410 likes | 422 Views
Learn about how enzymes catalyze reactions and the role of organic chemistry in the synthesis of vitamins. Explore the mechanisms of enzyme-catalyzed reactions and the influence of coenzymes. Discover the importance of specificity and molecular recognition in enzyme-substrate interactions.
E N D
How enzymes catalyze reactions? Organic chemistry of vitamins
Book: Bruice • Chapter: 17 • Pages: 506-524
Enzyme-catalyzed reactions • Reactant of an enzyme catalysis – substrate • Substrate + Enzyme -> Product • Substrate binds in a pocket of enzyme – active site • All bond-breaking and bon-forming steps occur in that moment • Enzymes – specific for the substrates • Specificity of enzymes – molecular recognition
Specificity – results from its conformation and the particularamino acid side chains (α-substituents) that are at the active site • Example: AA with negatively charged side chain associates with a positively charged group on the substrate
Factors • Influence catalytic ability of enzymes: • • Reacting groups are brought together at the active site in the proper orientationfor reaction. • • Some of the amino acid side chains of the enzyme serve as catalysts. These arepositioned relative to the substrate precisely where they are needed for catalysis. • • Amino acid side chains can stabilize transition states and intermediates—by vander Waals interactions, electrostatic interactions, and hydrogen bonding—which makes them easier to form.
Enzyme mechanism • “ase” – tells something about the reaction it catalyzes • Example: glucose-6-phosphate isomerase • catalyzes an isomerization reaction that converts glucose-6-phosphate tofructose-6-phosphate • open-chain form of glucose is an aldohexose • open-chain form of fructose is a ketohexose • glucose-6-phosphate isomerase—converts an aldose to a ketose
Enzyme must open the six-membered-ring sugar • convert it to the five-membered-ringsugar • This enzyme – has at least 3 catalytic groups at its active site • One functioning as an acid catalyst and two acting as base catalyst
1. ring opening reaction: (base catalyst-His) removes a proton and acid catalyst aids the departure of leaving group by protonation • 2. base catalyst (Glu residue) removes aproton from α-carbon of aldehyde • 3. enol converted to a ketone • 4. conjugate acid and conjugate base from corresponding acid and base close the ring
The mechanism of aldolase • Involved in glycolysis • D-glucose is substrate • Final product – 2 molecules of pyruvate • six-carbon compound must be cleaved into two three-carboncompounds • Aldolase - catalyzes this cleavage • The enzyme is called aldolase because the reverse reaction is an aldol addition
1. fructose-1,6-diphosphate forms an imine with a Lys residue at the active site of the enzyme • 2. A Tyr residue functions as a base catalyst in the step that cleaves the bondbetween C-3 and C-4 • 3. The enamine intermediate rearranges to an imine, with the tyrosine residue nowfunctioning as an acid catalyst • 4. Hydrolysis of the imine releases dihydroxyacetone phosphate, the other three carbonproduct
Coenzymes and vitamins • Coenzymes – enzyme helpers • organic molecules • assist enzymes in catalyzing certain reactions that cannotbe catalyzed by the amino acid side chains of the enzyme alone • derived from organic compounds commonly known as vitamins • Vitamin - substance needed in small amounts for normal body functionthat the body cannot synthesize • The body synthesizes the coenzyme from the vitamin
2 classes: water and fat soluble • Fat soluble: A, D, E and K • Vitamin K - only water-insoluble vitamin currently known to be a precursor for a coenzyme • Vitamin A - for proper vision • Vitamin D - regulates calcium and phosphatemetabolism • Vitamin E – antioxidant • Water soluble: B complex (precursors for coenzymes) and vitamin C (no precursor) • vitamin C is a radical inhibitor - must be included in their diets
Niacin • For redox reactions • Needs coenzyme – AA cannot perform redox reactions • coenzyme serves as the oxidizing or reducing agent • enzyme’s role is tohold the substrate and coenzyme together so that the oxidation or reductionreaction can take place • most commonly used: nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+)
composed of two nucleotides • linked together through their phosphate groups • Nucleotide - heterocyclic compound attached to C-1 of a phosphorylated ribose • Heterocycliccompound – one or more of the ring atoms is an atom other than carbon • The heterocyclic component of one of the nucleotides of NAD+ is nicotinamide,and the heterocyclic component of the other is adenine • The positive charge in the NAD+ abbreviation indicates the positively charged nitrogen of the substituted pyridine ring
The adenine nucleotide for the coenzyme is provided by ATP • Niacin (vitamin B3) isthe portion of the coenzyme that the body cannot synthesize and must acquire throughthe diet
Example: malate dehydrogenase • catalyzes an oxidation reaction • of the secondary alcohol group of malate to aketone group • Oxidizing agent: NAD+ • Number of C-H bonds decreases in an oxidation reaction
substrate is being oxidized, it donatesa hydride ion (H-) to the 4-position of the pyridine ring of NAD+ • The pyridine ring,therefore, is reduced • The rest of the NAD+ molecule has the job of binding the coenzymeto the proper site on the enzyme • basic amino acid side chain of the enzyme can help theoxidation reaction • removing a proton from the oxygen atom of the substrate
