Regulation of Protein Function Flashcards
What are some short term regulations of enzyme activity?
Substrate and product concentration. Change enzyme conformation such as: * Allosteric regulation * Covalent modification * Proteolytic cleavage
What are some long term regulations of enzyme activity?
Change in rate of protein synthesis
Change in rate of protein degradation
Where can you find hexokinase?
In muscles
Where can you find glucokinase?
In liver
What are isoenzymes?
Different forms of the same enzyme that have different kinetic properties.
What is product inhibition? Give an example.
Accumulation of the product of a reaction inhibits the forward reaction. Glucose-6-phosphate inhibits hexokinase activity.
What is allosteric regulation?
When an allosteric activator or allosteric inhibitor (small ligands) bind to a different site than the active site on an enzyme to either inhibit or promote activity.
How does allosteric regulation manifest in a graph, and why?
It shows as a sigmoid curve (s-shaped) because it uses cooperative binding to promote a R state or a T state. Multi subunit enzymes are also used in allosteric regulation.
How do allosteric activators work?
Bind onto the enzyme (not the active site) and increase the proportion of enzyme in the R state (high affinity). This is due to conformational change.
How do allosteric inhibitors work?
Bind onto the enzyme (not the active site) and increase the proportion of enzyme in the T state (low affinity). This is due to conformational change.
What is phosphofructokinase? What are the activators and inhibitors of it?
Thought to be the key regulator in glycolysis. It is allosterically regulated. Activators: *AMP *Fructose-2,6-biphosphate Inhibitors: *ATP *Citrate *H+
Give an example of covalent modification.
Phosporylation in the case of protein kinases. Trans the terminal phosphate from ATP to the -OH group of Ser, The, and Tyr.
What do protein phosphatases do?
Reverse the effects of kinases by catalysing the hydrolytic removal of phosphoryl groups from proteins.
Why is protein phosphorylation so effective?
It adds 2 negative charges.
A phosphoryl group can make hydrogen bonds
Rate of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation can be adjusted
Links energy status of the cell to metabolism through ATP
Allow for amplification effects
Conformational change due to its bulkiness (size)
What are zymogens? Give an example and explain why they occur.
Inactive precursors of digestive enzymes. They are found in the stomach but mainly in pancreas. They are inactive and needs to undergo proteolytic cleavage in order to be activated. This is because you don’t want them to break down tissue in pancreas.