Title: Kinetic Analysis of Tyrosinase Enzyme
1Kinetic Analysis of Tyrosinase Enzyme
2Enzymes as catalysts
- It is necessary for biological reactions to occur
much quicker than the ambient temperature and
prevailing conditions would allow - catalyst a substance that when added to a
chemical reaction, speeds it up without altering
the final products or without itself being
consumed. - Enzymes are biological catalysts
3Enzyme Benefits
- Enzymes provide many medical benefits
- key to understanding inborn errors of metabolism
- important in detoxification reactions
- targets of chemotherapy
- aid in diagnosis and monitoring therapy
- primary role of vitamins is as enzyme cofactors
- key to metabolic control and balance
4Enzyme properties
- All enzymes are proteins
- Molecular Weight range 15 kd-1000 kd
- enzymes show the same physical and chemical
properties as all proteins - denaturation
- precipitation
- sensitivity to proteases
- Enzymes are efficient biological catalysts which
must operate at 37o C or below and at pH values
found in living cells
5Enzyme Properties
- Enzymes are highly specific in their catalysis
- they must bind (form a complex) with substrate
into a region of the enzyme known as the active
site - How?
6Enzyme Properties
- Enzymes also allow the regulation of reactions
through activation or inhibition of the enzyme by
effectors - Virtually all biological reactions are found
to be enzyme catalyzed
7Enzyme Kinetics
- Studies of enzyme kinetics began in 1902 by
Adrian Brown - studied the rate of hydrolysis of sucrose
- proposed that the overall reaction was composed
of two elementary reactions
The enzyme-substrate complex (ES) provides the
transitional state that facilitates a more rapid
production of products
8Enzyme Kinetics
- In 1913, Lenor Michaelis and Maude Menten made
the assumption that the reversible step in the
mechanism does achieve equilibrium - Therefore, rewriting the law of chemical
equilibrium for the reversible step and equating
the ratio of the forward to reverse rate
constants and making substitutions. -
9Enzyme Kinetics
- Michealis-Menten equation
- vo Vmax S
- Km S
- Vmax the rate of reaction in which all of the
active sites of the enzyme are consumed by
substrate - Km a ratio of all rate constants involved. Km
also represents the substrate concentration at
which the reaction rate is 1/2 of Vmax - S the concentration of substrate binding to
enzyme
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15Effects of Temperature on Enzymes
- Living systems must function in a relatively
restricted range of temperature - Enzyme catalyzed reaction rates will increase
with temperature - will approximately double for every 10o increase
- However, enzymes are proteins...
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17Tyrosinase Enzyme
- Copper containing oxidase
- Widely distributed in plants, animals, and humans
- In plant cells, is responsible for browning in
potatoes, apples and bananas - In human cells, is responsible for catalyzing the
biosynthesis of melanin pigments, causing suntans - Method of assay
- Tyrosinase (d,l)-Dopa ? Dopachrome ? 475
nm
18Kinetic Assay Procedure
- Overview
- DETERMINE TOTAL CONCENTRATION OF ENZYME
- DETERMINE IDEAL LEVEL OF TYROSINASE FOR KINETIC
ASSAYS - PERFORM KINETIC ASSAYS TO DETERMINE Km
- INHIBITION OF ENZYME ACTIVITY
19Kinetic Assay Procedure
- Week 1
- Estimate enzyme concentration
- Determine ideal volume of enzyme to use
- Determine appropriate substrate volume range
- Determine Tyrosinase Concentration
- adjust UV-VIS to 280 nm
- zero out instrument using 0.05M pH 7.0 phosphate
buffer - measure absorbance of tyrosinase solution
- Calculate concentration assuming a 1 w/v
standard has an absorbance of 24.9
20Kinetic Assay Procedure
- All reagents except enzyme will be stored at
room temperature - Determination of Ideal Enzyme Volume
- Initially set up all 5 assays as given in the
table EXCEPT for adding enzyme (gently invert to
mix) - Reagent (mL) 1 2 3 4 5
- phosphate buffer 1.45 1.40 1.30 1.20 1.10
- l,d-Dopa 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5 1.5
- Tyrosinase 0.05 0.10 0.20 0.30 0.40
- Place into spectrophotometer at 475 nm and
immediately set 0 and 100T
21Kinetic Assay (continued)
- Record absorbance every 30 sec for 3 minutes
(Blank Rate) - Add the assay volume of tyrosinase (invert to
mix) - Record absorbances every 30 seconds for 4-5
minutes - Choose the enzyme volume that provided a
convenient rate at saturating levels of substrate
- (?A/min 0.10-.15)
22- Determination of Substrate Volume
- Designed as a trial run to make sure the
recommended volumes of substrate concentration
