Determination of enzyme mechanisms by radiationless energy transfer kinetics
- 1 June 1979
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 76 (6) , 2684-2688
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.76.6.2684
Abstract
Rigorous definition of the elementary steps of an enzymatic reactin requires visalization of transient enzyme-substrate (ES) complexes. Measurement of radiationless energy transfer (RET) between enzyme tryptophan residues and a fluorescent dansyl (5-dimethylaminonaphthalene-1-sulfonyl) substrate provides a sensitive means to observe ES complexes directly. Analysis of the rate of formation and breakdown of ES complexes by RET can serve as the basis of a rapid kinetic approach to enzyme mechanisms. Both pre-steady-state and steady-state kinetics can be performed in the same RET experiment. Analysis at steady state precisely determines kcat and Km values by multiple means. Analysis at pre-steady state determines the number of intermediates, the type of reaction mechanism and all the individual binding and rate constants. Chymotrypsin was chosen as a referance standard for RET kinetics because extensive investigations have established both the existence of transient intermediates in the course of its catalytic process and the range of values to be expected for pertinent kinetic constants. RET kinetics readily detects the 2 known intermediates in the .alpha.-chymotrypsin catalyzed hydrolysis of specific ester substrates. The results agree with data derived for this enzyme from classicial kinetics. This experimental study both validates and demonstrates the theoretical advantages and potential of RET kinetics. The generality of the approach was investigated by synthesizing a family of dansyl-labeled substrates designed to meet the specificity requirements of a number of metallo- and nonmetallo- exo- and endopeptidases [Bacillus cereus protease, yeast carboxypeptidase, pronase, thermolysin and trypsin]. In all cases, the ES complex is observed readily at micromolar or lower concentrations of enzyme under stopped-flow conditions. The success of the RET kinetic approach on proteolytic enzymes shows its broad utility.This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
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