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Molecular Cell Biology Kinetics: Enzymology Cooper.

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Presentation on theme: "Molecular Cell Biology Kinetics: Enzymology Cooper."— Presentation transcript:

1 Molecular Cell Biology Kinetics: Enzymology Cooper

2 Kinetic analysis How cells change over long time periods (development, long term adaptive changes; hours - years) Movement of proteins and membranes within cells - dynamics of cellular events (sec - hrs) –Pulse chase analyses –Real time imaging: GFP and other fluorophores allow measurement of trafficking, diffusion, etc. (time-lapse, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP), etc.) Kinetics of molecular interactions, enzyme reactions (msec - min)

3 Catalyst (enzyme): increases rate of a reaction Substrate: molecule on which enzyme acts to form product S ------> P enzyme Free energy of reaction not changed by enzyme. For a favored reaction (ΔG negative), enzyme accelerates reaction. Graph: ΔG* = activation energy ΔG negative overall for forward reaction Enzymes are catalysts for chemical reactions in cells

4 Active Site: Region of the enzyme that does the work. Amino acid residues in this site assume certain 3D conformation, which promotes the desired reaction. What does the Enzyme do to cause catalysis? High affinity for substrate in its transition state, facilitating transition to product Increased probability of proper orientation of substrates Increased local concentration of substrates Has atoms in places that push the reaction forward Change hydration sphere of substrates Enzymes as Catalysts

5 Phases of Enzyme Reactions Transient phase –Accelerating Velocity –Short (<1s) –Formation Enzyme-Substrate Intermediates Steady-state phase –May Not Occur –Constant Velocity –Duration up to Several Minutes –Little Change Levels of Enzyme –Small Fraction Substrate Consumed –Small Levels Product Formed Exhaustion phase –Decreasing Velocity –Depletion of Substrate –Accumulation of Product –Inactivation of Unstable Enzyme

6 What Can You Learn from What Happens at Steady State? Turnover number => catalytic efficiency of enzyme Affinity of enzyme for substrates Lower bounds for rate constants Inhibitors and pH variations to probe active site Details of mechanism require transient (pre- steady state) kinetic analysis

7 Need an assay that measures the product of the chemical reaction. For example... Enzyme β-galactosidase catalyzes this reaction: lactose --------------------> glucose + galactose Measure the amount of glucose or galactose over time. Trick - use a substrate that produces a reaction product that absorbs light (creates color). Measure absorbance. How to Measure Enzyme Activity at Steady State

8 ONPG = ONP-galactose (ONP = o-nitro-phenol) ONPG --------------> galactose + ONP (colorless) (colorless) (yellow) X-gal = X-galactose (X = 4-chloro-3-bromo indole) X-gal ---------------> galactose + 4-Cl-3-Br-indigo (colorless) (colorless) (deep blue) Measure absorbance with a spectrophotometer Beer’s law - concentration proportional to absorbance 96-well format instruments Color-Producing Substrates for β-galactosidase

9 Optimizing assay No Enzyme -> No Product Optimize pH, salt, other buffer conditions Optimize temperature Choose set of conditions to be kept constant Amount of enzyme –Linear range of assay –More is better

10 One Single Experiment at One Substrate Concentration Plot product vs time Determine rate during initial linear phase Equilibrium? Steady-state? Measure Velocity of Reaction

11 Run the Assay at Different Substrate Concentrations Plot initial rate (v 0 ) vs Concentration of Substrate [S]

12 Michaelis-Menten Plot What’s interesting or useful about this plot? Can we use this plot to compare results for different enzymes or conditions? Can we derive an equation for the curve?

13 Consider time zero We measure the initial velocity of the reaction) No product present: Back reaction is neglible, i.e. no k -2. The initial velocity, v 0, is therefore simply: v 0 = k 2 [ES] (k 2 often called “k cat ” - catalysis rate constant) Deriving an Equation for the Curve

14 Problem - [ES] cannot be measured However... [S 0 ] (the initial concentration of substrate) is known [P] (product produced) can be measured [E Total ] (the amount of enzyme added to the reaction) is known The individual rate equations allow us to solve, using algebra, for [ES] in terms of these known values

15 At steady state, d[ES]/dt is zero. So...

16 Solving for [ES]... To simply, let’s define a constant, Km, the Michaelis constant as... This simplifies the equation:

17 But... we don’t know [E]. We do know that the total amount of Enzyme is the sum of E and ES... [E0] = [E] + [ES] thus.. [E] = [E0] − [ES] Substituting for [E]...

