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STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES OF ENZYMES. THE
MECHANISM OF ENZYMES ACTION.
CLASSIFICATION OF ENZYMES. ISOENZYMES.
Definition
 Enzymes  are protein catalysts for
 biochemical reactions in living cells
 They are among the most remarkable
 biomolecules known because of their
 extraordinary specificity and catalytic
 power, which are far greater than those of
 man-made catalysts.
Naming
The name enzyme (from Greek word "in yeast")
was not used until 1877,
but much earlier it was suspected that
 biological catalysts
are involved in the fermentation of sugar
 to form alcohol
 (hence the earlier name "ferments").
Naming and Classification of
            Enzymes
 Many     enzymes have been named by adding the
    suffix -ase to the name of the substrate, i.e., the
    molecule on which the enzyme exerts catalytic
    action.

    For example, urease catalyzes hydrolysis of
    urea to ammonia and CO2, arginase catalyzes
    the hydrolysis of arginine to ornithine and
    urea, and phosphatase the hydrolysis of
    phosphate esters.
Classification of enzymes
   Oxido-reductases (oxidation-reduction
    reaction).
   Transferases (transfer of functional groups).
   Hydrolases (hydrolysis reaction).
   Lyases (addition to double bonds).
   Isomerases (izomerization reactions).
   Ligases (formation of bonds with ATP
    cleavage).
The structure of enzymes
   Protein part + Non- protein part
   Apoenzyme + Cofactor = Holoenzyme

 Function       of apoenzyme:
   It is responsible for the reaction
 Function     of cofactor:
   It is responsible for the bonds formation between
    enzyme and substrate
   Transfer of functional groups
   Takes plase in the formation of tertiary structure of
    protein part
Cofactor
 1. Prosthetic group (when cofactor is very
  tightly bound to the apoenzyme and has
  small size )
 2. Metal ion
 3. Coenzyme(organic molecule derived
  from the B vitamin which participate
  directly in enzymatic reactions)
Prosthetic group
 1.   Heme group of cytochromes

 2.   Biothin group of acetyl-CoA carboxylase
Metal ions
 Fe - cytochrome oxidase, catalase
 Cu - cytochrome oxidase, catalase
 Zn - alcohol dehydrogenase
 Mg - hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphatase
 K, Mg - pyruvate kinase
 Na, K – ATP-ase
Coenzyme
 B1
 TPP-   Thiamine Pyro Phosphate
 B2
 FAD- Flavin Adenine Dinucleotide
 FMN- Flavin Mono Nucleotide
 Pantothenic acid
 Coenzyme A (CoA)
 B5
 NAD – Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide
 NADP- Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide
  Phosphate
Chemical Kinetics
The Michaelis-Menten Equation
    In 1913 a general theory of enzyme action and kinetics
     was developed by Leonor Michaelis and Maud Menten.

 




1. Point А.

2. Point В.

3. Point С.
Mechanism of enzyme reaction
 1. Formation of enzyme – substrate
  complex
 E + S → ES
 2. Conversion of the substrate to the
  product
 ES→ EP
 3. Release of the product from the enzyme
 EP → E+P
The Free Energy of
            Activation
 Before   a chemical reaction can take place, the
  reactants must become activated.
 This needs a certain amount of energy which is
  termed the energy of activation.
 It is defined as the minimum amount of energy
  which is required of a molecule to take part in a
  reaction.
The Free Energy of
            Activation
 Forexample,decomposition of hydrogen
 peroxide without a catalyst has an energy
 activation about 18 000. When the enzyme
 catalase is added, it is less than 2000.
The Free Energy of
            Activation
 The  rate of the reaction is proportional to
  the energy of activation:
 Greater the energy of activation
 Slower will be the reaction
 While if the energy of activation is less,
 The reaction will be faster
Energy of Activation
Effect of pH on Enzymatic
             Activity
 Most enzymes have a characteristic pH at
 which their activity is maximal (pH-
 optimum);
 above or below this pH the activity
 declines. Although the pH-activity profiles
 of many enzymes are bell-shaped, they may
 be very considerably in form.
Effect of pH on Enzymatic
          Activity
Effect of Temperature on
       Enzymatic Reactions
.The rate of enzyme catalysed reaction generally
  increases with temperature range in which the
  enzyme is stable. The rate of most enzymatic
  reactions doubles for each 100 C rise in
  temperature. This is true only up to about 500 C.
  Above this temperature, we observe heat
  inactivation of enzymes.
The optimum temperature of an enzyme is that
  temperature at which the greatest amount of
  substrate is changed in unit time.
Effect of Temperature on
  Enzymatic Reactions
Allosteric enzymes
Allosteric enzymes have a second regulatory site
(allosteric site) distinct from the active site

Allosteric enzymes contain more than one polypeptide
chain (have quaternary structure).

