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Molecular Machinery

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Molecular Machinery Molecular basis of cell function Structure vs. Function Molecular mechanisms ENZYME ACTION Na+ K+ pump Cell Signalling ENZYMES Hydrolase ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Molecular Machinery


1
Molecular Machinery
  • Molecular basis of cell function
  • Structure vs. Function
  • Molecular mechanisms
  • ENZYME ACTION
  • Na K pump
  • Cell Signalling

2
ENZYMES
  • Hydrolase hydrolysis
  • Phosphatase REMOVE phosphate gps
  • Protease break down proteins
  • Nuclease break down nucleic acids
  • ATPase hydrolyse ATP
  • Kinase ADD phosphate gps
  • Synthase join molecules
  • Polymerase join molecules (to make
    polymers)
  • Oxidoreductases electron transfer
  • Isomerases isomerise p49-50 text

3
How do Enzymes work?
  • Lock key?

4
Pyruvate Kinase Lock Key
5
Carboxypeptidase
6
glucose ATP à glucose-6-phosphate ADP
7
INDUCED FIT THEORY OF ENZYME ACTION
  • Example Hexokinase

8
Active site
  • 3 dimensional shape on the surface of the enzyme
  • Contains specific amino acids to bind the
    substrate

9
Induced Fit
  • Substrate binding itself changes the shape of the
    protein
  • INDUCED FIT

10
Induced fit
  • The change in the shape of the hexokinase has 2
    functions
  • Changes shape of ATP binding site so it can bind
    ATP
  • This prevents hexokinase acting independently as
    an ATPase
  • Brings the two substrate binding sites closer,
    facilitating transfer of phosphate between the
    two molecules.

11
CONTROL OF ENZYME ACTION
  • Important not to waste valuable cell resources
  • Prokaryotic cells
  • enzyme synthesis is major control mechanism
  • e.g. Jacob Monod Hypothesis of enzyme regulation
    (lac operon)
  • Eukaryotic cells more complex

12
CONTROL OF ENZYME ACTION in EUKARYOTICE CELLS
  • Regulate transcription rate of enzyme gene same
    as Jacob Monod
  • pH e.g. lysosomes pH 5
  • Modify shape of protein itself
  • Inhibitors
  • Allosteric mechanisms
  • Covalent modifications
  • End-product inhibition

13
Max reached because the active sites are full all
the time
14
COMPETITIVE INHIBITORS
  • Inhibitor binds (non covalently) to the active
    site
  • Competes with substrate at active site
  • Rate slows because active site encounters fewer
    substrate molecules per second.
  • Competitive inhibitors have similar structure to
    the substrate
  • Effect can be overcome by adding more substrate
    (increases chance of active site encountering
    substrate - competing out)

15
Clinical application
  • Methanol poisoning
  • Methanol ? formaldehyde (toxic)
  • Enzyme Alcohol dehydrogenase
  • Formaldehyde Blindness Death (liver failure)
  • Enzyme competitively inhibited by ethanol

16
Non Competitive inhibitors
  • Non Competitive Inhibitors (two types)
  • Reversible bind non-covalently, reversibly to the
    enzyme
  • Alter conformation of enzyme
  • Not at the active site, not competed out by
    substrate
  • e.g. inhibition of threonine deaminase by
    isoleucine, an example of end product inhibition
    ( allosteric modulation)

17
Non Competitive Inhibitors
  • Irreversible (could be on active site)
  • Bind covalently, not able to be removed
  • Alter conformation of enzyme
  • Permanently inhibit enzyme
  • e.g. Penicillins inhibit bacterial cell wall
    synthesis by non-competitivitvely binding to the
    enzymes
  • Aspirin irreversibly binds to an enzyme which
    makes inflammatory lipids
  • Organophosphorous inhibitors of
    Acetylchloinesterase

18
ANTABUSE
DISULFIRAM or
19
Allosteric Regulation
  • Allosteric other (allo) steric (space/site)
  • Some enzymes have alternative binding sites to
    which modulators (positive or negative non
    competitive inhibitor bind)
  • They change the proteins shape.
  • Allosteric enzymes often have multiple inhibitor
    or activator binding sites involved in switching
    between active and inactive shapes
  • allows precise and responsive regulation of
    enzyme activity

20
Cooperative substrate binding
  • Allosteric or Regulatory enzymes can have
    multiple subunits (Quaternary Structure) and
    multiple active sites.
  • Allosteric enzymes have active and inactive
    shapes differing in 3D structure.

