enzyme kinetics

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M.Prasad Naidu MSc Medical Biochemistry, Ph.D.Research Scholar

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Page 1: ENZYME KINETICS

M.Prasad NaiduMSc Medical Biochemistry,Ph.D.Research Scholar

Page 2: ENZYME KINETICS

•Diverse and widespread proteolytic enzymes

•Involved in digestion, development, clotting, inflammation…

•Common catalytic mechanism

Page 3: ENZYME KINETICS

P-Nitrophenolate is very yellow while the acetate is colorless. This is an example of an artificial substrate!

Page 4: ENZYME KINETICS

The kinetics show

1. A “burst phase” where the product is rapidly formed with amounts stoichiometric with the enzyme.

2. Slower steady state that is independent of substrate concentration.

Page 5: ENZYME KINETICS

A covalent bond between a Serine and the substrate suggests an “active Serine”. These Serines can be labeled with inhibitors such as diidopropyl phosphofluoridate specifically killing the enzyme.

Ser 195 is specifically labeled

Page 6: ENZYME KINETICS

DIPF is extremely toxic because other active Serines can be labeled. Such as acetylcholine esterase.

Nerve gases, serin gas, are very toxic!! Many insecticides also work this way.

Page 7: ENZYME KINETICS

His 57 is a second important catalytic residue. A substrate containing a reactive group binds at the active site of the enzyme and reacts with a nearby reactive amino acid group. A Trojan horse effect.

Tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethyl ketone (TPCK)

Page 8: ENZYME KINETICS

The reaction of TPCK with His 57 of chymotrypsin

Page 9: ENZYME KINETICS

Bovine Trypsin

Page 10: ENZYME KINETICS
Page 11: ENZYME KINETICS

Bovine trypsin catalytic triad

Page 12: ENZYME KINETICS
Page 13: ENZYME KINETICS

Catalytic mechanism

1. After the substrate binds Ser 195 nucleophilically attacks the scissile peptide bond to form a transition state complex called the tetrahedral intermediate (covalent catalysis) the imidazole His 52 takes up the proton Asp 102 is hydrogen bonded to His 57. Without Asp 102 the rate of catalysis is only 0.05% of wild-type.

2. Tetrahedral intermediate decomposes to the acyl-enzyme intermediate. His 57 acts as an acid donating a proton.

3. The enzyme is deacylated by the reverse of step 1 with water the attacking nucleophile and Ser 195 as the leaving group.

Page 14: ENZYME KINETICS

1. Conformational distortion forms the tetrahedral intermediate and causes the carboxyl to move close to the oxyanion hole

2. Now it forms two hydrogen bonds with the enzyme that cannot form when the carbonyl is in its normal conformation.

3. Distortion caused by the enzyme binding allows the hydrogen bonds to be maximal.

Page 15: ENZYME KINETICS

Triad charge transfer complex stabilization

Page 16: ENZYME KINETICS

Rates of Enzyme Reactions How fast do reactions take place

•Reaction rates

Thermodynamics says I know the difference between state 1 and state 2 and G = (Gf - Gi)

But

Changes in reaction rates in response to differing conditions is related to path followed by the reaction

and

is indicative of the reaction mechanism!!

Page 17: ENZYME KINETICS

1. Substrate binding constants can be measured as well as inhibitor strengths and maximum catalytic rates.

2. Kinetics alone will not give a chemical mechanism but combined with chemical and structural data mechanisms can be elucidated.

3. Kinetics help understand the enzymes role in metabolic pathways.

4. Under “proper” conditions rates are proportional to enzyme concentrations and these can be determine “ metabolic problems”.

Page 18: ENZYME KINETICS

Chemical kinetics and Elementary Reactions

A simple reaction like A B may proceed through several elementary reactions like A I1 I2 B Where I1 and I2 are intermediates.

The characterization of elementary reactions comprising an overall reaction process constitutes its mechanistic description.

Rate Equations

Consider aA + bB + • • • + zZ. The rate of a reaction is proportional to the frequency with which the reacting molecules simultaneously bump into each other

zba ZBAk Rate

Page 19: ENZYME KINETICS

The order of a reaction = the sum of exponents

Generally, the order means how many molecules have to bump into each other at one time for a reaction to occur.

A first order reaction one molecule changes to another

A B

A second order reaction two molecules react

A + B P + Q

or

2A P

Page 20: ENZYME KINETICS

3rd order rates A + B + C P + Q + R rarely occur

and higher orders are unknown.

