Section C - Enzyme C1C2 Introduction to Enzymes C3 Enzyme Kinetics C4 Enzyme inhibition C5...

Post on 14-Dec-2015

283 views 7 download

Tags:

Transcript of Section C - Enzyme C1C2 Introduction to Enzymes C3 Enzyme Kinetics C4 Enzyme inhibition C5...

Section C - Enzyme

C1C2 Introduction to Enzymes

C3 Enzyme Kinetics

C4 Enzyme inhibition

C5 Regulation of Enzyme activity

C1C2 Introduction to Enzymes

1. Enzymes were among the first biological macromolecules to be studied chemically.

1.1 Much of the early history of biochemistry is the history of enzyme research.

1.1.1 Biological catalysts were first recognized in studying animal food digestion and sugar fermentation with yeast (brewing and wine making).

1.1.2 Ferments (i.e., enzymes, meaning in “in yeast”) were thought (wrongly) to be inseparable from living yeast cells for quite some time (Louis Pasteur)

1.1.3 Yeast extracts were found to be able to ferment sugar to alcohol (Eduard Buchner, 1897, who won the Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1907 for this discovery).

1.1.4 Enzymes were found to be proteins (1920s to 1930s, James Sumner on urease, “all enzymes are proteins”, John Northrop on pepsin, chymotrypsin and trypsin, both shared the 1946 Nobel Prize in Chemistry).

1.1.5 Almost every chemical reaction in a cell is catalyzed by an enzyme (thousands have been purified and studied, many more are still to be discovered!)

1.1.6 Proteins do not have the absolute monopoly on catalysis in cells. Catalytic RNA were found in the 1980s (Thomas Cech, Nobel Prize in Chemistry in 1989).

2. The most striking characteristics of enzymes are their immense catalytic power and high specificity.

2.1 Enzymes accelerate reactions by factors of at least a million.

2.1.1 Most reactions in biological systems do not occur at perceptible rates in the absence of enzymes.

2.1.2 The rate enhancements (rate with enzyme catalysis divided by rate without enzyme catalysis) brought about by enzymes are often in the range of 108 to 1020)

2.1.3 For carbonic anhydrase, an enzyme catalyzing the hydration of CO2 (H2O + CO2 HCO3

- + H+), the rate enhancement is 107 (each enzyme molecule can hydrate 105 molecules of CO2 per second!)

2.2 Enzymes are highly specific both in the reaction catalyzed and in their choice of substrates (i.e., reactants).

2.2.1 Enzymes exhibit various degrees of specificity in accord with their physiological functions :

Low specificity: some peptidases, esterases, and phosphatases.

Intermediate specificity: hexokinase, alcohol dehydrogenases, trypsin.

Absolute or near absolute specificity: Many enzymes belong to this group, and in extreme cases, stereochemical specificity is exhibited (i.e., enantiomers are distinguished as substrates or products).

2.3 Most enzymes are proteins.

2.3.1 Some enzymes require no other chemical gr

oups other than their amino acid residues for activity.

2.3.2 Some enzymes require the presence of cofact

ors, small nonprotein units, to function. Cofactors may

be inorganic ions or complex organic molecules called c

oenzymes. A cofactor that is covalently attached to the e

nzyme is called a prosthetic group.

2.3.3 Prosthetic groups could be inorganic metal i

ons (e.g., Fe2+, Mg2+, Mn2+, Zn2+) or complex organic or

metalloorganic molecules called coenzymes.

2.3.4 A complete catalytically active enzyme

(including its prosthetic group) is called a holoenz

yme.

2.3.5 The protein part of an enzyme (withou

t its prosthetic group) is called the apoenzyme.

2.3.6 Many vitamins, organic nutrients requi

red in small amounts in the diet, are precursors of

coenzymes.

