Dictionary Definition
enzymology n : the branch of biochemistry dealing
with the chemical nature and biological activity of enzymes
User Contributed Dictionary
Extensive Definition
Enzymes are biomolecules that catalyze (i.e. increase the
rates of) chemical
reactions. Almost all enzymes are proteins. In enzymatic
reactions, the molecules at the beginning of
the process are called substrates,
and the enzyme converts them into different molecules, the
products. Almost all processes in a biological
cell need enzymes in order to occur at significant rates. Since
enzymes are extremely selective for their substrates and speed up
only a few reactions from among many possibilities, the set of
enzymes made in a cell determines which metabolic
pathways occur in that cell.
Like all catalysts, enzymes work by lowering the
activation
energy (Ea or ΔG‡) for a reaction, thus dramatically increasing
the rate of the reaction. Most enzyme reaction rates are millions
of times faster than those of comparable uncatalyzed reactions. As
with all catalysts, enzymes are not consumed by the reactions they
catalyze, nor do they alter the equilibrium
of these reactions. However, enzymes do differ from most other
catalysts by being much more specific. Enzymes are known to
catalyze about 4,000 biochemical reactions. A few RNA molecules called
ribozymes catalyze
reactions, with an important example being some parts of the
ribosome. Synthetic
molecules called artificial
enzymes also display enzyme-like catalysis.
Enzyme activity can be affected by other
molecules. Inhibitors
are molecules that decrease enzyme activity; activators
are molecules that increase activity. Many drugs and poisons are enzyme inhibitors.
Activity is also affected by temperature, chemical
environment (e.g. pH), and the concentration of
substrate. Some enzymes are used commercially, for example, in the
synthesis of antibiotics. In addition,
some household products use enzymes to speed up biochemical
reactions (e.g., enzymes in biological washing
powders break down protein or fat stains on clothes; enzymes in
meat
tenderizers break down proteins, making the meat easier to
chew).
Etymology and history
As early as the late 1700s and early 1800s, the
digestion of meat by
stomach secretions and the conversion of starch to sugars by plant extracts and
saliva were known.
However, the mechanism by which this occurred had not been
identified.
In the 19th century, when studying the fermentation
of sugar to alcohol by
yeast, Louis
Pasteur came to the conclusion that this fermentation was
catalyzed by a vital force contained within the yeast cells called
"ferments", which
were thought to function only within living organisms. He wrote
that "alcoholic fermentation is an act correlated with the life and
organization of the yeast cells, not with the death or putrefaction
of the cells."
In 1878 German physiologist Wilhelm
Kühne (1837–1900) first used the term enzyme,
which comes from Greek
ενζυμον "in leaven", to describe this process. The word enzyme was
used later to refer to nonliving substances such as pepsin, and the word ferment used
to refer to chemical activity produced by living organisms.
In 1897 Eduard
Buchner began to study the ability of yeast extracts that
lacked any living yeast cells to ferment sugar. In a series of
experiments at the
University of Berlin, he found that the sugar was fermented
even when there were no living yeast cells in the mixture. He named
the enzyme that brought about the fermentation of sucrose "zymase". In 1907 he received the
Nobel
Prize in Chemistry "for his biochemical research and his
discovery of cell-free fermentation". Following Buchner's example;
enzymes are usually named according to the reaction they carry out.
Typically the suffix -ase is added to the name of the substrate
(e.g., lactase is the
enzyme that cleaves lactose) or the type of reaction
(e.g., DNA
polymerase forms DNA polymers).
Having shown that enzymes could function outside
a living cell, the next step was to determine their biochemical
nature. Many early workers noted that enzymatic activity was
associated with proteins, but several scientists (such as Nobel
laureate Richard
Willstätter) argued that proteins were merely carriers for the
true enzymes and that proteins per se were incapable of catalysis.
However, in 1926, James B.
Sumner showed that the enzyme urease was a pure protein and
crystallized it; Sumner did likewise for the enzyme catalase in 1937. The
conclusion that pure proteins can be enzymes was definitively
proved by Northrop
and Stanley,
who worked on the digestive enzymes pepsin (1930), trypsin and
chymotrypsin. These three scientists were awarded the 1946 Nobel
Prize in Chemistry.