Let us look at a first order rate

A B

dt

Pd

dt

Ad v

= velocity of the reaction

in Molar per min.

or

moles per min per volume

k = the rate constant of the reaction

AdtAd

kv

Page 21: ENZYME KINETICS

Instantaneous rate: the rate of reaction at any specified time point that is the definition of the derivative.

We can predict the shape of the curve if we know the order of the reaction.

A second order reaction: 2A P

2AA

kdt

dv

Or for A + B P + Q

BABA

kdt

d

dt

dv

Page 22: ENZYME KINETICS

Percent change in A (ratio ) versus time in first and second order reactions

Page 23: ENZYME KINETICS

It is difficult to determine if the reaction is either first or second order by directly plotting changes in

concentration.

Adt

Ad k

dtd

kA

A

t

0

A

A

dtk-A

A

o

d to kAlnAln

-kto eA A

Page 24: ENZYME KINETICS

However, the natural log of the concentration is directly proportional to the time.

- for a first order reaction-

The rate constant for the first order reaction has units of s-1 or min-1 since velocity = molar/sec

and v = k[A] : k = v/[A]

Gather your data and plot ln[A] vs time.

Page 25: ENZYME KINETICS

2

A A o Plugging in

to rate equation

2

1

o

A2

A

ln kt

kk

693.02lnt

2

1

Page 26: ENZYME KINETICS

The half-life of a first order reaction can be used to determine the amount of material left after a length of time.

The time for half of the reactant which is initially present to decompose or change.

32P, a common radioactive isotope, emits an energetic particle and has a half-life of 14 days. 14C has a half life of 5715 years.

Page 27: ENZYME KINETICS

A second order reaction such like 2A P

t

dtk0

A

oA2o

A

Ad-

ktoA

1

A

1

When the reciprocal of the concentration is plotted verses time a second order reaction is characteristic of a straight line.

The half-life of a second order reaction is

and shows a dependents on the initial concentration o2

1 A

1t

k

Page 28: ENZYME KINETICS

A bimolecular reaction A + B C A B + C at some point in the reaction coordinate an intermediate ternary complex will exist

A B C

This forms in the process of bond formation and bond breakage and is called a transition state.

Ha + Hb Hc Ha Hb + Hc

This is a molecule of H2 gas reforming by a collision

Page 29: ENZYME KINETICS

An energy contour of the hydrogen reaction as the three molecules approach the transition state at location c. This is called a saddle point and has a higher energy than the starting or ending point.

Page 30: ENZYME KINETICS

Energy diagrams for the transition state using the hydrogen molecule

Transition state diagram for a spontaneous reaction. X‡ is the symbol for the species in the transition state

Page 31: ENZYME KINETICS

Xk'BAkdt

Pd

Q P B A

For the reaction

‡ Where [X] is the concentration of the transition state species

BA

X K ‡

G RTlnK - ‡ ‡

G‡ is the Gibbs free energy of the activated complex.

k' = rate constant for the decom-position of the activated complex

Page 32: ENZYME KINETICS

BAek't

P RT

G-

d

d

‡The greater the G‡, the more unstable the transition

state and the slower the reaction proceeds.

This hump is the activation barrier or kinetic barrier for a reaction.

The activated complex is held together by a weak bond that would fly apart during the first vibration of the bond and can be expressed by k' =where is the vibrational frequency of the bond that breaks the activated complex and is the probability that it goes towards the formation of products.

Page 33: ENZYME KINETICS

Now we have to define . E = h and = E/h where h is Planks constant relating frequency to Energy. Also through a statistical treatment of a classical oscillator E= KbT where Kb is Boltzmann constant.

By putting the two together

h

TK k b

RT

Gb

h

TK k

eAnd

The rate of reaction decreases as its free energy of activation, G‡ increases

or the reaction speeds up when thermal energy is added

Page 34: ENZYME KINETICS

Consider PA 21 kk IIf one reaction step is much slower than all the rest this step acts as a “bottleneck” and is said to be the rate-limiting step

Page 35: ENZYME KINETICS
Page 36: ENZYME KINETICS

Catalysts act to lower the activation barrier of the reaction being catalyzed by the enzyme.

Where G‡cat = G‡

uncat- G‡cat

The rate of a reaction is increased by RT

Gcate

G‡cat = 5.71 kJ/mol is a ten fold increase in rate.

This is half of a hydrogen bond!!

G‡cat = 34.25 kJ/mol produces a million fold

increase in rate!!

Rate enhancement is a sensitive function of G‡cat