The Nature of the Active Site Questions we want to ask: 1.Looking at the reactants and products, what type of reaction has occurred Hydrolysis, Condensation,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Chemical Nature of Enzyme Catalysis
Advertisements

ALDEHYDES AND KETONES BY: SALEHA SHAMSUDIN.
Catalytic Strategies. Basic Catalytic Principles What is meant by the binding energy as it relates to enzyme substrate interactions? –free energy released.
Lecture 17 –Exams in Chemistry office with M’Lis. Please show your ID to her to pick up your exam. –Quiz on Friday –Enzyme mechanisms.
© 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. 1 Organic Chemistry 6 th Edition Paula Yurkanis Bruice Chapter 24 Catalysis.
Enzyme Catalysis I. Transition state theory
Hypothetical substrate docking in enzyme’s active site. Substrate is geometrically and electronically compatible with active site. Enzymes are also.
Enzymes: Protein Catalysts Increase rates of reaction, but not consumed. Enable reactions to occur under mild conditions: e.g. temperature, pH. High reaction.
Enzyme Mechanisms.
Modes of Enzymatic Catalysis 1._________________ modes A.General _______________ Catalysis B.__________________ Catalysis 2.___________________ modes A.______________________.
Biochemistry Sixth Edition
Lecture 12: Enzyme Catalysis
Chymotrypsin Chymotrypsin is one of the serine proteases.
Lecture 13: Mechanism of Chymotrypsin
Catalytic Mechanism of Chymotrypsin slide 1 Chymotrypsin –Protease: catalyze hydrolysis of proteins in small intestine –Specificity: Peptide bond on carboxyl.
Two Substrate Reactions
Probing Mechanisms of Peptide Bond Formation & Catalysis Using Models Model of Koga Uses molecular recognition by a crown ether to bind a model of the.
Enzyme Mechanisms: Serine Proteases
Principles of Bioinorganic Chemistry
Review Enzyme “constants” Reversible inhibition
Allosteric Enzymes Allosteric: Greek allo + steric, other shape Allosteric enzyme: an oligomer whose biological activity is affected by other substances.
Enzymatic Catalysis III Ribonuclease A An example of a general acid and base catalysisAn example of a general acid and base catalysis Digestive enzyme.
Enzymes Enzymes as Biological Catalysts
Chapter 3 DRUG TARGETS: ENZYMES.
Enzymes : Mechanism and Catalysis. Enzymes DO NOT change the equilibrium constant of a reaction Enzymes DO NOT alter the amount of energy consumed or.
Review 1.Reaction mechanisms 2. Reducing sugars 3. Amino acid mutations and their effects 4. Lipids.
Chymotrypsin Lecture Aims: to understand (1) the catalytic strategies used by enzymes and (2) the mechanism of chymotrypsin.
Advanced Bioprocess Engineering Enzymes & Enzymes Kinetics Lecturer Dr. Kamal E. M. Elkahlout Assistant Prof. of Biotechnology.
Catalytic Mechanisms.
Principles of Biochemistry
Condensation Reactions Two molecules combine with the generation of a smaller molecule.
Mechanism of lysozyme Lysozyme digests bacterial cell walls by breaking  (1- 4) glycosidic bonds between (N- acetylmuramic acid (NAM) and N-acetylglucosamine.
Chapter 6.1 and 6.2: Introduction to Enzymes
Reaction Mechanisms 1.The catalytically important amino acids are? 2.In the protease mechanisms we have reviewed, the carbonyl carbon on the peptide bond.
Enzymes are good catalysts
Nucleophilic addition – reaction of aldehydes and ketones C of C=O is delta positive (the most electrophilic centre). R groups are inductively donating.
CHMI E.R. Gauthier, Ph.D. 1 CHMI 2227E Biochemistry I Enzymes: - catalysis.
Mechanisms of Enzyme Action. Transition (TS) State Intermediate Transition state = unstable high-energy intermediate Rate of rxn depends on the frequency.
Enzyme Catalysis 10/08/2009. Regulation of Enzymatic Activity There are two general ways to control enzymatic activity. 1. Control the amount or availability.
Mechanism of alcohol dehydrogenase
Enzymology. How enzymes work - mechanisms.
Binding features that promote catalysis
Enzyme Rate Enhancement
2. The Citric Acid Cycle (CAC) Pyruvate CO The Citric Acid Cycle (CAC) The sequence of events: Step 1: C-C bond formation to make citrate Step 2:
The Behavior of Proteins: Enzymes, Mechanisms, and Control Feb 16, 2016 CHEM 281.
John E. McMurry Paul D. Adams University of Arkansas PREVIEW TO CARBONYL CHEMISTRY.
Enzymes Most biological catalysts are proteins (some REALLY COOL ONES are folded RNAs!!!) Catalysts - change rate of reaction without net change of catalyst.
© 2013 Pearson Education, Inc. Fundamentals of General, Organic, and Biological Chemistry, 7e John McMurry, David S. Ballantine, Carl A. Hoeger, Virginia.
Enzymes: A Molecular Perspective
Zymogen/proenzyme (inactive enzyme precursor)
22.2 Important Coenzymes in Metabolic Pathways
Mechanism of enzyme catalysis
Carboxypeptidase Mechanism
Ch 17- Carboxylic Acids and their derivatives
Chapter 7 Enzyme Mechanisms.
PROTEINS AS DRUG TARGETS:
Enzymes Enzymes as Biological Catalysts
Enzyme Catalytic Mechanisms
Pyruvate is reduced to lactate in anaerobic metabolism in muscle cells FIGURE An oxidation-reduction reaction. Shown here is the oxidation.
The Nature of the Active Site
Enzymes catalysis Enzyme catalyzed chemical reactions via both non-covalent and covalent interactions Transient chemical reactions (i.e., covalent interactions)
Principles of Bioinorganic Chemistry
Serine proteases Named because they use a serine residue to cut peptide bonds Possess a catalytic triad His 57 Asp 102 Ser 195 Use 2 different types of.
Review Reaction mechanisms 2. Reducing sugars
Review Reaction mechanisms 2. Amino acid mutations and their effects
Reaction Mechanisms The catalytically important amino acids are?
Organic Chemistry 2: Important Reactions
Organic Chemistry 2: Important Reactions
Mechanism of enzyme catalysis
The Structure of the Mammalian 20S Proteasome at 2.75 Å Resolution
Presentation transcript:

