Utilisateur
They dramatically accelerate reactions under biological conditions (ambient temperature, atmospheric pressure), unlike industrial processes that may need extreme heat/pressure (e.g., Haber process)
Enzymes allow controlled, stepwise oxidation of glucose to capture energy efficiently rather than explosive release (e.g., burning fuels).
Biological catalysts that speed up biochemical reactions without being consumed. Most are globular proteins with defined 1°, 2°, 3°, and sometimes 4° structure
Add heat (increases number of molecules overcoming activation barrier).
Add a catalyst (lowers activation energy without being consumed).
Enzymes use method #2.
Their function depends on flexible, complex 3-D structure driven by the same forces governing protein folding.
Increase reaction rates (10⁶–10²⁰×).
Are regenerated at the end.
Highly specific (no side reactions).
Promote conversion A + B → C + D.
The name usually reflects substrate (e.g., alcohol dehydrogenase), product, or reaction type (e.g., dehydrogenase, decarboxylase).
No. Thermodynamically favorable reactions can still be slow if the activation energy barrier is large. ΔG relates to spontaneity, not rate
The size of the activation energy (ΔG‡) barrier between reactants and the transition state. Smaller barrier → faster reaction.
Enzymes lower ΔG‡ by stabilizing the transition state. They do NOT change ΔG of the overall reaction
Desolvation (removing substrates from water).
Proximity and orientation effects.
Participation in reaction chemistry (acid/base, covalent, metal).
Transition state stabilization.
A 3-D cleft where catalysis occurs; contains key residues for binding & reaction; determines specificity, affinity, and rate. Complementary to substrate/TS.
Lock-and-Key: Rigid complementarity.
Induced Fit: Substrate binding causes enzyme to change shape → better binding + catalytic alignment.
Removes water shell → faster reaction.
Strengthens polar interactions (H-bonds, ion pairs).
Prevents side reactions.
Enzyme conformational change: closes active site, excludes more water, and positions catalytic residues optimally. Example: hexokinase.
Reactions only occur if substrates collide in the correct geometry. Active sites hold substrates close and properly oriented → ~1000-fold rate boost.
Yes, all enzymes use this mechanism to some degree.
Acid/base catalysis
Covalent (nucleophilic) catalysis
Metal ion catalysis
May be via amino acids or cofactors.
Any residue capable of donating/accepting protons depending on protonation state (e.g., His, Asp, Glu, Lys, Tyr).
Ser, Cys, Lys, His, Asp, Glu — often activated by deprotonation.
Metal ions (Fe, Zn, Mg, etc.)
Coenzymes (organic molecules)
Cosubstrates (loosely bound; e.g., NAD⁺)
Prosthetic groups (tightly bound; e.g., FAD)
These expand reactive capability.
Apoenzyme: Inactive protein without its prosthetic group.
Holoenzyme: Active enzyme with prosthetic group attached.
Same for apoprotein/holoprotein.
The enzyme binds the transition state more tightly than substrate → lowers ΔG‡ → increases rate dramatically.
They mimic TS, which enzymes bind with highest affinity → very strong competitive inhibitors (basis for drug design).
V₀: Initial rate of product formation.
Vmax: Maximum achievable rate at saturating substrate.
Km: [S] at which V₀ = ½ Vmax; inverse indicator of affinity (low Km = high affinity).
Increases hyperbolically until approaching Vmax (Michaelis–Menten curve).
The substrate with the lower Km has the higher enzyme affinity.
Competitive inhibition
Allostery
Reversible covalent modification
Ionic signals (e.g., Ca²⁺)
Gene expression
Subcellular localization
Intrinsic vs. non-intrinsic activity modifiers.
Binds reversibly to the active site; resembles substrate or TS but does not react. Blocks substrate binding.
Km increases (lower apparent affinity)
Vmax unchanged
Can be overcome by ↑[S]
Curves shift right.
Enzymes bind TS with greatest affinity, so TS-mimicking inhibitors bind extremely tightly
Oligomeric, cooperative, sigmoidal kinetics; shift between T (tense, low activity) and R (relaxed, high activity) states.
Homoallostery: Substrate itself enhances activity (positive cooperativity).
Heteroallostery: Other molecules (activators/inhibitors) modulate activity.
Shift equilibrium toward R state → increased activity → sigmoidal curve shifts left.
Favor T state, decrease activity, sigmoidal curve shifts right.
Phosphorylation of Ser/Thr/Tyr –OH groups.
Adds a bulky, charged phosphate → significantly alters tertiary structure → may activate or inactivate enzyme.
Protein kinases add phosphate (ATP → ADP).
Protein phosphatases remove phosphate (hydrolysis).
Both are regulated themselves.
Yes (Asp, Glu, His), but these rarely participate in regulation (e.g., Asp in Na⁺/K⁺ ATPase).
Competitive inhibition, allostery, covalent modification.
Which do not alter intrinsic activity? Gene expression & localization.
Competitive inhibitors: ↑Km, Vmax unchanged
Allosteric inhibitors: usually decrease Vmax & increase Km (varies)
Activators: decrease Km, may increase Vmax
The better an enzyme stabilizes the TS, the stronger a TS analog binds → explains their potency as drugs
Flexibility allows induced fit, TS stabilization, water exclusion, and regulation (e.g., phosphorylation). Static structures couldn't catalyze effectively.
Adds size, charge, and polarity, altering protein folding → modifies enzyme conformation allosterically.
Formed by backbone NH groups, it stabilizes the negatively charged oxygen that appears in the transition state (classic example of transition state stabilization).
You do not need to memorize the full mechanism or residue numbers, just the concept that it stabilizes the TS and lowers ΔG‡.