This discovery that enzymes could be crystallized
eventually allowed their structures to be solved by x-ray
crystallography. This was first done for lysozyme, an enzyme found in
tears, saliva and egg whites that
digests the coating of some bacteria; the structure was solved by a
group led by David
Chilton Phillips and published in 1965. This high-resolution
structure of lysozyme marked the beginning of the field of structural
biology and the effort to understand how enzymes work at an
atomic level of detail.
Structures and mechanisms
see also Enzyme catalysisEnzymes are generally globular proteins and range
from just 62 amino acid residues in size, for the monomer of 4-oxalocrotonate
tautomerase, to over 2,500 residues in the animal fatty
acid synthase. A small number of RNA-based biological catalysts
exist, with the most common being the ribosome, these are either
referred to as RNA-enzymes, or ribozymes. The activities of
enzymes are determined by their three-dimensional
structure. Most enzymes are much larger than the substrates
they act on, and only a small portion of the enzyme (around 3–4
amino
acids) is directly involved in catalysis. The region that
contains these catalytic residues, binds the substrate, and then
carries out the reaction is known as the active site.
Enzymes can also contain sites that bind cofactors,
which are needed for catalysis. Some enzymes also have binding
sites for small molecules, which are often direct or indirect
products or substrates of the reaction catalyzed. This binding can
serve to increase or decrease the enzyme's activity, providing a
means for feedback
regulation.
Like all proteins, enzymes are made as long,
linear chains of amino acids that fold to
produce a three-dimensional
product. Each unique amino acid sequence produces a specific
structure, which has unique properties. Individual protein chains
may sometimes group together to form a protein
complex. Most enzymes can be denatured—that
is, unfolded and inactivated—by heating or chemical denaturants,
which disrupt the three-dimensional
structure of the protein. Depending on the enzyme, denaturation
may be reversible or irreversible.
Specificity
Enzymes are usually very specific as to which reactions they catalyze and the substrates that are involved in these reactions. Complementary shape, charge and hydrophilic/hydrophobic characteristics of enzymes and substrates are responsible for this specificity. Enzymes can also show impressive levels of stereospecificity, regioselectivity and chemoselectivity.Some of the enzymes showing the highest
specificity and accuracy are involved in the copying and expression
of the genome. These
enzymes have "proof-reading" mechanisms. Here, an enzyme such as
DNA
polymerase catalyzes a reaction in a first step and then checks
that the product is correct in a second step. This two-step process
results in average error rates of less than 1 error in 100 million
reactions in high-fidelity mammalian polymerases. Similar
proofreading mechanisms are also found in RNA
polymerase, aminoacyl
tRNA synthetases and ribosomes.
Some enzymes that produce secondary
metabolites are described as promiscuous, as they can act on a
relatively broad range of different substrates. It has been
suggested that this broad substrate specificity is important for
the evolution of new biosynthetic pathways.
"Lock and key" model
Enzymes are very specific, and it was suggested by Emil Fischer in 1894 that this was because both the enzyme and the substrate possess specific complementary geometric shapes that fit exactly into one another. This is often referred to as "the lock and key" model. However, while this model explains enzyme specificity, it fails to explain the stabilization of the transition state that enzymes achieve. The "lock and key" model has proven inaccurate and the induced fit model is the most currently accepted enzyme-substrate-coenzyme figure.Induced fit model
In 1958 Daniel Koshland suggested a modification to the lock and key model: since enzymes are rather flexible structures, the active site is continually reshaped by interactions with the substrate as the substrate interacts with the enzyme. As a result, the substrate does not simply bind to a rigid active site, the amino acid side chains which make up the active site are moulded into the precise positions that enable the enzyme to perform its catalytic function. In some cases, such as glycosidases, the substrate molecule also changes shape slightly as it enters the active site. The active site continues to change until the substrate is completely bound, at which point the final shape and charge is determined.Mechanisms
Enzymes can act in several ways, all of which lower ΔG‡:- Lowering the activation energy by creating an environment in which the transition state is stabilized (e.g. straining the shape of a substrate - by binding the transition-state conformation of the substrate/product molecules, the enzyme distorts the bound substrate(s) into their transition state form, thereby reducing the amount of energy required to complete the transition).