18 Rearrange to solve for [ES]... From before, the rate (or velocity) of the reaction is... Substituting for [ES]...

19 V, the velocity (rate) of the reaction is... How does v depend on (vary with) S?

20 Km is the “Michaelis-Menten constant” - the substrate concentration at which reaction velocity is half-maximal. Km = (k -1 + k 2 )/k 1 Typical values? nM to mM V max = k 2 [E] total = k cat [E] total Typical k cat values? 1-1000 per second V0V0

21 Consider three situations... 1. [S] very large, much greater than Km The enzyme will be saturated with substrate. [S] + Km = ~ [S], so the rate equation simplifies to... v 0 = V max 2. [S] very small, much less than Km [S] + Km = ~ Km, so the equation simplifies to... v 0 linearly proportional to [S] 3. [S]=Km v 0 = 50% of V max V0V0

22 How Km values affect metabolism Glucose + ATP --> glucose-6-P + ADP + H + Typical cell [glucose] = 5 mM Two enzymes catalyze above reaction –Hexokinase Km (glucose) = 0.1 mM Km << [S], so velocity independent of [glucose] Reaction is inhibited by product--regulated by product utilization –Glucokinase Km (glucose) = 10 mM Km > [S], promotes glucose utilization only when [glucose] is high Reaction not inhibited by product--regulated by substrate availability

23 Determining Km and Vmax Estimate V max from asymptote, Km from conc. at V max /2 Curve fitting w/ computer programs, inc Excel Visual inspection (Graph paper) Lineweaver-Burke plot and others

24 Michaelis-Menten equation can be rearranged into “Lineweaver-Burke” equation From this graph, visually estimate Km and Vmax.

25 Regulating enzyme activity Allosteric regulation Reversible covalent modifications Enzyme availability (synthesis, degradation, localization) Substrate availability (synthesis, degradation, localization) Inhibition –By specific metabolites within the cell –By drugs, toxins, etc. –By specific analogues in study of reaction mechanism

26 Competitive inhibitor... binds to free enzyme prevents simultaneous binding of substrate - i.e. competes with substrate Apparent Km of the substrate is therefore increased High substrate concentration: - substrate overcomes inhibition by mass action - v 0 approaches V max (which does not change) Competitive Inhibition

27 Example of Competitive Inhibition EtOH Rx for MeOH poisoning Methanol (ingested from solid alcohol, paint strippers, windshield washer fluid, etc.) is metabolized by alcohol dehydrogenase to formaldehyde and formic acid. Leads to metabolic acidosis and optic neuritis (from formate) that can cause blindness. Treatment: Infuse EtOH to keep blood concentration at 100-200 mg/dL (legally intoxicated) for long enough to excrete the MeOH. EtOH serves as a competitive inhibitor. Ethylene glycol poisoning is treated in the same way.

28 Noncompetitive Inhibition Noncompetitive inhibitor... Binds to a site on the enzyme (E or ES) that inactivates the enzyme Decreases total amount of enzyme available for catalysis, decreasing Vmax Remaining active enzyme molecules are unaffected, so Km is unchanged

29 Uncompetitive Inhibition Uncompetitive inhibitor... Binds specifically to the [ES] complex (and inactivates it Fraction of enzyme inhibited increases as [S] increases So both Km and V max are affected

30 Summary: Types of Inhibitors Competitive –Binds Free Enzyme Only –Km Increased Noncompetitive –Binds E and ES –V max Decreased Uncompetitive –Binds ES only –V max Decreased –Km Decreased

31 Plots to Distinguish Types of Inhibitors Competitive Uncompetitive Noncompetitive No inhibitor Plots show curves with no inhibitor vs. presence of two different concentrations of inhibitor

32 Reading and Homework for Kinetics Alberts (5th edition) pp. 159-166 Lodish (6th edition) pp. 79-85 See handout or website for homework


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