视黄醇

脂溶性维生素:

A 、 D 、 E 、 K

Vitamin D3

甾醇衍生物

Vitamin E

Vitamin K

生育酚

凝血维生素

水溶性维生素: B 族、硫辛酸和维生素C

3. Enzymes are classified by the reactions they catalyze

3.1 Trivial names are usually given to enzymes.

3.1.1 Many enzymes have been named by adding the suffix “-ase” to the name of their substrate or to a word or phrase describing their activity (type of reaction).

3.2 Enzymes are categorized into six major classes by international agreement.

3.2.1 The six major classes include

Oxidoreductases: catalyzing oxidation-reduction reactions.

Transferases: catalyzing the transfer of a molecular group from one molecule to another.

Hydrolases: catalyzing the cleavage by the introduction of water.

Lyases: catalyzing reactions involving removal of a group to form a double bond or addition of groups to double bonds.

Isomerases: catalyzing reactions involving intramolecular rearrangements.

Ligases (synthases): catalyzing reactions joining together two molecules.

3.3 Each enzyme is given a systematic name which identifies the reaction catalyzed (e.g., hexokinase is named as ATP:glucose phosphotrasferase).

3.4 Each enzyme is assigned a four-digit number with the first digit denoting the class it belongs, the other three further clarifications on the reaction catalyzed.

Each enzyme is then uniquely identified by a four-digit classification number. Thus trypsin has the Enzyme Commission (EC)number 3.4.21.4. (e.g. Trypsin, EC 3.4.21.4)

4. Enzymes, like all other catalysts, does not affect reaction equilibria, only accelerate reactions.

4.1 Equilibrium constant (Keq’) of a reaction is related to the free energy difference between the ground states of the substrates and products (Go’)

Go’ = -RTlnKeq’

Enzyme catalysis does not affect Go’, thus not Keq’.

' [ ]

[ ]eq

PK

S

4.2 The rate constant of a reaction (k) is related to the free energy difference between the transition state and the ground state of the substrate (G‡)

For a biochemical reaction to proceed, the energy barrier needed to transform the substrate molecules into the transition state has to be overcome. The difference in free energy between the substrate and the transition state is termed the Gibbs free energy of activation (G‡ )

G‡------- activation energy

4.2.1 Transition state is a fleeting molecular moment (not a chemical species with any significant stability) that has the highest free energy during a reaction.

4.2.2 An enzyme increases the rate constant of a reaction (k) by lowering its G‡.

4.2.3 The combination of a substrate and an enzyme creates a new reaction pathway whose transition state energy is lower than that of the reaction in the absence of energy.

P S Go’ = -RTlnKeq’[ ]

[ ]eq

PK

S

f

b

k

kA B

[products] [B]

[reactants] [A]eq eq

eqeq eq

K

4

6

10100

10f

eqb

kK

k

Reaction equilibria are linked to Go’ and reaction rates are linked to G‡

5. Formation of an enzyme-substrate complex is the first

step in enzyme catalysis.

5.1 Substrates are bound to a specific region of an enzyme called the active site.

5.1.1 Much of the catalytic power of enzymes comes from their bringing substrates together in favorable orientations in enzyme-substrate (ES) complexes.

5.1.2 Most enzymes are highly selective in their binding of substrates.

5.1.3 Common Features of the Active Sites5.1.3 Common Features of the Active Sites

5.1.4 What are the types of the multiple weak interactions?5.1.4 What are the types of the multiple weak interactions?

Note: “electrostatic bonds” should be called as “electrostatic interactions”

11 2233 44

5.1.4 The active sites of some unbound enzym

es are complementary in shape to those of their sub

strates (the lock-and-key metaphor, Emil Fisher).

5.1.5 In many enzymes, the active sites have s

hapes complementary to those of their substrates o

nly after the substrates are bound (the induced-fit

model, Daniel Koshland).

5.2 The existence of ES complexes has been shown in a variety of ways.

5.2.1 The saturation effect: at a constant concentration of an enzyme, the reaction rate increases with increasing substrate concentrations until a Vmax is reached.

