Voet Chapt 11
Voet Chapt 11
Voet Chapt 11
1. General properties of enzymes 2. Activation energy and the reaction coordinate 3. Catalytic mechanism 4. Lysozyme 5. Serine proteases
Introduction
1. Enormous variety of chemical reactions within a cell 2. Mediated by Enzymes 3. Enzymology, the study of enzymes (coined 1878; Greek: en, in; zyme, yeast), fermentation: glucose -> ethanol 12 enzyme-catalyzed steps 4. James Summer, 1926, crystallized urease from jack bean, shown to be a protein 5. Other catalysts, i.e. ribozymes (peptide-bond formation; RNA-world), only for units 6. Proteins more versatile, 20 functional units
Introduction Enzymes increase the rate of chemical reactions by lowering the free energy barrier that separates the reactants and products
Definition catalyst: catalyzes reaction but is not itself consumed during the process
Table 11-1
A) Classification of Enzymes
- naming: -ase, urease, alcohol dehydrogenase but no rules, - systematic: IUBMB: 6 Classes acc. to the nature of the chemical reaction that is catalyzed (http://expasy.org/enzyme/)
An Enzyme-Substrate complex
Geometric and electrostatic complementarity
Some enzymes are very permissive, chymotrypsin, can hydrolyze amide and ester bonds, exception rather than rule !
Prosthetic groups
Permanently associated with enzyme, often by covalent bonds, example heme is bound to proteins called cytochromes Holoenzyme = enzyme+cofactor complex, active Apoenzyme, lacks cofactor, inactive
Substrate
Product
bottleneck
Note: the catalyst enhances rate of forward and that of the back reaction by the same magnitude, but Greaction determines whether forward or back reaction is favored
3) Catalytic Mechanisms
Enzymes lower the free energy of the transition state (G) by stabilizing the transition state
Learn about enzymatic reactions mechanisms by examining the corresponding non-enzymatic reactions of model compounds
Catalytic Mechanisms
Curved arrow convention to trace electron pairs At all times, rules of chemical reasons apply to the system, i.e. never five bonds on C, or 2 on H etc.
pH Optimum of Fumarase
Decarboxylation of acetoacetate
1. Nucleophilic attack of enzyme on substrate 2. Withdrawal of electrons 3. Elimination of catalysts by reversion of step 1 (not shown above).
24-times faster
Inhibitors
4) Lysozyme
Lysozyme is an enzyme that degrades bacterial cell walls.
Hydrolyzes (1->4) glycosidic bond from N-acetylmuramic (NAM) acid to N-acetylglucosamine (NAG) in cell wall peptidoglycan also hydrolyzes chitin: (1->4) NAG Lysozyme occurs widely as bactericidal agent, best characterized: hen egg white lysozyme, 14.3 kD, single 129 Aa polypeptide chain, 4 disulfide bonds, rate enhancement 108-fold
(1->4)
D-ring remains
anomer
NAG lactone binds to the D subside with about 9.2 kJ/ mol greater affinity than does NAG (corresponds to a 40fold enhancement)
4) Serine Proteases
Class of proteolytic enzymes,
Active site reactive Ser-residue (cut after Ser !) digestive enzymes, developmental regulation blood clotting inflammation many other cellular processes Focus on chymotrypsin, trypsin, elastase
Diisopropylphosphofluoridate (DIPF)
Diisopropylphosphofluoridate (DIPF)
A second important residue, His 57, was identified by affinity labeling Substrate analog bearing reactive groups reacts with nearby residues, Trojan horses Chymotrypsin specifically binds tosyl-L-phenylalanine chloromethylketone (TPCK), resembles Phe, reacts with His 57
B) X-ray structures provide information bout catalysis, substrate specificity, and evolution
Chymotrypsin, trypsin, elastase are strikingly Similar Have ca. 240 Aa, 40% identical All have reactive Ser and important His Closely related 3D structure, chymotrypsin solved in 1967 Active site His 57, Ser 195, Asp 102 form Catalytic triad residues
Nerve Poisons
Use of DIPF as enzyme inhibitor based on discovery that organophosphorous compounds, such as DIPF, acts as potent nerve poisons. Inactivate acetylcholinesterase, catalyzes hydrolysis of acetylcholine, active site Ser
Nerve Poisons
Acetylcholine is a neurotransmitter: transmits nerve impulses across certain types of synapses (junctions between nerve cells) Acetylcholinesterase in the synaptic clevt normally degrades acetylcholine to terminate nerve impulse. Acetylcholine receptor, which is a Na+-K+ channel, remains open for longer than normal, toxic to humans (inability to breathe) DIPF so toxic that it has been used as military nerve gas. Related compound such as parathion and malathion are used as insecticides
Used by terrorists in Tokyo subway, 1995 Inactivated by paraoxonase, expressed at different levels in different individuals, different sensitivity to nerve toxins of this class
5. Reversal of step 1
Yields the carboxylate product, that is the new Cterminus of the peptide, and regenerates the active enzyme
The preferential binding of the transition state (or the tetrahedral intermediate) over the enzyme-substrate complex or the acyl-enzyme intermediate is responsible for much of the catalytic efficiency of serine proteases
Mutating any or all residues of the catalytic triad yields enzymes that still enhance proteolysis by ca. 5 104-fold over the noncatalyzed reaction, native enzyme 1010
The tetrahedral intermediate resembles the complex of trypsin with trypsin inhibitor
1. Strong evidence for formation of a tetrahedral intermediated provided by X-ray structure of trypsin with bovine pancreatic trypsin inhibitor (BPTI) BPTI, 58 Aa, prevents self-digestion of organ of prematurely activated trypsin, k= 1013 Mol, one of the strongest protein interactions known A Lys on BPTI occupies trypsins specificity pocket But proteolytic reaction cannot proceed because the active site is so tightly sealed that the leaving group does not dissociate and water cannot enter Protease inhibitors are common, e.g. plant defence against insects, 10% of blood plasma (a1-proteinase inhibitor against leukocyte elastate (inflammation))
2.
3. 4.
5.
The tetrahedral intermediate resembles the complex of trypsin with trypsin inhibitor
Intrinsic pathway activated by glass surface (negative charge) Congenital defects in factor VIII (hemophilia a) or factor IX (hemophilia b)