Allosteric modulators bind noncovalently to allosteric
site and regulate enzyme activity via conformational
changes
2 types of modulators (inhibitors or activators)

• Negative modulator (inhibitor)
   –binds to the allosteric site and inhibits the action of the
   enzyme
   –usually it is the end product of a biosynthetic pathway
   - end-product (feedback) inhibition

• Positive modulator (activator)
   –binds to the allosteric site and stimulates activity
   –usually it is the substrate of the reaction
Example of allosteric enzyme - phosphofructokinase-1
                             (PFK-1)

• PFK-1 catalyzes an early step in glycolysis
• Phosphoenol pyruvate (PEP), an intermediate
  near the end of the pathway is an allosteric
                                                             PEP
  inhibitor of PFK-1
Regulation of enzyme activity by
               covalent modification
Covalent attachment of a molecule to an amino acid side chain of a
protein can modify activity of enzyme
Phosphorylation reaction
Dephosphorylation reaction




Usually phosphorylated enzymes are
active, but there are exceptions (glycogen
synthase)

Enzymes taking part in phospho-rylation are
called protein kinases
Enzymes taking part in dephosphorylation
are called phosphatases
Activation by proteolytic cleavage
• Many enzymes are synthesized as inactive precursors
(zymogens) that are activated by proteolytic cleavage
• Proteolytic activation only occurs once in the life of an enzyme
molecule

            Examples of specific proteolysis
 •Digestive enzymes
    –Synthesized as zymogens in stomach and pancreas
 •Blood clotting enzymes
    –Cascade of proteolytic activations
 •Protein hormones
     –Proinsulin to insulin by removal of a peptide
Multienzyme Complexes and
       Multifunctional Enzymes

• Multienzyme complexes - different enzymes that
  catalyze sequential reactions in the same pathway are
  bound together
• Multifunctional enzymes - different activities may
  be found on a single, multifunctional polypeptide
  chain
Metabolite channeling

• Metabolite channeling - “channeling” of reactants
  between active sites
• Occurs when the product of one reaction is transferred
  directly to the next active site without entering the bulk
  solvent
• Can greatly increase rate of a reactions
• Channeling is possible in multienzyme complexes and
  multifunctional enzymes
Enzyme Inhibition
 1.   Reversible inhibition
       A. Competitive
       B. Non-competitive
       C. Uncompetitive

 2. Irreversible inhibition
Competitive Inhibition
Usage competitive inhibition in
         medicine
 The antibacterial effects of sulfanilamides
 are also explained by their close
 resemblance to para-amino-benzoic acid
 which is a part of folic acid, an essential
 normal constituent of bacterial cells. The
 sulfanilamides inhibit the formation of folic
 acid by bacterial cells and thus the bacterial
 multiplication is prevented and they soon
 die.
Non-competitive Inhibition

 In this case, there is no structural
  resemblance between the inhibitor and the
  substrate. The inhibitor does not combine
  with the enzyme at its active site but
  combines at some other site.
   E + S = ES
 E ++ I +I =ESI
   ES S = ESI      (INACTIVE COMPLEX)
Uncompetitive inhibition




E   + S +I =ESI (No active complex)
Irreversible Inhibition
 The inhibitor is covalently linked to the
  enzyme.
 The example:
 Action of nerve gas poisons on
  acetylcholinesterase,an enzyme that has an
  important role in the transmission of nerve
  impulse.
Isoenzymes


  These are the enzymes from the same
organism which catalyse the same reaction
 but are chemically and physically distinct
             from each other.
Lactate dehydrogenase
 Itoccurs in 5 possible forms in the blood
  serum:
 LDH1

 LDH2

 LDH3

 LDH4

 LDH5
Structure of LDH
 Each contains 4 polypeptide chains which
 are of 2 types: A and B which are usually
 called M (muscle) and H (heart).
 LDH1 –H H H H
 LDH2 – H H H M
 LDH3 – H H M M
 LDH4 – H M M M
 LDH5 – M M M M
Clinical importance of LDH
 Acutemyocardial infarction
 LDH1 and LDH2
 Acute liver damage
 LDH4 and LDH5
Creatine kinase
 It
   has 3 isoenzymes:
 CK1
 CK2
 CK3


 Clinicalimportance:
 When patient have acute myocardial infarction
 CK appears in the blood 4 to 8 hours after onset of
 infarction and reaches a peak in activity after 24
 hours.
Enzyme-Activity Units

 The most widely used unit of enzyme activity is
 international unit defined as that amount which
 causes transformation of 1.0 mkmol of substrate
 per minute at 25°C under

 Thespecific activity is the number of enzyme units
 per milligram of protein.
Enzyme-Activity Units

 Themolar or molecular activity, is the
 number of substrate molecules transformed
 per minute by a single enzyme molecule

 The katal (abbreviated kat), defined as the
 amount of enzyme that transforms 1 mol
 of substrate per 1 sec.

