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REGULATION OF ENZYME ACTIVITY

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Title: REGULATION OF ENZYME ACTIVITY


1
REGULATION OF ENZYME ACTIVITY
  • Medical Biochemistry, Lecture 25

2
Lecture 25, Outline
  • General properties of enzyme regulation
  • Regulation of enzyme concentrations
  • Allosteric enzymes and feedback inhibition
  • Other effectors of catalytic activity

3
Metabolic Homeostasis
4
General Properties Regulatory Enzymes
  • The biochemical pathways that you will soon be
    studying are composed of groups of coordinated
    enzymes that perform a specific metabolic
    process. In general, these enzyme groups are
    composed of many enzymes, only a few of which are
    regulated by the mechanisms described in this
    lecture. Regulatory enzymes are usually the
    enzymes that are the rate-limiting, or committed
    step, in a pathway, meaning that after this step
    a particular reaction pathway will go to
    completion.

5
General Properties Regulatory Enzymes (cont)
  • Frequently, regulatory enzymes are at or near the
    initial steps in a pathway, or part of a branch
    point or cross-over point between pathways (where
    a metabolite can be potentially converted into
    several products in different pathways). In
    general, a cell needs to conserve energy -
    therefore costly (in metabolic terms)
    biosynthetic reaction pathways will not be
    operational unless a particular metabolite is
    required at a given time.

6
General Properties Regulatory Enzymes (cont)
  • Recall that when acting as catalysts, enzyme
    mediated-reactions should be reversible.
    However, regulatory enzymes frequently catalyze
    thermodynamically irreversible reactions, that
    is, a large negative free energy change (-DG)
    greatly favors formation of a given metabolic
    product rather than the reverse reaction. Thus,
    regulation of enzyme activity, usually at the
    committed step of the pathway, is critical for
    supplying and maintaining cellular metabolitic
    and energy homeostasis.

7
Two General Mechanisms that Affect Enzyme
Activity
  • 1) control of the overall quantities of enzyme or
    concentration of substrates present
  • 2) alteration of the catalytic efficiency of the
    enzyme

8
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9
Regulation of Enzyme Concentrations
  • The overall synthesis and degradation of a
    particular enzyme, also termed its turnover
    number, is one way of regulating the quantity of
    an enzyme. The amount of an enzyme in a cell can
    be increased by increasing its rate of synthesis,
    decreasing the rate of its degradation, or both.

10
Regulation of Enzyme Concentrations Induction
  • Induction (an increase caused by an effector
    molecule) of enzyme synthesis is a common
    mechanism - this can manifest itself at the level
    of gene expression, RNA translation, and
    post-translational modifications. The actions of
    many hormones and/or growth factors on cells will
    ultimately lead to an increase in the expression
    and translation of "new" enzymes not present
    prior to the signal. These generalizations will
    be covered in more detail in Dr. Bannon's
    lectures.

11
Regulation of Enzyme Concentrations Degradation
  • The degradation of proteins is constantly
    occuring in the cell, yet the molecular
    mechanisms that determine when and which enzymes
    will be degraded are poorly understood. The
    turnover number of an enzyme can be used for
    general comparison with other enzymes or other
    enzyme systems, yet these numbers can vary from
    minutes to hours to days for different enzymes.

12
Regulation of Enzyme Concentrations Degradation
(cont)
  • Protein degradation by proteases is
    compartmentalized in the cell in the lysosome
    (which is generally non-specific), or in
    macromolecular complexes termed proteasomes.
    Degradation by proteasomes is regulated by a
    complex pathway involving transfer of a 76 aa
    polypeptide, ubiquitin, to targeted proteins.
    Ubiquination of protein targets it for
    degradation by the proteasome. This pathway is
    highly conserved in eukaryotes, but still poorly
    understood

13
Regulation of Enzyme Concentrations Degradation
(cont)
  • Proteolytic degradation is an irreversible
    mechanism. For examples, rapid proteolytic
    degradation of enzymes that were activated in
    response to some stimulus (for example, in a
    signal transduction response). This type of
    down-regulation allows for a transient response
    to a stimulus instead of a continual response.
    Establishing the links between proteasomes,
    ubiquination and signal transduction pathways is
    currently a very active research area

14
Zymogens Inactive Precursor Proteins
  • A clinically important mechanism of controlling
    enzyme activity is the case of protease enzymes
    involved (predominantly) in food digestion and
    blood clotting. Protease enzymes (enzymes that
    degrade proteins) like pepsin, trypsin and
    chymotrypsin are synthesized first as larger,
    inactive precursor proteins termed zymogens
    (specifically pepsinogen, trypsinogen, and
    chymotrypsinogen, respectively).

15
Zymogen Protease Examples
Chymotrypsinogen cleavage sites to yield active
chymotrypsin
16
Zymogens (cont)
  • Activation of zymogens by proteolytic cleavage
    result in irreversible activation. Zymogen forms
    allow proteins to be transported or stored in
    inactive forms that can be readily converted to
    active forms in response to some type of cellular
    signal. Thus they represent a mechanism whereby
    the levels of an enzyme/protein can be rapidly
    increased (post-translationally). Other examples
    of zymogens include proinsulin, procollagen and
    many blood clotting enzymes (the latter will be
    discussed in the next lecture).

17
Enzyme/Substrate Compartmentation
  • Segregation of metabolic processes into distinct
    subcellular locations like the cytosol or
    specialized organelles (nucleus, endoplasmic
    reticulum, Golgi apparatus, lysosomes,
    mitochondria, etc.) is another form of
    regulation. Enzymes associated with a given
    pathway frequently form organized,
    multi-component macromolecular complexes that
    perform a particular cellular process.
    Similarly, it follows that the substrates
    associated with a given pathway can also be
    localized to the same organelle or cytosolic
    location. This segregation allows for more
    specialized regulation of cellular processes.