- Lowering the energy of the transition state, but without distorting the substrate, by creating an environment with the opposite charge distribution to that of the transition state.
- Providing an alternative pathway. For example, temporarily reacting with the substrate to form an intermediate ES complex, which would be impossible in the absence of the enzyme.
- Reducing the reaction entropy change by bringing substrates together in the correct orientation to react. Considering ΔH‡ alone overlooks this effect.
Interestingly, this entropic effect involves
destabilization of the ground state, and its contribution to
catalysis is relatively small.
Transition State Stabilization
The understanding of the origin of the reduction of ΔG‡ requires one to find out how the enzymes can stabilize its transition state more than the transition state of the uncatalyzed reaction. Apparently, the most effective way for reaching large stabilization is the use of electrostatic effects, in particular, by having a relatively fixed polar environment that is oriented toward the charge distribution of the transition state. Such an environment does not exist in the uncatalyzed reaction in water.Dynamics and function
Recent investigations have provided new insights into the connection between internal dynamics of enzymes and their mechanism of catalysis. An enzyme's internal dynamics are the movement of its internal parts (e.g. amino acids, a group of amino acids, a loop region, an alpha helix, neighboring beta-sheets or even an entire domain) of these proteins. These movements occur at various time-scales ranging from femtoseconds to seconds. Networks of protein residues throughout an enzyme's structure can contribute to catalysis through dynamic motions. Protein motions are vital to many enzymes, but whether small and fast vibrations, or larger and slower conformational movements are more important depends on the type of reaction involved. However, although these movements are important in binding and releasing substrates and products, it is not clear if protein movements help to accelerate the chemical steps in enzymatic reactions. These new insights also have implications in understanding allosteric effects and developing new drugs.Allosteric modulation
Allosteric enzymes change their structure in response to binding of effectors. Modulation can be direct, where the effector binds directly to binding sites in the enzyme, or indirect, where the effector binds to other proteins or protein subunits that interact with the allosteric enzyme and thus influence catalytic activity.Cofactors and coenzymes
Cofactors
Some enzymes do not need any additional components to show full activity. However, others require non-protein molecules called cofactors to be bound for activity. Cofactors can be either inorganic (e.g., metal ions and iron-sulfur clusters) or organic compounds, (e.g., flavin and heme). Organic cofactors can be either prosthetic groups, which are tightly bound to an enzyme, or coenzymes, which are released from the enzyme's active site during the reaction. Coenzymes include NADH, NADPH and adenosine triphosphate. These molecules act to transfer chemical groups between enzymes.An example of an enzyme that contains a cofactor
is carbonic
anhydrase, and is shown in the ribbon diagram above with a zinc
cofactor bound as part of its active site. These tightly-bound
molecules are usually found in the active site and are involved in
catalysis. For example, flavin and heme cofactors are often
involved in redox
reactions.
Enzymes that require a cofactor but do not have
one bound are called apoenzymes or apoproteins. An apoenzyme
together with its cofactor(s) is called a holoenzyme (this is the
active form). Most cofactors are not covalently attached to an
enzyme, but are very tightly bound. However, organic prosthetic
groups can be covalently bound (e.g., thiamine
pyrophosphate in the enzyme pyruvate
dehydrogenase).
Coenzymes
Coenzymes are small organic molecules that transport chemical groups from one enzyme to another. Some of these chemicals such as riboflavin, thiamine and folic acid are vitamins, this is when these compounds cannot be made in the body and must be acquired from the diet. The chemical groups carried include the hydride ion (H-) carried by NAD or NADP+, the acetyl group carried by coenzyme A, formyl, methenyl or methyl groups carried by folic acid and the methyl group carried by S-adenosylmethionine.Since coenzymes are chemically changed as a
consequence of enzyme action, it is useful to consider coenzymes to
be a special class of substrates, or second substrates, which are
common to many different enzymes. For example, about 700 enzymes
are known to use the coenzyme NADH.