5.2.2 ES complexes have been directly observed by electron microscopy and X-ray crystallography.

The two most striking characteristics of enzymesThe two most striking characteristics of enzymes

1)1) Catalytic capacityCatalytic capacity

2)2) SpecificitySpecificity

Actions of EnzymesActions of Enzymes

1)1) They bring substrates together in an They bring substrates together in an optimal optimal

orientationorientation

2)2) TheyThey catalyze reactions by catalyze reactions by stabilizing transition stabilizing transition

statesstates

3)3) They act as They act as molecular switchesmolecular switches

1. Michaelis-Menton equation reflects the kinetic behavior of many enzymes

1.1 Saturation effect was observed in enzyme catalysis when plotting the initial velocity (Vo) against the substrate concentration([S]).

1.2 The ES complex was proposed to be a necessary step in enzyme catalysis based on this kinetic pattern.

C3 Enzyme Kinetics

If [S]<<Km,

1.3 The Michaelis-Menton equation was establishe

d to account for the observed relationship between Vo a

nd [S].

1.3.1 A single-substrate, single-product reaction is

considered for simplicity.

1.3.2 At early times in the reaction, the concentration of the product ([P]) is negligible and the overall reaction can be written as (no reverse reaction) k1 k2

E + S ES E + P k-1

1.3.3 It is hypothesized that the rate-limiting step in enzymatic reactions is the breakdown of the ES complex to form the product and the free enzyme:

Vo = k2[ES]

1.3.4 The free enzyme concentration

[E]=[Et]-[ES] ([Et] is the total enzyme concentration).

1.3.5 The amount of substrate bound by the

enzyme at any given time is negligible compared with

the total [S], because [S] is usually far greater than

[Et] ([S]>>[Et], still true for low [S]); therefore, the

free substrate concentration is [S].

1.3.6 The rate of ES formation = k1([Et]-[ES])[S],

the rate of ES breakdown = k-1[ES]+k2[ES].

k1([Et]-[ES])[S]= k-1[ES]+k2[ES]

2 1

1m

k kK

k

[ ] [ ][ ] [ ][ ]m tK ES E S ES S

2[ ]v k ES

2 max[ ][ ] [ ]

[ ] [ ]t

m m

k E S V Sv

K S K S

1.3.7 This is the Michaelis-Menton equation, and Km =(k-1+k2)/k1, is the Michaelis-Menton constant.

The equation fits the observed curve very well.

When [S] is very low (<<Km), Vo=Vmax[S]/Km

when [S] is very high (>>Km), Vo=Vmax

1.4 Km equals to the substrate concentration at which the reaction rate is half its maximal value (Vo=Vmax/2).

Km and Vmax can be determined by varying the substrate concentrations--The Michaelis-Menton equation can be transformed by taking double reciprocal of both sides into the following form:

1 Km 1------ = ------------ + --------

Vo Vmax[S] Vmax

1.4.1 A plot of 1/Vo versus 1/[S] yields a straight line, The double reciprocal plot is called the Lineweaver-Burk plot.

2. When [S] is saturating, a doubling of the enzyme concentration leads to a doubling of Vo.

Vo

[E]

3. Effects of temperature on the rate

4. Enzyme activity is affected by pH

4.1 Each enzyme has an optimal pH or pH range (where the enzyme has maximal activity).

4.1.1 Requirements for the catalytic groups in the active site in appropriate ionization state is a common reason for this phenomenon.

4.1.2 Change of ionization state of surface groups (which may affect the protein structure) sometimes is responsible for this phenomenon.

4.1.3 In rare cases, it is the change of ionization state of substrate that is responsible for this phenomenon.

4.2 The pH range over which activity changes can provide a clue to what amino acid residues are involved.

4.2.1 This has to be treated with great caution, because in a closely packed environment of a protein, the pK values of amino acid side chains can change significantly (e.g., a nearby positive charge will increase the pK value of a Lys residue, and a negative one will decrease the pK!).

