ENZYME

biological catalyst. The term enzyme comes from zymosis, the Greek word for fermentation, a process accomplished by yeast cells and long known to the brewing industry, which occupied the attention of many 19th-century chemists.

Louis Pasteur recognized in 1860 that enzymes were essential to fermentation but assumed that their catalytic action was inextricably linked with the structure and life of the yeast cell. Not until 1897 was it shown by German chemist Edward Büchner that cell-free extracts of yeast could ferment sugars to alcohol and carbon dioxide; Büchner denoted his preparation zymase. This important achievement was the first indication that enzymes could function independently of the cell.

The first enzyme molecule to be isolated in pure crystalline form was urease, prepared from the jack bean in 1926 by American biochemist J. B. Sumner, who suggested, contrary to prevailing opinion, that the molecule was a protein. In the period from 1930 to 1936, pepsin, chymotrypsin, and trypsin were successfully crystallized; it was confirmed that the crystals were protein, and the protein nature of enzymes was thereby firmly established.

Enzymatic Action

Like all catalysts, enzymes accelerate the rates of reactions while experiencing no permanent chemical modification as a result of their participation. Enzymes can accelerate, often by several orders of magnitude, reactions that under the mild conditions of cellular concentrations, temperature, pH, and pressure would proceed imperceptibly (or not at all) in the absence of the enzyme. The efficiency of an enzyme's activity is often measured by the turnover rate, which measures the number of molecules of compound upon which the enzyme works per molecule of enzyme per second. Carbonic anhydrase, which removes carbon dioxide from the blood by binding it to water, has a turnover rate of 106. That means that one molecule of the enzyme can cause a million molecules of carbon dioxide to react in one second.

Most enzymatic reactions occur within a relatively narrow temperature range (usually from about 30 degrees Celsius to 40 degrees Celsius), a feature that reflects their complexity as biological molecules. Each enzyme has an optimal range of pH for activity; for example, pepsin in the stomach has maximal reactivity under the extremely acid conditions of pH 1–3. Effective catalysis also depends crucially upon maintenance of the molecule's elaborate three-dimensional structure. Loss of structural integrity, which may result from such factors as changes in pH or high temperatures, almost always leads to a loss of enzymatic activity. An enzyme that has been so altered is said to be denatured (see denaturation).

Consonant with their role as biological catalysts, enzymes show considerable selectivity for the molecules upon which they act (called substrates). Most enzymes will react with only a small group of closely related chemical compounds; many demonstrate absolute specificity, having only one substrate molecule which is appropriate for reaction.

Numerous enzymes require for efficient catalytic function the presence of additional atoms of small nonprotein molecules. These include coenzyme molecules, many of which only transiently associate with the enzyme. Nonprotein components tightly bound to the protein are called prosthetic groups. The region on the enzyme molecule in close proximity to where the catalytic event takes place is known as the active site. Prosthetic groups necessary for catalysis are usually located there, and it is the place where the substrate (and coenzymes, if any) bind just before reaction takes place.

The side-chain groups of amino acid residues making up the enzyme molecule at or near the active site participate in the catalytic event. For example, in the enzyme trysin, its complex tertiary structure brings together a histidine residue from one section of the molecule with glycine and serine residues from another. The side chains of the residues in this particular geometry produce the active site that accounts for the enzyme's reactivity.

Identification and Classification

More than 1,500 different enzymes have now been identified, and many have been isolated in pure form. Hundreds have been crystallized, and the amino acid sequences and three-dimensional structure of a significant number have been fully determined through the technique of X-ray crystallography. The knowledge gained has led to great progress in understanding the mechanisms of enzyme chemistry. Biochemists categorize enzymes into six main classes and a number of subclasses, depending upon the type of reaction involved. The 124-amino acid structure of ribonuclease was determined in 1967, and two years later the enzyme was synthesized independently at two laboratories in the United States.

Enzyme Deficiency

A variety of metabolic diseases are now known to be caused by deficiencies or malfunctions of enzymes. Albinism, for example, is often caused by the absence of tyrosinase, an enzyme essential for the production of cellular pigments. The hereditary lack of phenylalanine hydroxylase results in the disease phenylketonuria (PKU) which, if untreated, leads to severe mental retardation in children.

Bibliography

See J. E. and E. T. Bell, Proteins and Enzymes (1988).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Enzyme  - 1932 results