Coenzymes are usually regenerated and their
concentrations maintained at a steady level inside the cell: for
example, NADPH is regenerated through the pentose
phosphate pathway and S-adenosylmethionine by methionine
adenosyltransferase.
Thermodynamics
As all catalysts, enzymes do not alter the position of the chemical equilibrium of the reaction. Usually, in the presence of an enzyme, the reaction runs in the same direction as it would without the enzyme, just more quickly. However, in the absence of the enzyme, other possible uncatalyzed, "spontaneous" reactions might lead to different products, because in those conditions this different product is formed faster.Furthermore, enzymes can couple two or more
reactions, so that a thermodynamically favorable reaction can be
used to "drive" a thermodynamically unfavorable one. For example,
the hydrolysis of ATP
is often used to drive other chemical reactions.
Enzymes catalyze the forward and backward
reactions equally. They do not alter the equilibrium itself, but
only the speed at which it is reached. For example, carbonic
anhydrase catalyzes its reaction in either direction depending
on the concentration of its reactants.
Nevertheless, if the equilibrium is greatly
displaced in one direction, that is, in a very exergonic reaction, the
reaction is effectively irreversible. Under these conditions the
enzyme will, in fact, only catalyze the reaction in the
thermodynamically allowed direction.
Kinetics
Enzyme kinetics is the investigation of how enzymes bind substrates and turn them into products. The rate data used in kinetic analyses are obtained from enzyme assays.In 1902 Victor Henri
proposed a quantitative theory of enzyme kinetics, but his
experimental data were not useful because the significance of the
hydrogen ion concentration was not yet appreciated. After
Peter Lauritz Sørensen had defined the logarithmic pH-scale and
introduced the concept of buffering in 1909 the German chemist
Leonor
Michaelis and his Canadian postdoc Maud
Leonora Menten repeated Henri's experiments and confirmed his
equation which is referred to as
Henri-Michaelis-Menten kinetics (sometimes also Michaelis-Menten
kinetics). Their work was further developed by G. E.
Briggs and J. B. S.
Haldane, who derived kinetic equations that are still widely
used today.
The major contribution of Henri was to think of
enzyme reactions in two stages. In the first, the substrate binds
reversibly to the enzyme, forming the enzyme-substrate complex.
This is sometimes called the Michaelis complex. The enzyme then
catalyzes the chemical step in the reaction and releases the
product.
Enzymes can catalyze up to several million
reactions per second. For example, the reaction catalyzed by
orotidine 5'-phosphate decarboxylase will consume half of its
substrate in 78 million years if no enzyme is present. However,
when the decarboxylase is added, the same process takes just 25
milliseconds. Enzyme rates depend on solution conditions and
substrate concentration. Conditions that denature the protein
abolish enzyme activity, such as high temperatures, extremes of pH
or high salt concentrations, while raising substrate concentration
tends to increase activity. To find the maximum speed of an
enzymatic reaction, the substrate concentration is increased until
a constant rate of product formation is seen. This is shown in the
saturation curve on the right. Saturation happens because, as
substrate concentration increases, more and more of the free enzyme
is converted into the substrate-bound ES form. At the maximum
velocity (Vmax) of the enzyme, all the enzyme active sites are
bound to substrate, and the amount of ES complex is the same as the
total amount of enzyme. However, Vmax is only one kinetic constant
of enzymes. The amount of substrate needed to achieve a given rate
of reaction is also important. This is given by the Michaelis-Menten
constant (Km), which is the substrate concentration required
for an enzyme to reach one-half its maximum velocity. Each enzyme
has a characteristic Km for a given substrate, and this can show
how tight the binding of the substrate is to the enzyme. Another
useful constant is kcat, which is the number of substrate molecules
handled by one active site per second.
