15
Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification Proteolytic cleavage Covalent modification Protein-protein interaction Allosteric regulation Properties of allosteric enzymes (important) Sigmoid kinetics (what does Km mean in this case) (important) Positive and negative modulators (where do they act and how do they modify activity at constant substrate concentration) (most important) Models of allosteric transitions (important)

Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Lecture 8-KumarRegulation of Enzyme Activity

• Regulation by modification

– Proteolytic cleavage

– Covalent modification

– Protein-protein interaction

• Allosteric regulation

– Properties of allosteric enzymes (important)

– Sigmoid kinetics (what does Km mean in this case) (important)

– Positive and negative modulators (where do they act and how do they modify activity at constant substrate concentration) (most important)

– Models of allosteric transitions (important)

Page 2: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Regulation of Enzyme Activity

Normal metabolic control may be exerted in a variety of ways. Examples are:1.Proteolytic Cleavage of inactive Proenzymes to active enzymes

Pepsinogen pepsin + small peptidein gastrointestinal tract for protein digestion

2.Coagulation cascade—a series of proenzymes are converted to active enzymes. The last step is

Fibrinogen Fibrin

Page 3: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Coagulation Cascade

Page 4: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Covalent Modification as Control

Chemical modification can either increase or decrease activity. Some examples are: Glycogen Synthetase Phosphatase Kinase Phosphorylated Glycogen synthetase

Glycogen phosphorylase

Covalent Phosphorylated Glycogen phosphorylase

Page 5: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Protein-Protein Interaction

Example is activation of Protein Kinase A

R2C2 + 4 cAMP R2C2(4cAMP)

Inactive 2R(cAMP)2 + 2C (active)

The catalytic unit (C) is able to phosphorylate and modulate the activity of other enzymes

Page 6: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Allosteric Regulation

Page 7: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Properties of Allosteric enzymes

1. Catalyze essentially irreversible reactions; are rate limiting

2. Generally contain more than one polypeptide chain

3. Do not follow Michaelis-Menten Kinetics

4. Are regulated by allosteric activators or inhibitors

5. Can be up-regulated by allosteric activators at constant [S]

6. Can be down regulated by allosteric inhibitors at constant [S]

7. Activators and Inhibitors need not have any structural resemblance to substrate structure

Page 8: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Sigmoid kinetics for allosteric enzymes

Page 9: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Effects of allosteric activators and allosteric inhibitors on enzyme activity

Page 10: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Effect of allosteric activators and inhibitors on rate at cellular concentration of the

substrate

Page 11: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Models of Allosteric ModulationSymmetry model

Page 12: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric
Page 13: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric
Page 14: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Sigm

oidal Curve E

ffect

Sigmoidal curve

Exaggeration of sigmoidal curveyields a drastic zigzag line that shows the On/Off point clearly

Positive effector (ATP)brings sigmoidal curveback to hyperbolic

Negative effector (CTP)keeps

Consequently, Allosteric enzyme can sense the concentration of the environment and adjust its activity

Noncooperative(Hyperbolic)

Cooperative(Sigmoidal)

CTPATP

vo

vo

[Substrate]Off On

Page 15: Lecture 8-Kumar Regulation of Enzyme Activity Regulation by modification –Proteolytic cleavage –Covalent modification –Protein-protein interaction Allosteric

Learning objectives for lecture 8

• Learn various methodologies that enzymes employ to control metabolism

• Know the properties of an allosteric enzyme.

• Understand the significance of sigmoid kinetics. Can one determine Km and Vmax for these enzymes from the sigmoid plot

• Understand how the activity of an allosteric enzyme is regulated by allosteric activators and inhibitors

• Understand the mechanism of allosterism and negative feedback inhibition