5. Enzyme assays•An enzyme assay measures the conversion of substrate to product, under conditions of cofactors, pH and temperature at which the enzyme is optimally active.

•High substrate concentrations are used so that the initial reaction rate is proportional to the enzyme concentration.

•Enzyme activity is commonly expressed by the initial rate (Vo). The units of Vo are mol min-1

•1 U=1 mol min-1

•1 kat = 1 mol sec-1

C4 Enzyme inhibition

Enzyme inhibition Irreversible inhibition Reversible inhibition

1. The inhibition of enzymatic activity by specific small molecules and ions is important.

1.1 It serves as a major control mechanism in biological systems.

1.2 Many drugs and toxic agents act by inhibiting enzymes.

1.3 Inhibition can be a source of insight into the mechanism of enzyme action: residues critical for catalysis can often be identified by using specific (irreversible) inhibitors.

2. Reversible inhibition can usually be divided into different types.

2.1 Reversible inhibitors bind to enzyme noncovalently.

2.2 In competitive inhibition, the inhibitor competes with the substrate for the active site (binding of one prevents binding of the other, forming ES or EI complexes but no ESI complexes.).

2.3 Competitive inhibitors are often compounds that resemble the substrates.

=1+[I]/KI

2.4 Vmax is not affected by the presence of a com

petitive inhibitor (There is always some high substrate c

oncentration that will replace the inhibitor from the enz

yme’s active site).

2.5 Km is increased due to the presence of a comp

etitive inhibitor. Higher substrate concentration is need

ed to achieve Vmax/2.

2.6 In noncompetitive inhibition, the inhibitor binds to a site distinct from that (the active site) which binds the substrate.

2.7 Inhibitor binding does not affect substrate binding and vice versa (i.e., inhibitor can bind to ES complex, substrate can bind to EI complex).

2.8 The enzyme is inactivated when inhibitor is bound (whether or not substrate is also present). (e.g.)

2.9 The apparent Vmax is lowered (due to the concentration decrease of active enzymes)

Noncompetitive inhibition

Mixed or noncompetitive inhibition, plots similar tothe sequential binding in ternary complexes

2.10 In uncompetitive inhibition, the inhibitor binds only to the ES complex (unable to bind to free enzyme).

Uncompetitive inhibition

3 Irreversible inhibitors bind very tightly (covalen

tly or noncovalently) to the enzymes.

3.1 Many irreversible inhibitors modify critical cat

alytic residues covalently, thus inactivating the enzymes.

3.2 Diisopropylphosphofluoridate (DIPF, one comp

onent of the toxic nerve gases) reacts with a critical Ser re

sidue on acetylcholineesterase.

3.3 Critical catalytic residues in the active site can s

ometimes be identified using irreversible inhibitors (DIP

F on chymotrypsin).

The enzymatic activity of some enzymes are precisely regulated in living organisms to meet physiological requirements.

C5 Regulation of Enzyme activity

• Feedback regulation

•Allosteric enzyme

•Reversible covalent modification

•Proteolytic activation

•Regulation of enzyme synthesis and breakdown

1. Feedback inhibition

In biological systems the rates of many enzymes are altered by the presence of effectors (inhibitors or activators).

Building up of a pathway’s end product ultimately slows the entire pathway. This is called feedback inhibition and often takes place at the committed step in the pathway. The committed step is the first step to produce an intermediate which is unique to the pathway in question, and therefore normally commits the metabolite to further metabolism along that pathway.

Threonine Isoleucine

Threonine dehydratase

As many metabolic pathways are branched, feedback inhibition must allow the synthesis of one product of a branched pathway to proceed even when another is present in excess.

Sequential feedback inhibition

协同反馈抑制

concerted feed back inhibition

积累 ( 累积)反馈抑制 cumulative feed back inhibition

2.1The enzyme catalyzing the first step of a synthetic pathway is often an allosteric enzyme.