The efficiency of an enzyme can be expressed in
terms of kcat/Km. This is also called the specificity constant and
incorporates the rate
constants for all steps in the reaction. Because the
specificity constant reflects both affinity and catalytic ability,
it is useful for comparing different enzymes against each other, or
the same enzyme with different substrates. The theoretical maximum
for the specificity constant is called the diffusion limit and is
about 108 to 109 (M-1 s-1). At this point every collision of the
enzyme with its substrate will result in catalysis, and the rate of
product formation is not limited by the reaction rate but by the
diffusion rate. Enzymes with this property are called
catalytically perfect or kinetically perfect. Example of such
enzymes are triose-phosphate
isomerase, carbonic
anhydrase, acetylcholinesterase,
catalase, fumarase,
β-lactamase, and superoxide
dismutase.
Michaelis-Menten kinetics relies on the law of
mass action, which is derived from the assumptions of free
diffusion and
thermodynamically-driven random collision. However, many
biochemical or cellular processes deviate significantly from these
conditions, because of very high concentrations, phase-separation
of the enzyme/substrate/product, or one or two-dimensional
molecular movement. In these situations, a fractal Michaelis-Menten
kinetics may be applied.
Some enzymes operate with kinetics which are
faster than diffusion rates, which would seem to be impossible.
Several mechanisms have been invoked to explain this phenomenon.
Some proteins are believed to accelerate catalysis by drawing their
substrate in and pre-orienting them by using dipolar electric
fields. Other models invoke a quantum-mechanical tunneling
explanation, whereby a proton or an electron can tunnel through
activation barriers, although for proton tunneling this model
remains somewhat controversial. Quantum tunneling for protons has
been observed in tryptamine. This suggests
that enzyme catalysis may be more accurately characterized as
"through the barrier" rather than the traditional model, which
requires substrates to go "over" a lowered energy barrier.
Inhibition
Enzyme reaction rates can be decreased by various
types of enzyme
inhibitors.
In competitive inhibition, the inhibitor and
substrate compete for the enzyme (i.e., they can not bind at the
same time). Often competitive inhibitors strongly resemble the real
substrate of the enzyme. For example, methotrexate is a
competitive inhibitor of the enzyme dihydrofolate
reductase, which catalyzes the reduction of dihydrofolate
to tetrahydrofolate.
The similarity between the structures of folic acid and this drug
are shown in the figure to the right bottom. Note that binding of
the inhibitor need not be to the substrate binding site (as
frequently stated), if binding of the inhibitor changes the
conformation of the enzyme to prevent substrate binding and vice
versa. In competitive inhibition the maximal velocity of the
reaction is not changed, but higher substrate concentrations are
required to reach a given velocity, increasing the apparent
Km.
In uncompetitive inhibition the inhibitor can not
bind to the free enzyme, but only to the ES-complex. The
EIS-complex thus formed is enzymatically inactive. This type of
inhibition is rare, but may occur in multimeric enzymes.
Non-competitive inhibitors can bind to the enzyme
at the same time as the substrate, i.e. they never bind to the
active site. Both the EI and EIS complexes are enzymatically
inactive. Because the inhibitor can not be driven from the enzyme
by higher substrate concentration (in contrast to competitive
inhibition), the apparent Vmax changes. But because the substrate
can still bind to the enzyme, the Km stays the same.
This type of inhibition resembles the
non-competitive, except that the EIS-complex has residual enzymatic
activity.
In many organisms inhibitors may act as part of a
feedback mechanism. If
an enzyme produces too much of one substance in the organism, that
substance may act as an inhibitor for the enzyme at the beginning
of the pathway that produces it, causing production of the
substance to slow down or stop when there is sufficient amount.
This is a form of negative
feedback. Enzymes which are subject to this form of regulation
are often multimeric and have allosteric binding sites for
regulatory substances. Their substrate/velocity plots are not
hyperbolar, but sigmoidal (S-shaped).
Irreversible inhibitors react with the enzyme and form a
covalent
adduct with the protein. The inactivation is irreversible. These
compounds include eflornithine a drug used to
treat the parasitic disease sleeping
sickness. Penicillin and
Aspirin
also act in this manner. With these drugs, the compound is bound in
the active site and the enzyme then converts the inhibitor into an
activated form that reacts irreversibly with one or more amino acid
residues.
