteric modulator (here a
- positive modulator M) affects
- the substrate binding site
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28Mechanism and Example of Allosteric Effect
Allosteric site
R Relax (active)
Homotropic () Concerted
Allosteric site
A
Heterotropic () Sequential
X
Heterotropic (-) Concerted
T Tense (inactive)
I
X
X
29Enzyme Inhibitors
- Specific enzyme inhibitors regulate enzyme
activity and help us understand mechanism of
enzyme action. (Denaturing agents are not
inhibitors) - Irreversible inhibitors form covalent or very
tight permanent bonds with aa at the active site
of the enzyme and render it inactive. 3 classes
groupspecific reagents, substrate analogs,
suicide inhibitors - Reversible inhibitors form an EI complex that
can be dissociated back to enzyme and free
inhibitor. 3 groups based on their mechanism of
action competitive, non-competitive and
uncompetitive.
30Enzyme Inhibition
31Competitive inhibitors
- Compete with substrate for binding to enzyme
- E S ES or E I EI . Both S and I cannot
bind enzyme at the same time - In presence of I, the equilibrium of E S ES
is shifted to the left causing dissociation of
ES. - This can be reversed / corrected by increasing
S - Vmax is not changed, KM is increased by (1
I/Ki) - Eg AZT, antibacterial sulfonamides, the
anticancer agent methotrexate etc
32Competitive Inhibition
33Kinetics of competitive inhibitor
Increase S to overcome inhibition Vmax
attainable, Km is increased
Ki dissociation constant for inhibitor
34V max unaltered, Km increased
35Non-competitive Inhibitors
- Inhibitor binding site is distinct from
substrate binding site. Can bind to free enzyme E
and to ES - E I EI, ES I ESI or EI S ESI
- Both EI and ESI are enzymatically inactive
- The effective functional E (and S) is
reduced - Reaction of unaffected ES proceeds normally
- Inhibition cannot be reversed by increasing S
- KM is not changed, Vmax is decreased by (1
I/Ki)
36Mixed (Noncompetitive) Inhibition
37Kinetics of non-competitive inhibitor
Increasing S cannot overcome inhibition Less E
available, V max is lower, Km remains the
same for available E
38Km unaltered, V max decreased
39Uncompetitive Inhibitors
- The inhibitor cannot bind to the enzyme
directly, but can only bind to the
enzyme-substrate complex. - ES I ESI
- Both Vmax and KM are decreased by (1I/Ki).
40Uncompetitive Inhibition
41Substrate Inhibition
- Caused by high substrate concentrations
42Substrate Inhibition
- At low substrate concentrations S2/Ks1ltlt1 and
inhibition is not observed - Plot of 1/v vs. 1/S gives a line
- Slope Km/Vm
- Intercept 1/Vm
43Substrate Inhibition
- At high substrate concentrations, Km/Sltlt1, and
inhibition is dominant - Plot of 1/v vs. S gives a straight line
- Slope 1/KS1 Vm
- Intercept 1/Vm
44Competitive
Uncompetitive
Substrate Inhibition
Non-Competitive
45Enzyme Inhibition (Mechanism)
Non-competitive
Uncompetitive
Competitive
E
Substrate
E
X
Cartoon Guide
Compete for active site
Inhibitor
Different site
Equation and Description
I binds to free E only, and competes with
S increasing S overcomes Inhibition by I.
I binds to ES complex only, increasing S
favors the inhibition by I.
I binds to free E or ES complex
Increasing S can not overcome I inhibition.
46Enzyme Inhibition (Plots)
Vmax
vo
I
I
Km
Km
S, mM
Km
Vmax unchanged Km increased
Vmax decreased Km unchanged
Both Vmax Km decreased
I
47- Factors Affecting Enzyme Kinetics
48Effects of pH
- - on enzymes
- - enzymes have ionic groups on their active
sites. - - Variation of pH changes the ionic form of the
active sites. - - pH changes the three-Dimensional structure of
enzymes. - - on substrate
- - some substrates contain ionic groups
- - pH affects the ionic form of substrate
- affects the affinity of the substrate to the
enzyme.
49Effects of Temperature
- Reaction rate increases with temperature up to a
limit - Above a certain temperature, activity decreases
with temperature due to denaturation - Denaturation is much faster than activation
- Rate varies according to the Arrhenius equation
Where Ea is the activation energy (kcal/mol) E
is active enzyme concentration
50Factors Affecting Enzyme Kinetics
- Temperature
- - on the rate of enzyme catalyzed reaction
-
- k2Aexp(-Ea/RT)
-
- T k2
- - enzyme denaturation
- T
Denaturation rate
kdAdexp(-Ea/RT)
kd enzyme denaturation rate constant Ea
deactivation energy
51REFERENCES
- Michael L. Shuler and Fikret Kargi, Bioprocess
Engineering Basic Concepts (2 nd
Edition),Prentice Hall, New York, 2002. - 1. James E. Bailey and David F. Ollis,
Biochemical Engineering Fundementals (2 nd
Edition), McGraw-Hill, New York, 1986. - www.biochem.umass.edu/courses/420/lectures/Ch08B.p
pt -
52- class.fst.ohio-state.edu/fst605/605p/Enzymes.pdf
- www.horton.ednet.ns.ca/staff/selig/powerpoints/bio
12/biochem/enzymes.pdf - www.siu.edu/departments/biochem/som_pbl/SSB/powerp
oint/enzymes.ppt - www.associazioneasia.it/adon/files/2005_luisi_05_w
hy_are_enzymes.pdf - www.fatih.edu.tr/abasiyanik/Chapter6_enzymes.pdf
-
53- http//www.authorstream.com/presentation/kkozar-14
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html - http//www.wiley.com/college/pratt/0471393878/stud
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