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Fundamentals of Biochemistry Third Edition Donald Voet • Judith G. Voet • Charlotte W. Pratt Chapter 11 Enzymatic Catalysis Copyright © 2008 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Properties of Enzyme Catalysts • massive reaction rate enhancements • increase by factors of 106 – 1014 typical • specificity • stereochemical selectivity for substrates and products • including chirality (i.e. enantiomeric selectivity) • regulation by various compounds is common • generally not as robust to severe environmental conditions compared to nonbiological catalysts Examples of Enzyme Rate Enhancements Table 11-1 Enzyme classification (E.C. system) 1. Oxidoreductases Oxidation–reduction reactions First number (1-6) indicates reaction class 2. Transferases Transfer of functional groups 3. Hydrolases Hydrolysis reactions 4. Lyases Group elimination to form double bonds 5. Isomerases Isomerization 6. Ligases Bond formation coupled with ATP hydrolysis Subclasses of the Oxidoreductase class (1) 1. 1. -.1. 2. -.1. 3. -.1. 4. -.1. 5. -.1. 6. -.1. 7. -.1. 8. -.1. 9. -.1.10. -.1.11. -.1.12. -.1.13. -.1.14. -.1.15. -.1.16. -.1.17. -.1.18. -.1.19. -.1.20. -.1.21. -.1.97. -.- Acting on the CH-OH group of donors. Acting on the aldehyde or oxo group of donors. Second number Acting on the CH-CH group of donors. gives subclass, Acting on the CH-NH(2) group of donors. provides more Acting on the CH-NH group of donors. specificity (e.g. Acting on NADH or NADPH. details about the Acting on other nitrogenous compounds as donors. Acting on a sulfur group of donors. type of Acting on a heme group of donors. substrate/product) Acting on diphenols and related substances as donors. Acting on a peroxide as acceptor. Acting on hydrogen as donor. Acting on single donors with incorporation of molecular oxygen. Acting on paired donors, with incorporation or reduction of molecular oxygen. Acting on superoxide as acceptor. Oxidizing metal ions. Acting on CH or CH(2) groups. Acting on iron-sulfur proteins as donors. Acting on reduced flavodoxin as donor. Acting on phosphorus or arsenic in donors. Acting on x-H and y-H to form an x-y bond. Other oxidoreductases. Subclasses and sub-subclasses of the Isomerase class (5) 5. -. -.- Isomerases. 5. 1. -.- Racemases and epimerases. 5. 1. 1.- Acting on amino acids and derivatives. 5. 1. 2.- Acting on hydroxy acids and derivatives. 5. 1. 3.- Acting on carbohydrates and derivatives. 5. 1.99.- Acting on other compounds. 5. 2. -.- Cis-trans-isomerases. 5. 3. -.- Intramolecular oxidoreductases. 5. 3. 1.- Interconverting aldoses and ketoses, and related compounds. 5. 3. 2.- Interconverting keto- and enol- groups. 5. 3. 3.- Transposing C==C bonds. 5. 3. 4.- Transposing S-S bonds. 5. 3.99.- Other intramolecular oxidoreductases. 5. 4. -.- Intramolecular transferases (mutases). 5. 4. 1.- Transferring acyl groups. 5. 4. 2.- Phosphotransferases (phosphomutases). 5. 4. 3.- Transferring amino groups. 5. 4. 4.- Transferring hydroxy groups. 5. 4.99.- Transferring other groups. 5. 5. -.- Intramolecular lyases. 5.99. -.- Other isomerases. Enzyme specificities • mainly non-covalent forces (H-bonds, electrostatics, van der Waals, hydrophobic) • typically involves a binding cleft • complimentary in shape to substrate(s) {see caveat later} • resulting desolvation of the substrate is sometimes an important feature • binding cleft is typically pre-formed to a large degree • ‘lock and key’ idea: Emil Fischer, 1894 • on the contrary, sometimes the cleft needs to change conformation substantially to fit the substrate: • ‘induced fit’ idea: Dan Koshland • energetic disadvantage (some binding energy spent to ‘cause’ binding cleft to reconfigure) • advantage: binding site will not do catalysis accidentally, reactive groups not situated correctly until substrate binds A cartoon illustrating binding specificity in an active site cleft multiple sites of interaction are usually involved Figure 11-1 Stereo and enantiomeric selectivity in enzyme reactions • able to distinguish between natural and unnatural enantiomers of a molecule • able to introduce a new chiral center with enantiomeric specificity • important for ensuring the production and recognition of the correct biological molecules • a major advantage over most non-biological catalysts employed organic chemistry application • example: the enzyme aconitase Aconitase introduces a two new chiral centers when the hydroxyl shifts * * * new chiral centers Page 325 illustrates how multiple attachment points to a chiral surface make it possible to discriminate between the two chemically identical (-CH2-COO-) substituents on the central carbon; the hydroxyl gets shifted specifically towards one of them and not the other Enzymes are usually not perfectly selective • some enzymes are intentionally nonspecific • e.g. proteolytical degradation in the gut • imperfect selectivity of most enzymes makes it possible to design a substratemimic that can be detected spectrophotometrically • very useful in