21
Sigmoid Reaction rate curves
  • Enzymes with cooperative binding show a
    characteristic "S"-shaped curve for reaction rate
    vs.. substrate concentration. Why?
  • Substrate binding is "cooperative."
  • Binding of first substrate at first active site
    stimulates active shape, and promotes binding of
    second substrate.

22
Covalent Modification
  • Phosphorylation
  • Phosphate added by kinases
  • Removed by phosphatases

23
Example Glycogen Phosphorylase
  • Enzyme involved in breakdown of glycogen to
    produce glucose
  • Inactive form not phosphorylated
  • Active form phosphorylated
  • Phosphorylase kinase adds phosphate groups (high
    energy needs)
  • Phosphorylase phosphatase removes phosphate
    groups (low energy needs)
  • Activity of phosphatase and kinase under hormonal
    control

24
Allosteric modulation glycogen phosphorylase
  • Glycogen phosphorylase also has binding sites for
    glucose, ATP AMP
  • Glucose ATP indicate cell has a lot of energy
  • Both negative allosteric modulators
  • Adenosine Monophosphate (AMP formed by ATP
    hydrolysis) indicate cell has little energy
  • Positive allosteric modulator

25
Proteolytic Cleavage
  • Proteolytic cleavage of a ZYMOGEN
  • To produce active enzyme e.g.
  • Trypsinogen ? trypsin
  • Prolipase ? lipase
  • Activation is required, otherwise these enzymes
    would digest the pancreas
  • Pepsinogen ? pepsin
  • This activation occurs through the action of
    pepsin itself
  • Autocatalysis

26
END PRODUCT INHIBITION
  • Metabolic pathways usually involve a number of
    steps from precursor to product. e.g.
  • Synthesis of isoleucine from threonine
  • First step catalysed by threonine deaminase
  • Allosterically inhibited by end product
    isoleucine
  • Allows cell to monitor levels of product and
    control production rate appropriately

27
NON COMPETITIVE INHIBITORS
  • Bind to area of the protein other than the active
    site
  • Alter conformation (shape) of the protein
    changing shape of active site/ making oit more
    difficult for substrate to bind
  • Reversible non-covalently bound, can be diluted
    out
  • Irreversible covalently bound cannot be diluted
    out

28
  • Induced fit Binding of glucose to Hexokinase
    induces a large conformational change (diagram p.
    386). The change in conformation brings the C6
    hydroxyl of glucose close to the terminal
    phosphate of ATP, and excludes water from the
    active site. This prevents the enzyme from
    catalyzing ATP hydrolysis, rather than transfer
    of phosphate to glucose. 
  • It is a common motif for an enzyme active site to
    be located at an interface between protein
    domains that are connected by a flexible hinge
    region. The structural flexibility allows access
    to the active site, while permitting precise
    positioning of active site residues, and in some
    cases exclusion of water, following a
    substrate-induced conformational change.

29
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30
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31
  • This is a molecular model of the unbound
    carboxypeptidase A enzyme. The cpk, or
    space-filled, representation of atoms is used
    here to show the approximate volume and shape of
    the active site. Note the zinc ion (magenta) in
    the pocket of the active site. Three amino acids
    located near the active site (Arg 145, Tyr 248,
    and Glu 270) are labeled.
  • This is a cpk representation of carboxypeptidase
    A with a substrate (turquoise) bound in the
    active site. The active site is in the induced
    conformation. The same three amino acids (Arg
    145, Tyr 248, and Glu 270) are labeled to
    demonstrate the shape change.
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