2.2 For example, threonine dehydratase in the Ile synthesis pathway, and aspartate transcarbamoylase (ATCase, the best understood allosteric enzyme) in the pyrimidine nucleotide synthesis pathway.

2. Allosteric enzymes (similar to hemoglobin) are regulated by reversible, noncovalent binding of modulators (often being metabolites).

ATCase

This allosteric regulatory enzyme has two stacked catalytic clusters, each with three catalytic polypeptide chain (in shades of blue and purple), and three regulatory clusters, each with two regulatory polypeptide chains (in red and yellow).

The regulatory clusters form the points of a triangle surrounding the catalytic subunits. Effector binding produces large changes in enzyme conformation and activity.

2.3 In allosteric enzymes, the binding of a substrate molecule to one active site affects the binding of substrate molecules to other active sites in the enzyme; the different active sites are said to behave cooperatively in binding and acting on substrate molecules.

2.4 In addition,the modulators or effectors (activators and inhibitors) usually bind not to the active site but to another specific regulatory site.

2.5 Allosteric enzymes are often multi-subunit proteins, with one or more active sites on each subunit. 2.6 The enzyme activity varies when the concentration of the modulators vary, hence the synthesis pathway is open only when the end product is lacking (closed when the end product is abundant).

2.7 Allosteric enzymes do not follow the Michaelis-Menton kinetics.

2.7.1 They do exhibit saturation effect, but do not show a hyperbolic curve (usually a sigmoidal curve) when plotting Vo against [S].

2.7.2 The substrate concentration at which Vo is half maximal is referred as K0.5 (which is not Km!)

The curve has a steep section in the middle of the substrate concentration range, reflecting the rapid increase in enzyme velocity which occurs cover a narrow range of substrate concentrations.

This allows allosteric enzymes to be particularly sensitive to small changes in substrate concentration within the physilological range.

+ATP

+CTP

别构酶的主要特点:•寡聚酶•别构效应•S 形动力学曲线•酶系统的第一个酶,或代谢分支酶

3. The activity of many enzymes are regulated by reversible covalent modifications.

3.1 Phosphorylation, the most common reversible covalent modification, is a highly effective means of switching the activity of target enzymes.

3.2 Protein kinases catalyze the transfer of a phosphate group from an ATP molecule to the side chains of Ser, Thr, or Tyr residues in proteins. 3.3 Protein phosphatases catalyze the hydrolysis of phosphoryl groups attached to proteins, thus reversing the effects of kinases.

Regulation of glycogen phosphorylase activity

磷酸化

腺苷酰化

尿苷酰化

糖基化

甲基化

4. Many enzymes are activated by specific proteolytic cleavage.

4.1 These enzymes are synthesized as inactive precursors called zymogens or proenzyme.

4.2 They are activated by cleavage of one or several specific peptide bonds.

4.3 Proteolytic activation, in contrast with allosteric control and reversible covalent modification, can occur just once in the life of the enzyme molecule.

4.4 The digestive enzymes that hydrolyze proteins are synthesized as zymogens in the stomach and pancreas.

4.5 Blood clotting is mediated by a cascade of proteolytic activation.

4.6 Some protein hormones are synthesized as inactive precursors (e.g., insulin is derived from proinsulin by proteolytic removal of a peptide).

5. Both the synthesis and degradation of the certain important enzymes are tightly controlled.

5.1 Amount of some enzymes are increased when certain inducers (often enzyme substrates) are present in the cells. This is often seen in bacterium cells.

5.2 The presence of lactose 乳糖 in a culture medium induces a large increase in the amount of -galactosidase 半乳糖苷酶 (and two other enzymes, galatoside permease 半乳糖苷透过酶 and thiogalactoside transacetylase 硫代半乳糖苷转乙酰酶 )

5.3 Once the enzyme protein has been synthesized, the rate of its breakdown can also be altered as a means of regulatory enzyme activity.