pH and fumarase

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pH and fumarase Forward reaction: B 2 has to accept a proton from water What if pH is too low? What if pH is too high?

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pH and fumarase. Forward reaction: B 2 has to accept a proton from water What if pH is too low? What if pH is too high?. This week’s lab notes. You want to know the total activity of each fraction slope ( D abs/min) → rate ( m mol/min) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of pH and fumarase

Page 1: pH and fumarase

pH and fumarase

Forward reaction: B2 has to accept a proton from water What if pH is too low? What if pH is too high?

Page 2: pH and fumarase

This week’s lab notes

• You want to know the total activity of each fraction

slope (abs/min) → rate (mol/min)

Think of this rate as # units of fumarase activity in the volume you assayed (eg. you may have added 10 L to 990 L assay buffer).

But, you have to correct for the total volume of the sample. (eg. you may have applied 10.4 mL of crude to the column)

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From abs/time

SampleTotal

Volume(mL)

Rate(mol/min)

VolumeAssayed

(mL)

TotalActivity

(mol/min)

Yield(%)

Crude 10.4 0.25 0.010 260 100

FT 14.1 0.05 0.010 70.5 27.1

Pooled Elutions

3.2 0.31 0.010 99.2 38.2

How much of thatsample you testedfor activity (~10L)

assayedvol

voltotalRate

.

.

Sample’s total activity vs. crude’s

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Plan:

• Exam over Ch. 4, 5.1 plus Expt 3 weeks 1 and 2 (fumarase purification and ion exchange)

• Today: finish up 5.1 (Hb), start Ch. 6

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Hemoglobin

• Cooperative binding– Binding of O2 at one subunit affects the

oxygen affinity of other subunits

• Allostery: – Regulation by reversible binding at a site

other than the active site– “Allosteric activation”– O2: homotropic allosteric activator

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Another allosteric modulator

bisphosphoglycerate (BPG)

• Heterotropic allosteric inhibitor

• Binding of Hb•BPG has a lower affinity for O2 than does Hb

• Enhances release of O2 in the tissues

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One BPG molecule per tetramer

Pushes T ↔ R equilibrium tothe left

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T state

R state

High affinity for BPGStabilized by BPG

Low affinity for O2

High affinity for O2

Stabilized by O2

Low affinity for BPG

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Enzymes

• Biological catalysts– High specificity and efficiency relative to

inorganic catalysts, for example– Participate in reactions, but no net change– Lower the activation energy– Do not change equilibrium (get there faster)

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Enzymes

• Almost exclusively proteins (some RNA, others?)

• Protein may require cofactor(s)

(non-amino acid functional groups)– Apoenzyme: protein alone– Holoenzyme: protein + functional group

– Metals, nucleotide-containing cofactors, etc.

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Enzymes

• Usually noted by “-ase” at the end– DNA polymerase, protein kinase, etc.

• Many enzymes have a common ‘trivial’ name– Fumarase, hexokinase, lysozyme, etc.

• All enzymes have a systematic name– Substrate(s) and reaction catalyzed

• Fumarase = “fumarate hydratase”• Hexokinase = “ATP:glucose phosphotransferase”

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Enzymes

• Some common classes of enzymes– Kinases transfer phosphate (usually from

ATP) to another substrate– Phosphatases remove (hydrolyze) a

phosphate– Polymerases string together nucleotides– Proteases cleave peptide bonds– Oxidoreductases transfer electrons between

substrates

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Drugs often modulate the action of enzymes

CYCLOOXYGENASE

aspirin

www.3dchem.com

Arachidonic acid

Prostaglandin H2

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Enzymes speed up biological reactions

H2CO3 → CO2 + H2O

10,000,000x faster + carbonic anhydrase

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EN

ER

GY

(G

°)

REACTION PROGRESS

G < 0

Reaction should bespontaneous

Equil should favorproducts

Biological reaction:sugar + oxygen ↔ CO2 + water

Reactants (R)

Activation energy

EA

Kinetic barrier to reaction

High energy “Transition state”Intermediate between R & P

Products (P)

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The energy barrier is critical for life

• Potentially deleterious reactions are blocked by EA

– Complex molecule degrading to simpler constituents

http://asm.wku.eduhttp://encyclopedia.quickseek.com/

DNAnucleotide

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How do enzymes speed up reactions?

• Lower the activation energy

• Decrease the energy barrier

2H2O2 → 2H2O + O2

Isolated: EA ~ 86 kJ/molIn the presence of catalase: EA ~ 1kJ/mol

Hydrogen peroxide

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Binding of substrate to enzyme creates a new reaction pathway

http://w3.dwm.ks.edu.tw/

An enzyme changes EA NOT G

Affects RATE, not EQUILIBRIUM

Without enzyme

With enzyme

EA = G‡

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How is EA lowered?

• Enzyme’s ‘goal’ is to reduce G‡

• Two ways enzymes can affect G

– Improve H– Improve S

EA =G‡ = H - TS

G‡ = Gtrans.state – Greactants

Enzymes alter the free energy of the

transition state

enthalpy entropy

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-

Example: More favorable H

A B

AOHBH

A BH+

+ H2O

+OH-

+

Charge unfavorableUnstable transition st.

A BH+

Ionic interaction stabilizesthe positive charge

OH-

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Example: More favorable S

Two moleculesMore ‘freedom’Higher disorder (high S)

One moleculeLower disorder (low S)Unfavorable entropically

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ENZYME

Example: More favorable S

Enzyme/Reactant COMPLEX

Essentially a single molecule

ENZYME

Enzyme/Transition state complex

Still a single molecule

Not much difference entropically

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Remember

1. Enzymes lower the energy barrier

2. Decrease EA (G‡)

3. Provide an environment where:

• Transition state is stabilized (lower enthalpy)• Change of disorder (entropy) is minimized

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