Uses of inactivators
Inhibitors are often used as drugs, but they can also act as poisons. However, the difference between a drug and a poison is usually only a matter of amount, since most drugs are toxic at some level, as Paracelsus wrote, "In all things there is a poison, and there is nothing without a poison." Equally, antibiotics and other anti-infective drugs are just specific poisons that kill a pathogen but not its host.An example of an inactivator being used as a drug
is aspirin, which
inhibits the COX-1 and
COX-2
enzymes that produce the inflammation messenger
prostaglandin,
thus suppressing pain and inflammation. The poison cyanide is an irreversible
enzyme inactivator that combines with the copper and iron in the
active site of the enzyme cytochrome
c oxidase and blocks cellular
respiration.
Biological function
Enzymes serve a wide variety of functions inside living organisms. They are indispensable for signal transduction and cell regulation, often via kinases and phosphatases. They also generate movement, with myosin hydrolysing ATP to generate muscle contraction and also moving cargo around the cell as part of the cytoskeleton. Other ATPases in the cell membrane are ion pumps involved in active transport. Enzymes are also involved in more exotic functions, such as luciferase generating light in fireflies. Viruses can also contain enzymes for infecting cells, such as the HIV integrase and reverse transcriptase, or for viral release from cells, like the influenza virus neuraminidase.An important function of enzymes is in the
digestive
systems of animals. Enzymes such as amylases and proteases break down large
molecules (starch or
proteins, respectively)
into smaller ones, so they can be absorbed by the intestines.
Starch molecules, for example, are too large to be absorbed from
the intestine, but enzymes hydrolyse the starch chains into smaller
molecules such as maltose and eventually glucose, which can then be
absorbed. Different enzymes digest different food substances. In
ruminants which have a
herbivorous diets,
microorganisms in the gut produce another enzyme, cellulase to break down the
cellulose cell walls of plant fiber.
Several enzymes can work together in a specific
order, creating metabolic
pathways. In a metabolic pathway, one enzyme takes the product
of another enzyme as a substrate. After the catalytic reaction, the
product is then passed on to another enzyme. Sometimes more than
one enzyme can catalyze the same reaction in parallel, this can
allow more complex regulation: with for example a low constant
activity being provided by one enzyme but an inducible high
activity from a second enzyme.
Enzymes determine what steps occur in these
pathways. Without enzymes, metabolism would neither progress
through the same steps, nor be fast enough to serve the needs of
the cell. Indeed, a metabolic pathway such as glycolysis could not exist
independently of enzymes. Glucose, for example, can react directly
with ATP to become phosphorylated at one or
more of its carbons. In the absence of enzymes, this occurs so
slowly as to be insignificant. However, if hexokinase is added, these
slow reactions continue to take place except that phosphorylation
at carbon 6 occurs so rapidly that if the mixture is tested a short
time later, glucose-6-phosphate
is found to be the only significant product. Consequently, the
network of metabolic pathways within each cell depends on the set
of functional enzymes that are present.
Control of activity
There are five main ways that enzyme activity is controlled in the cell.- Enzyme production (transcription and translation of enzyme genes) can be enhanced or diminished by a cell in response to changes in the cell's environment. This form of gene regulation is called enzyme induction and inhibition. For example, bacteria may become resistant to antibiotics such as penicillin because enzymes called beta-lactamases are induced that hydrolyse the crucial beta-lactam ring within the penicillin molecule. Another example are enzymes in the liver called cytochrome P450 oxidases, which are important in drug metabolism. Induction or inhibition of these enzymes can cause drug interactions.
- Enzymes can be compartmentalized, with different metabolic pathways occurring in different cellular compartments. For example, fatty acids are synthesized by one set of enzymes in the cytosol, endoplasmic reticulum and the Golgi apparatus and used by a different set of enzymes as a source of energy in the mitochondrion, through β-oxidation.