18
Enzyme Regulation by Compartmentation
19
Allosteric Enzymes
  • Allosteric enzymes - from the Greek allos for
    "other" and stereos for "shape" (or site) meaning
    "other site". These enzymes function through
    reversible, non-covalent binding of a regulatory
    metabolite at a site other than the catalytic,
    active site. When bound, these metabolites do
    not participate in catalysis directly, but lead
    to conformational changes in one part of an
    enzyme that then affect the overall conformation
    of the active site (causing an increase or
    decrease in activity, hence these metabolites are
    termed allosteric activators or allosteric
    inhibitors).

20
Allosteric Example
  • Feedback Inhibition - This occurs when an
    end-product of a pathway accumulates as the
    metabolic demand for it declines. This
    end-product in turn binds to the regulatory
    enzyme at the start of the pathway and decreases
    its activity - the greater the end-product levels
    the greater the inhibition of enzyme activity.
    This can either effect the Km or Vmax of the
    enzyme reaction.

21
Metabolic Pathway Product/ Feedback Inhibition
22
Allosteric Enzymes - Properties
  • Allosteric enzymes differ from other enzymes in
    that they are generally larger in mass and are
    composed of multiple subunits containing active
    sites and regulatory molecule binding sites. The
    same principles that govern binding of a
    substrate to an active site are similar for an
    allosteric regulator molecule binding to its
    regulatory site.

23
Kinetics of Allosteric Enzymes - Terms
  • Cooperativity - in relation to multiple subunit
    enzymes, changes in the conformation of one
    subunit leads to conformational changes in
    adjacent subunits. These changes occur at the
    tertiary and quaternary levels of protein
    organization and can be caused by an allosteric
    regulator.
  • Homotropic regulation - when binding of one
    molecule to a multi-subunit enzyme causes a
    conformational shift that affects the binding of
    the same molecule to another subunit of the
    enzyme.
  • Heterotropic regulation - when binding of one
    molecule to a multi-subunit enzyme affects the
    binding of a different molecule to this enzyme
    (Note These terms are similar to those used for
    oxygen binding to hemoglobin)

24
Allosteric Enzymes - Kinetics
  • Allosteric enzymes do exhibit saturation kinetics
    at high S, but they have a characteristic
    sigmoidal saturation curve rather than hyperbolic
    curve when vo is plotted versus S (analogous to
    the oxygen saturation curves of myoglobin vs.
    hemoglobin). Addition of an allosteric activator
    () tends to shift the curve to a more hyperbolic
    profile (more like Michaelis-Menten curves),
    while an allosteric inhibitor (-) will result in
    more pronounced sigmoidal curves. The
    sigmoidicity is thought to result from the
    cooperativity of structural changes between
    enzyme subunits (again similar to oxygen binding
    to hemoglobin). NOTE A true Km cannot be
    determined for allosteric enzymes, so a
    comparative constant like S0.5 or K0.5 is used.

25
Vo vs S for Allosteric Enzymes
26
Models of Allosteric Proteins
27
Regulation by Modulator Proteins - Calmodulin
Calmodulin is a small protein (17 kDa) that can
bind up to four calcium ions (blue dots) in the
two globular domains. When calciumis bound,
calmodulin acts as a protein co-factor to
stimulate the activity of target regulatory
kinases like phosphorylase kinase, myosin
kinase, Ca-ATPase and a Ca/calmodulin-dependent pr
otein kinase. It is the structural conformation
of Ca-calmodulin that makes it an active co-factor
28
Regulation of Enzyme Activity by Covalent
Modifications
  • Another common regulatory mechanism is the
    reversible covalent modification of an enzyme.
    Phosphorylation, whereby a phosphate is
    transferred from an activated donor (usually ATP)
    to an amino acid on the regulatory enyme, is the
    most common example of this type of regulation.
    Frequently this phosphorylation occurs in
    response to some stimulus (like a hormone or
    growth factor) that will either activate or
    inactivate target enzymes via changes in Km or
    kcat.

29
Phosphorylation/Signal Transduction
  • Phosphorylation of one enzyme can lead to
    phosphorylation of a different enzyme which in
    turn acts on another enzyme, and so on. An
    example of this type of phosphorylation cascade
    is the response of a cell to cyclic AMP and its
    effect on glycogen metabolism. Use of a
    phosphorylation cascade allows a cell to respond
    to a signal at the cell surface and transmit the
    effects of that signal to intracellular enzymes
    (usually within the cytosol and nucleus) that
    modify a cellular process. This process is
    generically referred to as being part of a signal
    transduction mechanism

30
Signaling Regulation of Glycogen Synthase and
Phosphorylase
A-forms, most active B-forms, less active
31
Other covalent modificiations
  • Prenylation, Myristoylation, Palmitoylation The
    covalent addition of hydrophobic, acyl fatty acid
    or isoprenoid groups to soluble proteins/enzymes
    can alter their intracellular location. This type
    of hydrophobic acylation generally causes target
    proteins to associate with a membrane rather than
    the cytosol. Thus, it represents a mechanistic
    and functional re-compartmentalization of the
    target protein/enzyme (an example of a prenylated
    protein is the Ras oncogene discussed in lecture
    11)

32
Allosteric and Phosphorylation Regulation -
Glycogen Phosphorylase
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