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Allosteric enzymes Allosteric enzymes tend to be multi-sub unit proteins The reversible binding of an allosteric modulator (here a positive modulator M) affects the substrate binding site

Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

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Page 1: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Allosteric enzymes

Allosteric enzymes tend to be

multi-sub unit proteins

The reversible binding of an

allosteric modulator (here a

positive modulator M) affects

the substrate binding site

Page 2: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding
Page 3: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

T

T

R

T

[S]

vo

Mechanism and Example of Allosteric Effect

S S

R

R

SS

RS

A

I

T[S]

vo

[S]

vo

(+)

(-) X X

X

R = Relax(active)

T = Tense(inactive)

Allosteric siteHomotropic(+)Concerted

Heterotropic(+)Sequential

Heterotropic(-)Concerted

Allosteric site

Kinetics Cooperation Models

(-)

(+)

(+)

Page 4: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Enzyme Inhibitors

• Specific enzyme inhibitors regulate enzyme activity and help us

understand mechanism of enzyme action. (Denaturing agents are not

inhibitors)

• Irreversible inhibitors form covalent or very tight permanent bonds with

aa at the active site of the enzyme and render it inactive. 3 classes:

groupspecific reagents, substrate analogs, suicide inhibitors

• Reversible inhibitors form an EI complex that can be dissociated back

to enzyme and free inhibitor. 3 groups based on their mechanism of

action: competitive, non-competitive and uncompetitive.

Page 5: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Enzyme Inhibition

Page 6: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Competitive inhibitors

• Compete with substrate for binding to enzyme

• E + S = ES or E + I = EI . Both S and I cannot bind enzyme at the same time

• In presence of I, the equilibrium of E + S = ES is shifted to the left causing dissociation of ES.

• This can be reversed / corrected by increasing [S]

• Vmax is not changed, KM is increased by (1 + I/Ki)

• Eg: AZT, antibacterial sulfonamides, the anticancer agent methotrexate etc

Page 7: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Competitive Inhibition

Page 8: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Kinetics of competitive inhibitor

Increase [S] toovercomeinhibition

Vmax attainable,

Km is increased

Ki =dissociationconstant forinhibitor

Page 9: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

V max unaltered, Km increased

Page 10: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Non-competitive Inhibitors

• Inhibitor binding site is distinct from substrate binding site. Can bind to free enzyme E and to ES

• E + I = EI, ES + I = ESI or EI + S = ESI

• Both EI and ESI are enzymatically inactive

• The effective functional [E] (and [S]) is reduced

• Reaction of unaffected ES proceeds normally

• Inhibition cannot be reversed by increasing [S]

• KM is not changed, Vmax is decreased by (1 + I/Ki)

Page 11: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Mixed (Noncompetitive) Inhibition

Page 12: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Kinetics of non-competitive inhibitor

Increasing [S] cannotovercome inhibition

Less E available,V max is lower,Km remains the samefor available E

Page 13: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Km unaltered, V max decreased

Page 14: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Uncompetitive Inhibitors

• The inhibitor cannot bind to the enzyme directly, but can only bind to the enzyme-substrate complex.

• ES + I = ESI

• Both Vmax and KM are decreased by (1+I/Ki).

Page 15: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Uncompetitive Inhibition

Page 16: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Substrate Inhibition

Caused by high substrate concentrations

E + S ES E + PKm

’ k2

KS1

+

S

ES21

2'

'

2

][][

][

][

]][[,

][

]][[

Sm

m

mSi

KS

SK

SVv

ES

ESK

ES

ESSK

Page 17: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Substrate Inhibition

At low substrate concentrations [S]2/Ks1<<1 and inhibition is not observed

Plot of 1/v vs. 1/[S] gives a line Slope = K’

m/Vm

Intercept = 1/Vm

][

111

][1

'

'

SV

K

Vv

SK

Vv

m

m

m

m

m

Page 18: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Substrate Inhibition

At high substrate concentrations, K’m/[S]<<1, and

inhibition is dominant

Plot of 1/v vs. [S] gives a straight line Slope = 1/KS1 · Vm

Intercept = 1/Vm

mSm

S

m

VK

S

Vv

KS

Vv

1

1

][11

][1

1'

max][

0][/

SmKKS

Sddv

Page 19: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

1/V I>0

I=0

1/Vm

-1/Km -1/Km,app 1/[S]