- Enzymes can be regulated by inhibitors and activators. For example, the end product(s) of a metabolic pathway are often inhibitors for one of the first enzymes of the pathway (usually the first irreversible step, called committed step), thus regulating the amount of end product made by the pathways. Such a regulatory mechanism is called a negative feedback mechanism, because the amount of the end product produced is regulated by its own concentration. Negative feedback mechanism can effectively adjust the rate of synthesis of intermediate metabolites according to the demands of the cells. This helps allocate materials and energy economically, and prevents the manufacture of excess end products. Like other homeostatic devices, the control of enzymatic action helps to maintain a stable internal environment in living organisms.
- Enzymes can be regulated through post-translational modification. This can include phosphorylation, myristoylation and glycosylation. For example, in the response to insulin, the phosphorylation of multiple enzymes, including glycogen synthase, helps control the synthesis or degradation of glycogen and allows the cell to respond to changes in blood sugar. Another example of post-translational modification is the cleavage of the polypeptide chain. Chymotrypsin, a digestive protease, is produced in inactive form as chymotrypsinogen in the pancreas and transported in this form to the stomach where it is activated. This stops the enzyme from digesting the pancreas or other tissues before it enters the gut. This type of inactive precursor to an enzyme is known as a zymogen.
- Some enzymes may become activated when localized to a different environment (eg. from a reducing (cytoplasm) to an oxidising (periplasm) environment, high pH to low pH etc). For example, hemagglutinin in the influenza virus is activated by a conformational change caused by the acidic conditions, these occur when it is taken up inside its host cell and enters the lysosome.
Involvement in disease
Since the tight control of enzyme activity is essential for homeostasis, any malfunction (mutation, overproduction, underproduction or deletion) of a single critical enzyme can lead to a genetic disease. The importance of enzymes is shown by the fact that a lethal illness can be caused by the malfunction of just one type of enzyme out of the thousands of types present in our bodies.One example is the most common type of phenylketonuria. A
mutation of a single amino acid in the enzyme phenylalanine
hydroxylase, which catalyzes the first step in the degradation
of phenylalanine,
results in build-up of phenylalanine and related products. This can
lead to mental
retardation if the disease is untreated.
Another example is when germline
mutations in genes coding for DNA repair
enzymes cause hereditary cancer syndromes such as xeroderma
pigmentosum. Defects in these enzymes cause cancer since the
body is less able to repair mutations in the genome. This causes a
slow accumulation of mutations and results in the development of
many types of cancer in the sufferer.
Naming conventions
An enzyme's name is often derived from its substrate or the chemical reaction it catalyzes, with the word ending in -ase. Examples are lactase, alcohol dehydrogenase and DNA polymerase. This may result in different enzymes, called isoenzymes, with the same function having the same basic name. Isoenzymes have a different amino acid sequence and might be distinguished by their optimal pH, kinetic properties or immunologically. Furthermore, the normal physiological reaction an enzyme catalyzes may not be the same as under artificial conditions. This can result in the same enzyme being identified with two different names. E.g. Glucose isomerase, used industrially to convert glucose into the sweetener fructose, is a xylose isomerase in vivo.The
International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology have
developed a nomenclature
for enzymes, the EC numbers;
each enzyme is described by a sequence of four numbers preceded by
"EC". The first number broadly classifies the enzyme based on its
mechanism:
The top-level classification is
- EC 1 Oxidoreductases: catalyze oxidation/reduction reactions
- EC 2 Transferases: transfer a functional group (e.g. a methyl or phosphate group)
- EC 3 Hydrolases: catalyze the hydrolysis of various bonds
- EC 4 Lyases: cleave various bonds by means other than hydrolysis and oxidation
- EC 5 Isomerases: catalyze isomerization changes within a single molecule
- EC 6 Ligases: join two molecules with covalent bonds
The complete nomenclature can be browsed at
http://www.chem.qmul.ac.uk/iubmb/enzyme/.