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Enzymes. classification. isoenzymes

  • 1. THEME: STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES OF ENZYMES. THE MECHANISM OF ENZYMES ACTION. CLASSIFICATION OF ENZYMES. ISOENZYMES.
  • 2. Definition  Enzymes are protein catalysts for biochemical reactions in living cells  They are among the most remarkable biomolecules known because of their extraordinary specificity and catalytic power, which are far greater than those of man-made catalysts.
  • 3. Naming The name enzyme (from Greek word "in yeast") was not used until 1877, but much earlier it was suspected that biological catalysts are involved in the fermentation of sugar to form alcohol (hence the earlier name "ferments").
  • 4. Naming and Classification of Enzymes  Many enzymes have been named by adding the suffix -ase to the name of the substrate, i.e., the molecule on which the enzyme exerts catalytic action.  For example, urease catalyzes hydrolysis of urea to ammonia and CO2, arginase catalyzes the hydrolysis of arginine to ornithine and urea, and phosphatase the hydrolysis of phosphate esters.
  • 5. Classification of enzymes  Oxido-reductases (oxidation-reduction reaction).  Transferases (transfer of functional groups).  Hydrolases (hydrolysis reaction).  Lyases (addition to double bonds).  Isomerases (izomerization reactions).  Ligases (formation of bonds with ATP cleavage).
  • 6. The structure of enzymes  Protein part + Non- protein part  Apoenzyme + Cofactor = Holoenzyme  Function of apoenzyme:  It is responsible for the reaction  Function of cofactor:  It is responsible for the bonds formation between enzyme and substrate  Transfer of functional groups  Takes plase in the formation of tertiary structure of protein part
  • 7. Cofactor  1. Prosthetic group (when cofactor is very tightly bound to the apoenzyme and has small size )  2. Metal ion  3. Coenzyme(organic molecule derived from the B vitamin which participate directly in enzymatic reactions)
  • 8. Prosthetic group  1. Heme group of cytochromes  2. Biothin group of acetyl-CoA carboxylase
  • 9. Metal ions  Fe - cytochrome oxidase, catalase  Cu - cytochrome oxidase, catalase  Zn - alcohol dehydrogenase  Mg - hexokinase, glucose-6-phosphatase  K, Mg - pyruvate kinase  Na, K – ATP-ase
  • 10. Coenzyme  B1  TPP- Thiamine Pyro Phosphate  B2  FAD- Flavin Adenine Dinucleotide  FMN- Flavin Mono Nucleotide  Pantothenic acid  Coenzyme A (CoA)  B5  NAD – Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide  NADP- Nicotinamide Adenine Dinucleotide Phosphate
  • 12. The Michaelis-Menten Equation  In 1913 a general theory of enzyme action and kinetics was developed by Leonor Michaelis and Maud Menten.  1. Point А. 2. Point В. 3. Point С.
  • 13. Mechanism of enzyme reaction  1. Formation of enzyme – substrate complex  E + S → ES  2. Conversion of the substrate to the product  ES→ EP  3. Release of the product from the enzyme  EP → E+P
  • 14. The Free Energy of Activation  Before a chemical reaction can take place, the reactants must become activated.  This needs a certain amount of energy which is termed the energy of activation.  It is defined as the minimum amount of energy which is required of a molecule to take part in a reaction.
  • 15. The Free Energy of Activation  Forexample,decomposition of hydrogen peroxide without a catalyst has an energy activation about 18 000. When the enzyme catalase is added, it is less than 2000.
  • 16. The Free Energy of Activation  The rate of the reaction is proportional to the energy of activation:  Greater the energy of activation  Slower will be the reaction  While if the energy of activation is less,  The reaction will be faster
  • 18. Effect of pH on Enzymatic Activity  Most enzymes have a characteristic pH at which their activity is maximal (pH- optimum);  above or below this pH the activity declines. Although the pH-activity profiles of many enzymes are bell-shaped, they may be very considerably in form.
  • 19. Effect of pH on Enzymatic Activity
  • 20. Effect of Temperature on Enzymatic Reactions .The rate of enzyme catalysed reaction generally increases with temperature range in which the enzyme is stable. The rate of most enzymatic reactions doubles for each 100 C rise in temperature. This is true only up to about 500 C. Above this temperature, we observe heat inactivation of enzymes. The optimum temperature of an enzyme is that temperature at which the greatest amount of substrate is changed in unit time.
  • 21. Effect of Temperature on Enzymatic Reactions
  • 22. Allosteric enzymes Allosteric enzymes have a second regulatory site (allosteric site) distinct from the active site Allosteric enzymes contain more than one polypeptide chain (have quaternary structure). Allosteric modulators bind noncovalently to allosteric site and regulate enzyme activity via conformational changes
