Bio211 L8 Enzymes-2
Bio211 L8 Enzymes-2
Bio211 L8 Enzymes-2
ENZYMES-2
BIO211
BIO211 GS 1
Objectives/Lecture outline
• Regulation of enzyme activity
• Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
BIO211 GS 2
REGULATION OF ENZYME ACTIVITY
• The regulation of the reaction velocity of enzymes is essential because an
organism has to coordinate its numerous metabolic processes.
• (Such as; Lipid metabolism, carbohydrate metabolism (TCA), nitrogen metabolism e.t.c)
• 3 forms/types of regulation
• A. Regulation of allosteric enzymes
BIO211 GS 3
Regulation of Enzyme Activity
A. Regulation of allosteric enzymes
• Allosteric enzymes are regulated by molecules called
effectors that bind noncovalently at a site other than the
active site.
• These enzymes are almost always composed of multiple
subunits, and the regulatory (allosteric) site that binds the
effector is distinct from the substrate-binding site and may
be located on a subunit that is not itself catalytic.
BIO211 GS 4
Regulation of Enzyme Activity
A. Regulation of allosteric enzymes
BIO211 GS 5
Regulation of Enzyme Activity
A. Regulation of allosteric enzymes
1. Homotropic effectors:
• When the substrate itself serves as an effector, the effect is said to be
homotropic.
• Most often, an allosteric substrate functions as a positive effector.
• In such a case, the presence of a substrate molecule at one site on the enzyme
enhances the catalytic properties of the other substrate-binding sites.
• That is, their binding sites exhibit cooperativity.
• These enzymes show a sigmoidal curve when reaction velocity (vo) is plotted
against substrate concentration ([S]).
BIO211 GS 6
Regulation of Enzyme Activity
A. Regulation of allosteric enzymes
2. Heterotropic effectors:
• The effector may be different from the substrate, in which case
the effect is said to be heterotropic.
• e.g. consider the feedback inhibition shown in Figure. The
enzyme that converts D to E has an allosteric site that binds
the end-product, G.
• If the concentration of G increases (for example, because it is
not used as rapidly as it is synthesized), the first irreversible
step unique to the pathway is typically inhibited.
• Feedback inhibition provides the cell with appropriate
amounts of a product it needs by regulating the flow of
substrate molecules through the pathway that synthesizes
that product.
BIO211 GS 7
Regulation of Enzyme Activity
B. Regulation of enzymes by covalent modification
• Many enzymes are regulated by covalent modification → by
the addition or removal of phosphate groups from specific
serine, threonine, or tyrosine residues of the enzyme.
• Protein phosphorylation is one of the primary ways in which
cellular processes are regulated. [Note: Protein phosphorylation is
mediated by hormonal signals.]
1. Phosphorylation and dephosphorylation:
• Phosphorylation reactions are catalyzed by a family of
enzymes called protein kinases that use ATP as the
phosphate donor.
• Phosphate groups are cleaved from phosphorylated
enzymes by the action of phosphoprotein
phosphatases (Figure on right)
BIO211 GS 8
Regulation of Enzyme Activity
B. Regulation of enzymes by covalent modification
2. Response of enzyme to phosphorylation:
• Depending on the specific enzyme, the phosphorylated form
may be more or less active than the unphosphorylated
enzyme.
• e.g. phosphorylation of glycogen phosphorylase(an enzyme
that degrades glycogen) increases activity, whereas
phosphorylation of glycogen synthase (an enzyme that
synthesizes glycogen) decreases activity.
BIO211 GS 9
Regulation of Enzyme Activity
C. Induction and repression of enzyme synthesis
• The regulatory mechanisms described earlier (Allosteric & Covalent
modifications) modify the activity of existing enzyme molecules.
• However, cells can also regulate the amount of enzyme present by altering the
rate of enzyme degradation or the rate of enzyme synthesis.
BIO211 GS 10
Regulation of Enzyme Activity
C. Induction and repression of enzyme synthesis
• Enzymes subject to regulation of synthesis are often those that are needed at only
one stage of development or under selected physiologic conditions.
• e.g elevated levels of insulin as a result of high blood glucose levels cause an
increase in the synthesis of key enzymes involved in glucose metabolism.
• In contrast, enzymes that are in constant use are usually not regulated by
altering the rate of enzyme synthesis.
BIO211 GS 11
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
• A. Reaction model
• Leonor Michaelis and Maude Menten proposed a simple model that accounts for
most of the features of enzyme-catalyzed reactions.
• In this model, the enzyme reversibly combines with its substrate to form an ES
complex that subsequently yields Product (P), regenerating the free Enzyme (E).
• The model, involving one substrate molecule, is represented below:
• E + S ↔ ES ↔ E + P
• Where, S=substrate, E=enzyme, ES=enzyme-substrate complex, P=product
BIO211 GS 12
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
• B. Michaelis-Menten equation
• The Michaelis-Menten equation describes how reaction velocity
varies with substrate concentration:
BIO211 GS 13
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
C. Important conclusions
• 1. Characteristics of Km:
• Km, the Michaelis constant, is characteristic of an enzyme and its
particular substrate and reflects the affinity of the enzyme for
that substrate.
• Km is numerically equal to the substrate concentration at which
the reaction velocity is equal to 1⁄2Vmax.
• Km does not vary with enzyme concentration.
• a. Small Km: A numerically small (low) Km reflects a high affinity
of the enzyme for substrate, because a low concentration of
substrate is needed to half-saturate the enzyme—that is, to
reach a velocity that is 1⁄2Vmax(Figure).
BIO211 GS 14
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
• b. Large Km: A numerically large (high) Km reflects a low affinity of
enzyme for substrate because a high concentration of substrate is
needed to half-saturate the enzyme.
BIO211 GS 15
Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
• 3. Order of reaction:
• When [S] is much less than Km, the velocity of the reaction is
approximately proportional to the substrate concentration.
• The rate of reaction is then said to be first order with respect to
substrate.
• When [S] is much greater than Km, the velocity is constant and
equal to Vmax.
• The rate of reaction is then independent of substrate concentration
(the enzyme is saturated with substrate) and is said to be zero
order with respect to substrate concentration (Figure on right).
BIO211 GS 16
Enzymes
Clinical diagnosis
BIO211 GS 18
Enzymes
Inhibition of enzymatic activity
• Competitive inhibition
• Inhibitor binds reversibly to the same site that the
substrate would normally occupy and therefore
competes with the substrate for that site.
• Thus Enzyme inhibitors useful as Drugs, e.g. HIV
TREATMENT drugs (Protease Inhibitors)
BIO211 GS 19
Enzymes
Inhibition of enzymatic activity
• Noncompetitive inhibition:
• occurs when the inhibitor and substrate bind at
different sites on the enzyme.
• The noncompetitive inhibitor can bind either free
enzyme or the enzyme-substrate complex, thereby
preventing the reaction from occurring
BIO211 GS 20
summary
• Regulation of enzyme activity
• Allosteric enzymes:
• effectors
• Covalent modification
• Phosphorylation & de-phosphorylation
• Induction and repression
• Rate of synthesis & degradation
• Michaelis-Menten Kinetics
• Small Km & large Km → high affinity & low affinity respectively
• Rate of reaction directly proportional to enzyme concentration [E] at all [S]
• Enzymes in clinical diagnostics
BIO211 GS 21