The mechanism for reduction by NADH is the reverse of the mechanism foroxidation • When a substrate is being reduced, the dihydropyridinering of NADH donates a hydride ion from its 4-position to the substrate • ring, therefore, is oxidized • An acidic amino acid side chain of the enzymeaids the reduction reaction by donating a proton to the substrate
Niacin deficiency • Causes pellagra • Diseasethat begins with dermatitis and ultimately causesinsanity and death • Reported in 1927 in USA (120,000 cases) • among poor people with unvaried diets
Vitamin B2 • Flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) is another coenzyme used to oxidize substrates • Example: FAD is the coenzyme used by succinatedehydrogenase to oxidize succinateto fumarate • dinucleotide in which one of the heterocyclic compoundsis flavin and the other is adenine • instead of ribose, the flavin nucleotidehas a reduced ribose (a ribitol group) – riboflavin or B2 • Deficiency - inflammation of the skin
NAD+ or FAD? • NAD+ - in enzyme-catalyzedoxidation reactions involving carbonyl compounds • alcohols being oxidizedto ketones, aldehydes, or carboxylic acids • FAD - coenzyme used in othertypes of oxidations
Vitamin B1 • Thiamine • Absence in the diet - disease called beriberi • damages the heart, impairs nerve reflexes, and in extreme cases causesparalysis • As vitamin - used to form the coenzyme thiamine pyrophosphate (TPP) • required by enzymes that catalyze the transfer of a two-carbon fragmentfrom one species to another
Example: Pyruvatedecarboxylase requires TPP • catalyzes the decarboxylation of pyruvate and transfersthe remaining two-carbon fragment to a proton, resulting in the formation ofacetaldehyde
pyruvatedehydrogenase system - group of three enzymes and five coenzymes • overall reaction catalyzes the decarboxylationof pyruvate and transfers the remaining two-carbon fragment to coenzyme A - resulting in the formation of acetyl-CoA
Coenzyme A • activates carboxylic acids by convertingthem to thioesters • more reactive than are carboxylic acids • pKaof the conjugate acid of the thiol leavinggroup of a thioester is approx.10 • The vitamin needed to make CoASH is pantothenate
Vitamin H • Biotin • unusual vitamin because it can be synthesized by bacteria thatlive in the intestine • does not have to be included in our diet anddeficiencies are rare • can be found in people who maintaina diet high in raw eggs • Egg whites contain a protein that binds biotin tightly andthereby prevents it from acting as a coenzyme • When eggs are cooked, the protein isdenatured, and the denatured protein does not bind biotin
required by enzymes that catalyze carboxylation of an α-carbon (a carbon adjacent to a carbonyl group) • Carboxylases • Example: acetyl-CoAcarboxylaseconverts acetyl-CoA into malonyl-CoA • Biotin-requiring enzymesuse bicarbonate and also require ATP and Mg2+
Vitamin B6 • pyridoxine or vitamin B6 • coenzyme - pyridoxal phosphate (PLP) • “al” suffix indicates that the coenzyme is analdehyde • deficiency -causes anemia; severe deficiencies can causeseizures and death • PLP - required by enzymes that catalyze certain reactions of amino acids likedecarboxylation
Vitamin B12 • coenzyme B12 • Has CN or HO- group coordinated with Cobalt • Humans must obtain all their vitamin B12 from their diet, particularlyfrom meat • deficiency - pernicious anemia • Most deficiencies are caused by the intestines’ inability to absorb the vitamin
Folic acid • Tetrahydrofolate (THF) – coenzyme • used by enzymes that catalyze reactionsthat transfer a group containing a single carbon to their substrates • produced by the reduction of two double bonds offolic acid (folate)
required for the synthesis of the bases found in DNA and RNA andfor the synthesis of aromatic amino acids • Three THF-coenzymes • Methyl group transfer, methylene group transfer and formyl group transfer
Chemistry link: First antibiotics • Sulfonamides—commonly known as sulfa drugs • 1936 as the first effective antibiotics • sulfanilamide, the first sulfonamide, isstructurally similar to p-aminobenzoic acid • Sulfanilamide acts by inhibiting the enzyme that incorporates paminobenzoicacid into folate • Both structures compete for the active site of the enzyme
Vitamin K • for proper clotting of blood • K – koagulation (German word for clotting) • Process requires Ca2+ • Vitamin K needed for proper Ca2+ binding • found in the leaves of green plants • Deficiencies in the vitamin are rare because it is synthesized by intestinal bacteria • Vitamin KH2 is the coenzyme form of the vitamin
Vitamin KH2- coenzyme for the enzyme that catalyzes the carboxylation ofthe γ-carbon of glutamate side chains in proteins, forming γ-carboxyglutamates
Warfarin (coumadin) and dicoumerol- used as anticoagulants • Preventclotting by inhibiting the enzyme that synthesizes vitamin KH2 from vitamin Kepoxide • enzyme cannot tell the difference between vitamin K epoxide and warfarin (or dicoumerol) - two compounds compete for binding at the enzyme’s activesite • Warfarin – common rat poison
Problems to solve • Page 524
Summary • Enzymes • Substrate • Active site • Coenzyme • Vitamins • NAD+ and NADH • FAD and FADH2 • TPP • Biotin • PLP • Coenzyme B12 • THF • Vitamin KH2