  • 23. 2 types of modulators (inhibitors or activators) • Negative modulator (inhibitor) –binds to the allosteric site and inhibits the action of the enzyme –usually it is the end product of a biosynthetic pathway - end-product (feedback) inhibition • Positive modulator (activator) –binds to the allosteric site and stimulates activity –usually it is the substrate of the reaction
  • 24. Example of allosteric enzyme - phosphofructokinase-1 (PFK-1) • PFK-1 catalyzes an early step in glycolysis • Phosphoenol pyruvate (PEP), an intermediate near the end of the pathway is an allosteric PEP inhibitor of PFK-1
  • 25. Regulation of enzyme activity by covalent modification Covalent attachment of a molecule to an amino acid side chain of a protein can modify activity of enzyme
  • 27. Dephosphorylation reaction Usually phosphorylated enzymes are active, but there are exceptions (glycogen synthase) Enzymes taking part in phospho-rylation are called protein kinases Enzymes taking part in dephosphorylation are called phosphatases
  • 28. Activation by proteolytic cleavage • Many enzymes are synthesized as inactive precursors (zymogens) that are activated by proteolytic cleavage • Proteolytic activation only occurs once in the life of an enzyme molecule Examples of specific proteolysis •Digestive enzymes –Synthesized as zymogens in stomach and pancreas •Blood clotting enzymes –Cascade of proteolytic activations •Protein hormones –Proinsulin to insulin by removal of a peptide
  • 29.
  • 30. Multienzyme Complexes and Multifunctional Enzymes • Multienzyme complexes - different enzymes that catalyze sequential reactions in the same pathway are bound together • Multifunctional enzymes - different activities may be found on a single, multifunctional polypeptide chain
  • 31. Metabolite channeling • Metabolite channeling - “channeling” of reactants between active sites • Occurs when the product of one reaction is transferred directly to the next active site without entering the bulk solvent • Can greatly increase rate of a reactions • Channeling is possible in multienzyme complexes and multifunctional enzymes
  • 32. Enzyme Inhibition 1. Reversible inhibition A. Competitive B. Non-competitive C. Uncompetitive 2. Irreversible inhibition
  • 34. Usage competitive inhibition in medicine  The antibacterial effects of sulfanilamides are also explained by their close resemblance to para-amino-benzoic acid which is a part of folic acid, an essential normal constituent of bacterial cells. The sulfanilamides inhibit the formation of folic acid by bacterial cells and thus the bacterial multiplication is prevented and they soon die.
  • 35. Non-competitive Inhibition  In this case, there is no structural resemblance between the inhibitor and the substrate. The inhibitor does not combine with the enzyme at its active site but combines at some other site. E + S = ES  E ++ I +I =ESI ES S = ESI (INACTIVE COMPLEX)
  • 36. Uncompetitive inhibition E + S +I =ESI (No active complex)
  • 37. Irreversible Inhibition  The inhibitor is covalently linked to the enzyme.  The example:  Action of nerve gas poisons on acetylcholinesterase,an enzyme that has an important role in the transmission of nerve impulse.
  • 38. Isoenzymes These are the enzymes from the same organism which catalyse the same reaction but are chemically and physically distinct from each other.
  • 39. Lactate dehydrogenase  Itoccurs in 5 possible forms in the blood serum:  LDH1  LDH2  LDH3  LDH4  LDH5
  • 40. Structure of LDH  Each contains 4 polypeptide chains which are of 2 types: A and B which are usually called M (muscle) and H (heart).  LDH1 –H H H H  LDH2 – H H H M  LDH3 – H H M M  LDH4 – H M M M  LDH5 – M M M M
  • 41. Clinical importance of LDH  Acutemyocardial infarction  LDH1 and LDH2  Acute liver damage  LDH4 and LDH5
  • 42. Creatine kinase  It has 3 isoenzymes:  CK1  CK2  CK3  Clinicalimportance:  When patient have acute myocardial infarction CK appears in the blood 4 to 8 hours after onset of infarction and reaches a peak in activity after 24 hours.
  • 43. Enzyme-Activity Units  The most widely used unit of enzyme activity is international unit defined as that amount which causes transformation of 1.0 mkmol of substrate per minute at 25°C under  Thespecific activity is the number of enzyme units per milligram of protein.
  • 44. Enzyme-Activity Units  Themolar or molecular activity, is the number of substrate molecules transformed per minute by a single enzyme molecule  The katal (abbreviated kat), defined as the amount of enzyme that transforms 1 mol of substrate per 1 sec.