will work (sufficient changes in absorbance that
arent too rapid or too slow) - If they dont work, formulate a volume range that
will - Set up assays containing fixed volume of
enzyme. Total volume always 3.0 mL - Reagent 1 2 3 4 5
- phosphate buffer (3.00 - (substrate enzyme)
- d,l-Dopa 0.10 0.40 0.80 1.0 1.50
- tyrosinase optimal enzyme volume
- Run assays just like previous step..running a
blank, adding enzyme last, recording measurements
every 30 sec
23Kinetic Analysis of Tyrosinase Enzyme
- Experiment 5
- Week2 Determination of Km
- Inhibition
24Enzyme Inhibition
- Inhibitors can halt the activity of an enzyme
- results in a decreasing concentration of product
formation - Drug therapy is based on the inhibition of
specific enzymes - There are three major classes of inhibitors
- Competitive
- Noncompetitive
- Uncompetitive
25Competitive Inhibition
- A molecule that fits
- into the enzymes active
- site but does not react with
- it
- Enzyme will remain
- inactive until the inhibitor
- falls off
- More substrate is needed
- to get to the maximum rate,
- since substrate competes with inhibitor
26Noncompetitive Inhibition
- Inhibitor fits into a site on the enzyme
different from the active site - As a result, the folding of the enzyme changes a
bit, distorting the active site in a way that
makes it less effective as a catalyst - A decrease in the maximum rate would be observed
since each catalyst has become less efficient
27Uncompetitive Inhibition
- Inhibitor binds to the enzyme only after
enzyme-substrate complex forms - As a result, catalytic activity is blocked
28Irreversible Inhibition
- Inhibitor may bind to the active site or
alternative site - Next, inhibitor forms a covalent bond to the
enzyme - Since inhibitor, will not fall off, the enzyme
molecule is dead
29Different slopes, same y-intercept (Km for
substrate increases)
30Different slopes, different y-intercept, same
x-intercept (Vmax decreases)
31Same slope, different x-intercept and y-intercept
(Equal change in both Km and Vmax)
32Inhibitors to tyrosinase
- Several compounds act as inhibitors to tyrosinase
enzyme.. We will examine - Thiourea
- Cinnamic Acid
- Cinnamic acid was found to be effective in
apple juice, especially when used in combination
with ascorbic acid (Walker, 1976 Sapers et al.,
1989b). This inhibitor was also effective when
applied to cut surfaces of apples, but induced
browning under some circumstances. Carbon
monoxide has been proposed as a browning
inhibitor for mushrooms (Albisu et al., 1989).
33Procedure
- I. Determination of Km
- Set up the following assays using ideal volume of
enzyme and ideal substrate range. Total volume
is 3.0 mL - Reagent 1 2 3 4 5
- phosphate buffer (3.00 - (substrate enzyme)
- d,l-Dopa 0.10 0.40 0.80 1.0 1.50
- tyrosinase optimal enzyme volume
- substitute substrate volume range that worked
best - Ideal product formation is ?A/min 0.033-0.25
34Procedure
- Set up all 5 assays as given in the table except
for adding the enzyme - Place into spectrophotometer at 475 nm and
immediately set 0 and 100T - Record absorbance every 30 seconds for 3 minutes
(blank rate) - Add the assay volume of tyrosinase, invert,
immediately set 100T - Record absorbances every 30 seconds for 4 minutes
35Procedure
- II. Inhibition
- Choose one of the three inhibitors
- Choose a constant level of inhibitor that results
in at least 20-30 decrease in rate (for an
intermediate concentration of substrate) - Reagent 1 2 3 4 5
- phosphate buffer (3.00mL - (substrate inhibitor
enzyme)) - d,l-Dopa 0.10 0.40 0.80 1.0 1.50
- inhibitor determined by trial and error
- tyrosinase optimal enzyme volume
- Run assays just like in Km determination (set up
blank rate with buffer, substrate, and inhibitor)
36Data Analysis
37Data Analysis
Prepare a similar table for inhibited
runs ?A/min should be blank corrected
(?A/min)enzyme - (?A/min)blank
38Data Analysis
- Use the following formulas to calculate S and
vo - Smg/mL (volume used in assay)(Stock conc.
mg/mL) - 3.0 mL
- S mol/L Smg/mL x 1
- 197.2
The rate of reaction is dependent on production
of Dopachrome molar absorptivity constant of
dopachrome 3600 mol/Lcm ?c ?A/min (?c
)(.003L)(106 ) vo (umol/min) 3600 x
1cm (?mol/Lmin )
39Data Analysis
- Use linear regression to calculate slope and
intercept for inhibited and uninhibited plot - Uninhibited Inhibited
- y-intercept 1/Vmax compare slope and
- 1/y-intercept Vmax y-int to inhibited
- competitive noncompetitive
- slope Km/Vmax slopeinh slopeuninh (1
I/KI) - Km (slope)(Vmax) I (ml inhibitor
used)(inhibitor, M) - (3.0 mL)
- uncompetitive
- y-interceptinh y-interceptuninh (1
I/KI)