Industrial applications
Enzymes are used in the chemical industry and other industrial applications when extremely specific catalysts are required. However, enzymes in general are limited in the number of reactions they have evolved to catalyze and also by their lack of stability in organic solvents and at high temperatures. Consequently, protein engineering is an active area of research and involves attempts to create new enzymes with novel properties, either through rational design or in vitro evolution.See also
References
Further reading
Etymology and history- New Beer in an Old Bottle: Eduard Buchner and the Growth of Biochemical Knowledge, edited by Athel Cornish-Bowden and published by Universitat de València (1997): ISBN 84-370-3328-4, A history of early enzymology.
- Williams, Henry Smith, 1863–1943. A History of Science: in Five Volumes. Volume IV: Modern Development of the Chemical and Biological Sciences, A textbook from the 19th century.
- Kleyn, J. and Hough J. The Microbiology of Brewing. Annual Review of Microbiology (1971) Vol. 25: 583–608
Enzyme structure and mechanism
- Fersht, A. Structure and Mechanism in Protein Science: A Guide to Enzyme Catalysis and Protein Folding. W. H. Freeman, 1998 ISBN 0-7167-3268-8
- Walsh, C., Enzymatic Reaction Mechanisms. W. H. Freeman and Company. 1979. ISBN 0-7167-0070-0
- Page, M. I., and Williams, A. (Eds.), 1987. Enzyme Mechanisms. Royal Society of Chemistry. ISBN 0-85186-947-5
- Bugg, T. Introduction to Enzyme and Coenzyme Chemistry, 2004, Blackwell Publishing Limited; 2nd edition. ISBN 1-40511-452-5
- Warshel, A., Computer Modeling of Chemical Reactions in enzymes and Solutions John Wiley & Sons Inc. 1991. ISBN 0-471-18440-3
Thermodynamics
- Reactions and Enzymes Chapter 10 of On-Line Biology Book at Estrella Mountain Community College.
Kinetics and inhibition
- Athel Cornish-Bowden, Fundamentals of Enzyme Kinetics. (3rd edition), Portland Press (2004), ISBN 1-85578-158-1.
- Irwin H. Segel, Enzyme Kinetics: Behavior and Analysis of Rapid Equilibrium and Steady-State Enzyme Systems. Wiley-Interscience; New Ed edition (1993), ISBN 0-471-30309-7.
- John W. Baynes, Medical Biochemistry, Elsevier-Mosby; 2th Edition (2005), ISBN 0-7234-3341-0, p. 57.
Function and control of enzymes in the cell
- Price, N. and Stevens, L., Fundamentals of Enzymology: Cell and Molecular Biology of Catalytic Proteins Oxford University Press, (1999), ISBN 0-19-850229-X
- Nutritional and Metabolic Diseases Chapter of the on-line textbook "Introduction to Genes and Disease" from the NCBI.
Enzyme-naming conventions
- Enzyme Nomenclature, Recommendations for enzyme names from the Nomenclature Committee of the International Union of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology.
- Koshland D. The Enzymes, v. I, ch. 7, Acad. Press, New York, (1959)
Industrial applications
- History of industrial enzymes, Article about the history of industrial enzymes, from the late 1900s to the present times.
External links
portal Food- Structure/Function of Enzymes, Web tutorial on enzyme structure and function.
- Enzymes in diagnosis,Role of enzymes in diagnosis of diseases.
- Enzyme spotlight Monthly feature at the European Bioinformatics Institute on a selected enzyme.
- AMFEP, Association of Manufacturers and Formulators of Enzyme Products
- BRENDA database, a comprehensive compilation of information and literature references about all known enzymes; requires payment by commercial users.
- Enzyme Structures Database links to the known 3-D structure data of enzymes in the Protein Data Bank.
- ExPASy enzyme database, links to Swiss-Prot sequence data, entries in other databases and to related literature searches.
- KEGG: Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes Graphical and hypertext-based information on biochemical pathways and enzymes.
- MACiE database of enzyme reaction mechanisms.
- MetaCyc database of enzymes and metabolic pathways
- 'Face-to-Face Interview with Sir John Cornforth who was awarded a Nobel Prize for work on stereochemistry of enzyme-catalyzed reactions Freeview video by the Vega Science Trust
- Sigma Aldrich Enzyme Assays by Enzyme Name - 100's of assays sorted by enzyme name.
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