12 Flashcards
What is the diffusion controlled unit
The upper limit of Kcat/km
- the rate at which enzyme and substrate diffuse together
Absulote upper limit is
10^9s-1M-1
- anexymes about 10^8 are conc diehard to be perfect catalysis
What is an inhibitor?
A compound that binds to an enzyme and reduces its acticity
What are enzyme inhibitions important
- naturals inhibitors regulate metablioicsm
- many drugs, poisons and toxins are enzyme inhibitors
- used to study enzyme mechanisms
- used to study metablotic pathways
Two classes of inhibitor
Irreversible inhibitor
Reversible inhibitor
What is a irreversible in hibiritor ?
Binds covalantly to enzyme
Reveersbale inhibirtr
Not coabvalently bound to the enzyme
Reversible inhibitor can be either:
Competitive - binds at the active site, compères for site
Non competitive - doesn’t block substrate binding
Can be pure or mixed
Features of irreversible inhibitor
- binds to enzyme and permetntly inactivarte a pool of enzyme
- inhibition reacts with a specific amino acid side chain, usually in the active site, and forms a covalent bond
Features of reviewable inhibitor
- binds to enzyme but can also be released leaving enzyme in original conddiotn
competitive inhibitor - mutually exclusives
- inhibitor competes diversely w the substrate for active site
Kinetic parameters of competitive inhibition
- infinite [S] out competes inhibitor
- more substate needed to get V- Vmax/2
Examples of competitive inhibitors
Transistor state analogues e.g Lipitor
Anastrozole (sold arimidex in NZ) - competitive inhibitor of the enzyme aromatise
- treatment for some breast cancers
Non competitive einhibition features
- inhibitor binds at a different site then the substrate
- enzyme can bind to substrate or inhibitor or both
- changes how well enzyme can catalyse actual reaction - no matter much substrate you out in enzyme can bind fine, but enzyme can’t carry out reaction - Vmax reduces
- in pure non-competitive inhibition, the binding of I has no effect on binding of S ie the substrate binds to E and EI with the same affinity
Pure non competitive inhibition
- binding changes the structures of the active site such that S still bonds, but the transition state stabilisation is no longer optimal