The Nature of the Active Site Questions we want to ask: 1.Looking at the reactants and products, what type of reaction has occurred Hydrolysis, Condensation, Acid-Base Catalysis 2.What amino acid residues are present in the active site that would allow us to perform this reaction? 3.How are these amino acids arranged in the active site? Once we know these pieces of information, we can propose a mechanism for the reaction and really begin to understand how the structure determines the function of the protein

Identifying the Reaction Look closely at the reactants and products. What is chemically different about the product? If new groups are present, (phosphate groups for example), you’ll need to account for them Since the cell is mostly water, a lot of chemical reactions involve the breaking of O-H bonds in water and using the atoms in a reaction

Identifying Important Amino Acids in the Active Site Since the  -amino group and the carboxylic acid group at the start and finish of every amino acid are involved in forming peptide bonds, we usually only need to worry about the side chains. USUALLY (The carbonyl oxygen and nitrogen involved in the peptide bond may be positioned JUST right…) Hydrophobic Amino Acids are non-reactive, so we can drop them from our consideration That leaves us with…

Reactive Amino Acid Side Chain Functional Groups

Let’s Look at a Specific Reaction: Chymotrypsin Chymotrypsin normally catalyzes the hydrolysis of the primary structure of proteins, however it can also catalyze the hydrolysis of various esters:

Chymotrypsin We can see a 2-stage reaction: 1)Production of p- Nitrophenolate 2)Release of acetate This indicates that there is a clear difference in the rate constants for each step

Chymotrypsin Hydrolysis of p- Nitrophenylacetate What amino acids might be involved in the first step? Serine, Glutamate, Aspartate. Why? Nucleophilic attack of the carbonyl carbon by one of the side chain oxygens.

Idenitfying the Critical Amino Acids Biochemical data from many laboratories indicated that Ser195 and His57 were important in the reaction X-ray crystallographic analysis of the protein supported these data Ser195 and His57 are involved in the reaction mechanism

Chymotrypsin Structure Remember: Chymotrypsin is produced as a zymogen Look at the positioning of the active site residues at the bottom of a cleft in the center of the protein

Chymotrypsin Mechanism

Let’s break the reaction down into steps 1st Stage: Formation of the Acyl-Enzyme intermediate Imidazole nitrogen from histidine side chain acts as a General Base Catalyst and abstracts the hydroxyl proton from the Serine side chain The electrons from that bond move to the hydroxyl oxygen, which then acts as a nucleophile, attacking the carbonyl carbon The carbonyl carbon-oxygen double bond breaks and a pair of electrons moves to the oxygen, stabilizing the intermediate.