assaying enzyme activities • requires some change in absorption (magnitude or wavelength) between substrate and product Page 325 The range of possible enzyme reactions is expanded greatly by the use of bound cofactors organic transiently bound, cycling on-off Page 325 bound persistently (e.g. covalent) Involvement of cofactors in enzyme reactions • direct involvement in the catalytic events • cofactor sometimes left unaltered at the end of the reaction • or, sometimes the cofactor is altered (e.g. oxidized/reduced) • cofactor sometimes recycled ‘in-place’, by the activity of another enzyme acting on the bound cofactor • cofactor sometimes cycled off the enzyme; it is replaced by a ‘fresh’ cofactor, and then regenerated by another enzyme in solution Page 325 NAD+/NADH: an example of a ubiquitous redox cofactor. Often acting as a ‘co-substrate’ (i.e. recycled off the enzyme) note the introduction of a chiral center Page 325 Definition • apo-enzyme: enzyme with no cofactor bound • holo-enzyme: enzyme with cofactor bound Page 325 Transition state theory for reaction rates (Henry Eyring) Example with a very simple reaction: Along a reaction pathway, one passes (very briefly) through a maximally unstable configuration: this is the ‘transition state’ In a simple reaction, the reaction coordinate can be understood in terms of a specific geometric feature of the reaction (e.g. here, the Ha-Hb distance). In more complex reactions, the reaction coordinate is sometimes less tangible. A transition state diagram for a reaction involving a change in free energy between substrates and products Height of the barrier that must be overcome is called the free enegy of activation. The free energy of activation (in the forward direction) is shown. The rate of a reaction is governed by how well-populated the transition state (shown here as X#) is. Dependence of reaction rate on free energy of activation The rate of a reaction is governed by how well-populated the transition state (shown here as X#) is. Specifically, the rate depends on e(-DG#/RT) Lower DG# means faster rate. By thermodynamic arguments, the degree to which X# is populated depends on how much higher its energy is than the substrates. (i.e. it depends on DG#) N.B. Intermediates are not the same as transition states. In a multi-step reaction mechanism, there will be intermediates, and transition states between every stable (or marginally stable) species. Figure 11-6 Catalysis of a reaction by lowering the transition state energy The rate enhancement goes as e-(DDG#/RT) Note that forward and reverse rates are increased by the same factor; the equilibrium constant and K for the reaction are unchanged Figure 11-7 factor of 1,000,000 corresponds to about 34Kcal/mol (smaller than the energy of a covalent bond, comparable to a few strong non-covalent interactions Acid-Base catalysis: one of the dominant features in enzyme mechanisms acid catalysis base catalysis a ‘concerted’ acid-base mechanism would involve both features Figure 11-8 Acid-Base catalysis: one of the dominant features in enzyme mechanisms • participation of multiple side chains (or cofactors makes concerted acid-base mechanisms possible (and common) for enzymes • the use of acid-base mechanisms is one reason the activities of most enzymes are pH dependence • details of the pH dependence can often be used to infer something about what functional groups are involved in the mechanism Figure 11-8 Ribonuclease (RNase): an example of acidbase catalysis cleavage of a nucleic acid between the phosphate and the 3’ sugar hydroxyl pH dependence suggests participation of groups with pK’s of 5.4 and 6.4 (understood to be His12 and His119 based on crystal structure) Figure 11-10 Ribonuclease (RNase): an example of acid-base catalysis Step 1: the 2’OH belonging to the substrate acts as the nucleophile. His12 acts as general base to activate the nucleophile. His119 acts as a general acid, donating a proton to the leaving group 5’OH. Figure 11-10 part 1 Ribonuclease (RNase): an example of acid-base catalysis Step 2: H2O comes in to act as the nucleophile in the second step, attacking the same phosphate as before. Now, His119 acts as a general base and His12 acts as a general acid, protonating the leaving group (the 2’OH). The two steps are a simple reversal, including the roles of the side chains. Only the substrate participants are different (H20 vs sugar 5’OH). Figure 11-10 part 1 Covalent catalysis • typically involves formation of a covalently bonded intermediate between the substrate and either a protein sde chain or cofactor • ex: acetoacetate decarboxylation by a primary amine Figure 11-8 Common nucleophiles (and electrophiles) Figure 11-12 Metal ions in catalysis • common in redox reactions • substrate binding • stabilization of negative charges stabilization of hydroxy ion (not ordinarily present at high concentrations) for nucleophilic attack example: carbonic anhydrase (Zn2+) Figure 11-13b Metal ions in catalysis Zn provides a hydroxyl ligand for attacking CO2 Figure 11-13b