Chapter 6 Notes
Chapter 6 Notes
Chapter 6 Notes
How to Lower
Enzymes organize reactive groups into close proximity and proper orientation
Enzymatic Catalysis
Enzymes do not affect equilibrium (G)
Slow reactions face significant activation
barriers (G) that must be surmounted
during the reaction
Enzymes increase reaction rates (k) by
decreasing G
kB T G
k
exp
h RT
Rate equation ;
Vmax [ S ]
v
Km S
Saturation Kinetics:
At high [S] velocity does not depend on [S]
Lineweaver-Burk Plot:
Linearized, Double-Reciprocal
Enzyme Inhibition; although the term is enzyme inhibitor, often these are
chemotheraputic agents .
Inhibitors are compounds that decrease enzymes activit
Irreversible inhibitors (inactivators) react with the enzyme
One inhibitor molecule can permanently shut off one enzyme molecule
They are often powerful toxins but also may be used as drugs
Reversible inhibitors bind to and can dissociate from the enzyme
Peptidoglycan and
Lysozyme
Hen egg white lysozyme and the
reaction it catalyzes. (b) Reaction
catalyzed by hen egg white
lysozyme. A segment of a
peptidoglycan polymer is shown,
with the lysozyme binding sites A
through F shaded. The glycosidic
CO bond between sugar residues
bound to sites D and E is cleaved,
as indicated by the red arrow. The
hydrolytic reaction is shown in the
Asp 52 acts as a nucleophile to attack the
inset, with the fate of the oxygen in
anomeric carbon in the first SN2 step
the H2O traced in red. Mur2Ac is NGlu 35 acts as a general acid and protonates
acetylmuramic acid; GlcNAc, Nthe leaving group in the transition state
acetylglucosamine. RO represents
a lactyl (lactic acid) group; NAc
Water hydrolyzes the covalent glycosyland AcN, an N-acetyl group (see
enzyme intermediate
key).
Glu 35 acts as a general base to deprotonate
water in the second SN2 step