Let’s break the reaction down into steps 1st Stage: Formation of the Acyl-Enzyme intermediate The tetrahedral intermediate rearranges, breaking the amide carbon-nitrogen bond The nitrogen is stabilized by taking the proton from the imidazole nitrogen which acts like a General Acid Catalyst since it donated the proton.

Let’s break the reaction down into steps 1st Stage: Formation of the Acyl-Enzyme intermediate The recently generated product leaves the active site by diffusion The remainder of the substrate is covalently bonded to the enzyme, forming the Acyl- enzyme intermediate

Let’s break the reaction down into steps 2nd Stage: Deacylation and Regeneration The imidazole nitrogen once again acts as a General Base and abstracts a proton from a water molecule The electrons from the O-H bond move to the oxygen and it begins a nucleophilic attack on the carbonyl carbon in the acyl- enzyme intermediate

Let’s break the reaction down into steps 2nd Stage: Deacylation and Regeneration The tetrahedral intermediate reorganizes with the serine oxygen taking the proton from the imidazole, thereby breakign the bond between the enzyme and the product

Let’s break the reaction down into steps 2nd Stage: Deacylation and Regeneration The product diffuses out and the enzyme is ready for the whole process to start over again…

What can we learn from the proposed mechanism? 1.The active site amino acids have specific tasks Ser195 - Hydroxyl oxygen: Nucleophile His57 - Imidazole nitrogen: General Acid-Base Catalyst 2.The amino acids must be in proximity or no reaction would occur His57 Imidazole nitrogen starts the reaction by increasing the nucleophilicity of the serine hydroxyl oxygen This happens simply because the imidazole ring is close enough to the serine hydroxyl group that it can form a hydrogen bond

Different Active Site, Slightly Different Mechanisms Chymotrypsin is a protease, specifically a Serine Protease There are other types of proteases: 1.Cysteine Proteases Cys residue replaces Ser in mechanism similar to Serine proteases 2.Aspartic Proteases 2 Asp residues act as General Acid-base catalysts 3.Zinc Proteases Zn 2+ is coordinated by 2 His Zn 2+ promotes attack of carbonyl carbon by water

Guessing the Catalytic Mechanism of Papain Papain is a cysteine protease from Papaya commonly found in meat tenderizer Why? In the active site of papain, you will find a cysteine and a histidine in close proximity What mechanism would you propose for papain knowing that the substrate is a peptide, and the reaction results in the hydrolysis of a peptide bond? Turn your answer in next Tuesday, March 9.

Alcohol Dehydrogenase (ADH) Enzymes provide proximity and proper orientation for substrates to interact. Oxidoreductases constitute the largest class of enzymes. They catalyze the transfer of electrons from one molecule to another. Within this class of enzymes, hydrogen atoms and hydride ions are the most common groups transferred. Alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH) oxidizes alcohol into aldehyde or ketone through the reduction of NAD+ to NADH. –We’ll cover these cofactors next session

Alcohol Dehydrogenase (ADH)

NAD + Alcohol

How are the Ligands Bound? Ethanol The ethanol is bound by an ion-dipole interaction with the Zn 2+ and a dipole- dipole interaction with Ser48

How are the Ligands Bound? Zn 2+ The catalytic zinc ion is coordinated by two cysteine suflhydryl sulfurs, an imidazole nitrogen and the ethanol oxygen

How are the Ligands Bound? NAD + The shortest interactions are the catalytically relevant ones: 1.His51 2.Ser48

How are the Ligands Arranged? The Players

How are the Ligands Arranged? Distance between Residues

How are the Ligands Arranged? Active Site and Surroundings

Alcohol Dehydrogenase Mechanism Steps Binding of the coenzyme NAD+ Binding of the alcohol substrate by coordination to zinc Deprotonation of nicotinamide ribose by His-51 Deprotonation of Ser-48 by nicotinamide ribose Deprotonation of the alcohol by Ser-48 Hydride transfer from the alkoxide ion to NAD+, leading to NADH and a zinc bound aldehyde or ketone Release of the product aldehyde

Alcohol Dehydrogenase Mechanism Start at bottom and work your way clockwise, Follow the electrons!

Alcohol Dehydrogenase Mechanism Overall Rxn:

Alcohol Dehydrogenase Questions for Your Consideration 1.How effective do you think the enzyme will be with various alcohols as substrate? 2.What effect do you think performing the reaction at an acidic pH would have? Basic pH? 3.If you mutated Ser48 to a Threonine, what would happen to the observed activity? Turn your answers in next Tuesday (March 9).