Chapter - 5
Chapter - 5
Definition of enzymes
Properties of enzyme
Classification of enzymes
Mechanism of enzyme catalysis
Enzyme kinetics
Factors affecting enzymes activity
Enzyme inhibitors
Regulation of enzyme activity
Enzyme in clinical diagnosis
Definition of enzymes
• The catalytically active complex of protein and prosthetic group is called the
holoenzyme.
Active sites
Catalytic efficiency
Specificity
Zymogens
Isoenzymes
Active sites
Enzyme molecules contain a special pocket or cleft called the active site.
The active site contains free hydroxyl group of serine, phenolic group of
tyrosine, SH-group of cysteine or imindazolle group of histidine to interact
with substrates.
Glycosidase
Zymogens (Proenzymes)
It is inactive form of enzyme
Some enzymes are produced in nature in an inactive form which can be
activated when they are required.
Many digestive enzymes & enzymes concerned with blood coagulation
are in this group
Examples:
Pancreatic proproteases (trypsinogen, chymotrypsinogen,
proelastase and procarboxypeptidase),
Gastric pepsinogen and blood clotting and clot dissolution factors
(enzymes).
Isoenzymes (Isozymes)
These enzymes having similar catalytic activity, act on the same substrate and
produces the same product
They originated at different site and exhibiting different physical & chemical
characteristics such as electrophoretic mobilities, amino acid composition and
immunological behavior.
Example: LDH (Lactate dehydrogenase) exists in five different forms each
having four
polypeptide chains. H= Heart and M=Muscle.
CPK (Creatine phospho kinase) exists in three different forms each having
two polypeptide chains. Characteristic sub units are B=Brain and M= Muscle.
Location of enzymes
• Enzymes are found in all tissues and fluids of the body.
• They act:
Inside the cells (cellular metabolic enzymes)
Outside cells (the digestive enzymes).
Steps in enzyme catalysis
II. “induced-fit Model” :after the substrate binding the shapes of substrate &
the active sites of enzymes are complementary.
lock-and-key Induced-fit
Factors affecting enzyme catalyzed reaction
Substrate concentration
As substrate = reaction rate
Enzyme saturated
substrate concentration
Temperature
pH
Kinetics of Enzyme Catalyzed Reaction
Enzyme kinetics is the quantitative measurement of the rates of enzyme
catalyzed reactions.
At optimal conditions, no inhibitors and a constant enzyme conc., as the
substrate concentration (S) increases, the initial reaction velocity (Vo)
increases gradually towards the maximum velocity (Vmax).
The mathematical equation explaining the relationship between the [S] and Vo
is called michaelis-menten equation
• The dependence of the Vo on [S] and the Km value is provided by studying
shifts in Michaelis-Menten equation in three different conditions:
CI increase the Km b/s they raise the [S] necessary to saturate the enzyme
and they have no effect on Vmax.
NON-COMPETITIVE INHIBITION
The NI does not have structural similarity to the substrate
the inhibitor and substrate bind at different sites on the enzyme
the inhibitor does not compete with a substrate for its binding site.
The presence of a substrate has no influence on the ability of a non-
competitive inhibitor to bind an enzyme and vice versa
reduced Vmax
constant Km
Noncompetitive Inhibitors(NI) Uncompetitive inhibitor