Enzy. Defi. Class.
Enzy. Defi. Class.
Enzy. Defi. Class.
• 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.
Mitochondria: TCA cycle
Cytosol: Glycolysis
Fatty acid synthesis
HMP pathway
Oxidation of Pyruvate
Fatty acid synthesis
Nucleus: DNA and RNA synthesis Lysosome: Degradation of complex molecules
Enzymes Lower a Reaction’s Activation Energy
Competencies
• Explain fundamental concepts of enzyme, isoenzyme, apoenzyme, coenzyme
& co-factors. Enumerate the main classes of IUBMB nomenclature.
• Observe the estimation of SGOT & SGPT
• Describe and explain the basic principles of enzyme activity
• Describe and discuss enzyme inhibitors as poisons and drugs and as
therapeutic enzymes
• Describe and discuss the clinical utility of various serum enzymes as markers
of pathological conditions.
• Discuss use of enzymes in laboratory investigations (Enzyme-based assays)
• Interpret laboratory results of enzyme activities & describe the clinical utility
of various enzymes as markers of pathological conditions.
Specific Learning Objectives
The learner will be able to:
• Classify enzymes
• Explain the basic concepts and mode of action of enzymes
• Describe the active center of enzymes and specificity of enzymes
• Outline Michaelis-Menten theory, Fischer’s template theory and
Koshland’s induced fit theory
• Define Michaelis constant, Km value, Vmax
• Enumerate factors influencing enzyme activity
• Classify the coenzymes and cofactors
• Describe different types of enzyme inhibition with examples
• Explain the mechanisms of regulation, covalent modification,
repression, and induction
• Definition
• Properties
• Active center of enzymes and specificity of enzymes
• Coenzymes and cofactors
• Classification
• Nomenclature
Enzymes are biological catalyst produced by living tissues.
Coenzyme: The non protein part of an enzyme which is required for the
catalytic activity of the enzyme, is called coenzyme. They act as transient
carriers of specific functional groups. Generally these are vitamins.
Characteristics of coenzymes
1. They are heat stable
2. It is low molecular weight organic substances
3. Generally coenzymes loosely bind with enzymes. They are
separated easily by dialysis
4. Sometimes when reaction completed, the coenzyme released
from one enzyme and take part in other reaction.
Co-enzymes may be divided into two groups
• Those taking part in reactions catalyzed by oxidoreductases by
donating or accepting hydrogen atoms or electrons.
Ex. NAD, NADP, FMN, FAD
• Those co-enzymes taking part in reactions transferring groups
other than hydrogen
Ex.
Vitamins Coenzyme Reaction
Thiamine TPP Oxidative decarboxylation and
transketolase reactions
Riboflavin FAD, FMN Dehydrogenation
Pyridoxine (B6) Pyridoxal phosphate Transamination, deamination,
(PLP) decarboxylation of amino acids
Niacin NAD+, NADP Dehydrogenation
Biotin Biotin Decarboxylation
Pantothenic acid Coenzyme-A (CoA-SH) Acyl transferase
Folic acid Tetrahydrofolate (THF) Take part in One carbon group transfer
reactions
Coenzymes derived from nonvitamin precursors
OTHLIL T
EC-1 Oxidoreductases Catalyzes oxidation-reduction reactions.
Alcohol dehydrogenase
Alcohol + NAD+ Aldehyde + NADH + H+
Lactate dehydrogenase
Pyruvate Lactate
NAD NADH + H+
2. Oxidases: If the reaction involves a direct participation of oxygen, the
enzymes are termed as oxidases
Xanthine Oxidase
Xanthine Uric Acid
H2O + O2 H2O2
Glutathione Peroxidase
2GSH+ H2O2 GSSG + 2H2O
ATP ADP + Pi
3. Transmethylase:
S-Adenosylmethionine S-Adenosylhomocysteine
Methyl group acceptor Methylated product
(Norepinephrine) Transmethylation (Epinephrine)
EC-3 Hydrolases
Catalyze the cleavage of C-O, C-N, C-C and some other bonds with
the addition of water.
Enzymes in this category are:
Acid phosphatase
Catalyze the cleavage of C-O, C-C and C-N bonds by means other than
hydrolysis or oxidation, giving rise to compound with double bonds or
catalyze the reverse reaction, by the addition of group to a double bond.
Glycolysis
Phosphohexose isomerase
Glu. 6 phosphate Fru. 6 phosphate
Phosphoglycerate Mutase
3 Phosphoglycerate 2 Phosphoglycerate
Odd-chain fatty acid oxidation
Methylmalonyl CoA
L Methylmalonyl CoA Mutase Succinyl CoA
Vit. B12
se
Isomera Ribose 5 phosphate
Ribulose 5 phosphate
Epim
er as e Xylulose 5 phosphate
EC-6 Ligases (Synthetases)
Catalyze the joining of two molecules coupled with the hydrolysis of ATP.
α-ketoglutarate
Transamination
NH4 NH4 Urea
Mg-ATP L-glutamate
Glutamine Glutaminase
synthetase
Mg-ADP + Pi
Glutamine
Cells Liver
EC-7: Translocases (A new EC Class)
Translocases catalyze the movement of ions or molecules across membranes
or their separation within membranes. Ex.ATPase
ATP synthase
Examples are:
Enzymes catalyzing the translocation of:
Hydrons (H+), inorganic cations, inorganic anions, amino acids and
peptides, and carbohydrates and their derivatives.
Enzymes of the reaction that provided the driving
force for the translocation linked to:
Oxidoreductase reactions, hydrolysis of a nucleoside triphosphate,
hydrolysis of a diphosphate, and decarboxylation reaction.
Dehydrogenase: NAD/FAD is electron acceptor in redox reaction
Oxidase: O2 is acceptor but oxygen atoms are not incorporated into substrate
Oxygenase: One or both oxygen atoms are incorporated
Synthase: No ATP required
Synthetase: Required ATP
Phosphatase: Use water to remove phosphoryl group
Phosphorylase: Uses Pi to break a bond and generate a phosphorylated
compound
Kinases: catalyze the transfer of Pi from high energy compound (ATP) to
specific substrate
Nomenclature of Enzymes
• In early days, enzymes when discovered where given trivial names
such as pepsin, trypsin, chymotrypsin and so on which are still in use
• The name assigned to enzymes in the beginning were very vague and
uninformative
• As more and more enzymes were discovered and added to list, these
enzymes were named by adding the suffix “ase”
ex. Lactase acts on lactose
Lipase on lipids
Urease on urea etc.
IUBMB classification-to make the names precise, fully informative
and unambiguous, 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: Functional class
Second number: Subclass
Third number: Sub subclass
Fourth number: Particular enzyme.
• As per this nomenclature, each enzyme is given a specific name
indicating its substrate, coenzyme and the type of reaction
catalysed by it.
11. Which of following vitamins provides the coenzyme for transamination of amino acids
E) Thiamin B) Vit. B6 C) Niacin D) Folic acid
12. Which of following vitamins acts as a coenzyme for transfer of one-carbon units?
A)Niacin B) Thiamin C) vit. B6 D) Folic acid
13. For the synthesis of fatty acids which of following vitamin as a coenzyme required:
B) Biotin B) Riboflavin C) Folic acid D) Thiamin