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...Importance of substrate variability to enzyme polymorphisms ". Nature New Biol. 243...Johnson G. B. 1973b. "Relationship of enzyme polymorphism to species diversity...193-194. Johnson G. B. 1974. "Enzyme polymorphism and metabolism". Science...
...breaks up, the enzyme molecule remains...molecule is changed. Enzymes are highly specific...the surface of the enzyme molecule. Enzymes can be inhibited...different from an enzyme involved in a similar...are hundreds of enzymes in the cell, each...
enzyme system must be compensated with k ln 2 entropy...bit for each recognition. For a capable enzyme which manages to raise a substrate concentration...when the substrate leaves the water for the enzyme pocket, the ordered arrangement of molecules...
Cholesterolesterase This enzyme hydrolyzes cholesterol esters...and the chief interest in the enzyme is its relation to resorption...Azolesterases are defined as the enzymes that hydrolyze esters of nitrogen...transmission of nerve impulses. The enzyme can hydrolyze, not only the...
...character of the enzymes present; and finally...differences in the enzyme element of the reaction...of potency of two enzymes. Enzyme I is essential to...the level at which enzyme I produces effects, the two enzymes, I and I-II...
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...function of four enzymes: cytosolic malic enzyme (MEN), cytosolic...the other NADPH enzymes. In calculating...coefficients, enzyme activity was expressed...multifunctional nature of the enzymes; the different oxidative role of each enzyme may limit or affect...
...dismutases. These enzymes are among the first...One form of the enzyme, a copper/zinc...the regulation of enzymes, such as controlling...degradation of the enzyme after it is produced...addition, these enzymes are responsible for...contribution of this enzyme to total alcohol...
...of the one gene-one enzyme relationship, our understanding...features of genes and enzymes was insufficient to allow...biosynthesis. Thus the enzymes presumably altered in...investigations on the gene-enzyme relationship, begun...chose one of the initial enzymes of this organism shown...
...ubiquitin-activating (or E1) enzyme, forming a high-energy thiolester...ubiquitinconjugating (or E2) enzyme, which, like the E1, forms...of ubiquitin-conjugating enzymes is defined by a conserved motif...kinetics as the wild-type enzyme but extend ubiquitin chains...
Inflammatory Enzyme Modulates Motor Neuron Damage in Amyotrophic...provide new insights into the role of the enzyme NADPH oxidase in the death of motor neurons...researchers discovered that the NADPH oxidase enzyme, an important component in the generation...
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...The duties of enzymes, however, go beyond digestion. An enzyme named renin (not...drugs are called "enzyme inducers," and the enzymes they induce may...inactivate vital enzyme systems. Medical...long used certain enzymes with beneficial...
...Getting Back at Celiac: Enzyme Treatment Might Stem...A combination of two enzymes could eventually treat...response brought on by the enzyme-treated gluten was...well-studied digestive enzyme that breaks up another...gluten treated with both enzymes, the cells division...
...understand how quickly enzymes transform molecules...see an individual enzyme at work. On closer...When all of the enzymes are busy, a substrate...to wait until an enzyme is freed up. For...molecules of a certain enzyme than cells that yielded...might indicate that enzymes play a part in drug...
...lot of amylase, an enzyme, to break down the...All plants have enzymes in them, as they...churning takes place. Enzymes in food are active...pH is perfect for enzyme activation. Once...serious digestive enzyme work happens in the...most of.the food enzymes we consume are destroyed...
...simply blocking the whole enzyme knocks out many of its other...how just one portion of the enzyme, a protein called nicastrin...protein that is a component of an enzyme called gamma-secretase...splitting of APP, leaving all the enzymes other functions intact. For...
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Enzyme Breakthrough Could Be Key to Halting Killer...Institute of Cancer Research discovered that an enzyme in the body is directly involved in the...to successfully block the action of the enzyme, called lysyl oxidase-like 2 (or LOXL2...
...to the hands than enzyme-free products...experiments focusing on the enzymes rather than the powders...convincingly that enzymes were notresponsible. Indeed, enzyme-containing laundry...adverse effects of enzymes on the skin seem to...
...actives" because it contain thousands of enzymes, delicate protein catalysts found...life itself would impossible without enzyme has a specific job in the body that no other enzyme can accomplish. Enzymes utilized the food you ingest to construct...
...to the hands than enzyme-free products...experiments focusing on the enzymes rather than the powders...convincingly that enzymes were not responsible. Indeed, enzyme-containing laundry...adverse effects of enzymes on the skin seem to...
Enzyme Clue to Womb Problems. Byline: Jenny Hope...may be triggered by an out-of control enzyme, scientists claim. They say the information...University have now identified that the enzyme - or biological catalyst - telomerase could...
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encyclopedia articles on: Enzyme  - 104 results

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ANGIOTENSIN-CONVERTING ENZYME INHIBITOR see ACE inhibitor . ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia University Press. Used with the permission of Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
...indication that enzymes could function...cell. The first enzyme molecule to be...absence of the enzyme. The efficiency of an enzymes activity is often...the mechanisms of enzyme chemistry. Biochemists categorize enzymes into six main classes...
...platinum or with bromine on finely divided silica. Enzyme reactions can, in principle, also be considered...reactions, since the reaction takes place on the enzyme surface after the enzyme has bound the reactants; however, usually only...
...sugar (e.g., from molasses), which requires an enzyme catalyst that is present in yeast; or it can be prepared...potatoes), which requires, in addition to the yeast enzyme, an enzyme present in an extract of malt. The concentration of...
...that secrete the acids and enzymes necessary to break down food...simple sugars by means of an enzyme, salivary amylase . The food...the stomach secrete digestive enzymes and gastric juices , which...stomach secretions include the enzyme pepsin , which acts on proteins...
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