1/VI>0

I=0

1/Vm

-1/Km-1/Km,app 1/[S]

1/Vm,app

1/VI>0

I=0

1/Vm

-1/Km 1/[S]

1/Vm,app

1/V

1/Vm

-1/Km 1/[S]

Competitive Uncompetitive

Non-Competitive Substrate Inhibition

Page 20: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Enzyme Inhibition (Mechanism)

I

I

S

S

S I

I

I II

S

Competitive Non-competitive Uncompetitive

EE

Different siteCompete for

active siteInhibitor

Substrate

Car

toon

Gui

deEq

uatio

n an

d D

escr

iptio

n

[II] binds to free [E] only,and competes with [S];increasing [S] overcomesInhibition by [II].

[II] binds to free [E] or [ES] complex; Increasing [S] cannot overcome [II] inhibition.

[II] binds to [ES] complex only, increasing [S] favorsthe inhibition by [II].

E + S → ES → E + P + II↓EII

E + S → ES → E + P + + II II↓ ↓EII + S →EIIS

↑ ↑

E + S → ES → E + P + II ↓ EIIS

EI

S X

Page 21: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Km

Enzyme Inhibition (Plots)

I II Competitive Non-competitive Uncompetitive

Dir

ect

Plo

tsD

ou

ble

Rec

ipro

cal

Vmax Vmax

Km Km’ [S], mM

vo

[S], mM

vo

II II

Km [S], mM

Vmax

II

Km’

Vmax’Vmax’

Vmax unchangedKm increased

Vmax decreasedKm unchanged

Both Vmax & Km decreased

II

1/[S]1/Km

1/vo

1/ Vmax

II

Two parallellines

II

Intersect at X axis

1/vo

1/ Vmax

1/[S]1/Km 1/[S]1/Km

1/ Vmax

1/vo

Intersect at Y axis

= Km’

Page 22: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Factors Affecting Enzyme

Kinetics

Page 23: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Effects of pH

- on enzymes

- enzymes have ionic groups on their active sites.

- Variation of pH changes the ionic form of the active sites.

- pH changes the three-Dimensional structure of enzymes.

- on substrate

- some substrates contain ionic groups

- pH affects the ionic form of substrate

affects the affinity of the substrate to the enzyme.

Page 24: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Effects of Temperature

Reaction rate increases with temperature up to a limit

Above a certain temperature, activity decreases with temperature

due to denaturation

Denaturation is much faster than activation

Rate varies according to the Arrhenius equation

tkRTE

RTEdd

tk

RTE

da

a

d

a

eEAev

eAk

eEE

Aek

Ekv

0/

/

0

/2

2

][][

][Where Ea is the activation energy (kcal/mol)

[E] is active enzyme concentration

Page 25: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

Factors Affecting Enzyme Kinetics Temperature

- on the rate of enzyme catalyzed reaction

k2=A*exp(-Ea/R*T)

T k2

- enzyme denaturation

T

][][

2ESk

dt

Pdv

v

][][

Edkdt

Ed

Denaturation rate:

kd=Ad*exp(-Ea/R*T)

kd: enzyme denaturation rate constant;

Ea: deactivation energy

Page 26: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

REFERENCES

Michael L. Shuler and Fikret Kargı, Bioprocess Engineering: Basic Concepts (2 nd Edition),Prentice Hall, New York, 2002.

1. James E. Bailey and David F. Ollis, Biochemical Engineering Fundementals (2 nd Edition), McGraw-Hill, New York, 1986.

Page 27: Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric enzymes have one or more allosteric sites Allosteric sites are binding sites distinct from an enzyme’s active site or substrate-binding

www-nmr.cabm.rutgers.edu/academics/

biochem694/2005BioChem412/

Biochem.412_2005_Lect.18.ppt –

juang.bst.ntu.edu.tw/BCbasics/Animation.htm - 37k –

www.saburchill.com/IBbiology/chapters03/images/

ENZYME%20INHIBITION.ppt –

http://www.wiley.com/college/pratt/0471393878/student/animations/enzyme_inhibition/index.html