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1.
13C-kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) of four cinnamyl alcohol oxidations and a xylose reductase-catalyzed cinnamyl aldehyde reduction have been determined by 13C NMR using competition reactions with reactants at natural 13C-abundance. Differences in KIEs among oxidations indicate dissimilarities between the respective hydrogen transfers. Their mechanistic implications are discussed. A low primary KIE of the enzymatic reduction is consistent with a kinetically complex mechanism in which steps other than the chemical step of hydride transfer from NADH are slow.  相似文献   

2.
The rate and kinetic isotope effect (KIE) on proton transfer during the aromatic amine dehydrogenase-catalyzed reaction with phenylethylamine shows complex pressure and temperature dependences. We are able to rationalize these effects within an environmentally coupled tunneling model based on constant pressure molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. As pressure appears to act anisotropically on the enzyme, perturbation of the reaction coordinate (donor-acceptor compression) is, in this case, marginal. Therefore, while we have previously demonstrated that pressure and temperature dependences can be used to infer H-tunneling and the involvement of promoting vibrations, these effects should not be used in the absence of atomistic insight, as they can vary greatly for different enzymes. We show that a pressure-dependent KIE is not a definitive hallmark of quantum mechanical H-tunneling during an enzyme-catalyzed reaction and that pressure-independent KIEs cannot be used to exclude tunneling contributions or a role for promoting vibrations in the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. We conclude that coupling of MD calculations with experimental rate and KIE studies is required to provide atomistic understanding of pressure effects in enzyme-catalyzed reactions.  相似文献   

3.
Observed pseudo-first-order rate constants (k(obs)) of the hydride-transfer reactions from isopropyl alcohol (i-PrOH) to two NAD(+) analogues, 9-phenylxanthylium ion (PhXn(+)) and 10-methylacridinium ion (MA(+)), were determined at temperatures ranging from 49 to 82 degrees C in i-PrOH containing various amounts of AN or water. Formations of the alcohol-cation ether adducts (ROPr-i) were observed as side equilibria. The equilibrium constants for the conversion of PhXn(+) to PhXnOPr-i in i-PrOH/AN (v/v = 1) were determined, and the equilibrium isotope effect (EIE = K(i-PrOH)/K(i-PrOD)) at 62 degrees C was calculated to be 2.67. The k(H) of the hydride-transfer step for both reactions were calculated on the basis of the k(obs) and K. The corresponding deuterium kinetic isotope effects (e.g., KIE(OD)(H) = k(H)(i-PrOH)/k(H)(i-PrOD) and KIE(beta-D6)(H) = k(obs)(i-PrOH)/k(obs)((CD3)2CHOH)), as well as the activation parameters, were derived. For the reaction of PhXn(+) (62 degrees C) and MA(+) (67 degrees C), primary KIE(alpha-D)(H) (4.4 and 2.1, respectively) as well as secondary KIE(OD)(H) (1.07 and 1.18) and KIE(beta-D6)(H) (1.1 and 1.5) were observed. The observed EIE and KIE(OD)(H) were explained in terms of the fractionation factors for deuterium between OH and OH(+)(OH(delta+)) sites. The observed inverse kinetic solvent isotope effect for the reaction of PhXn(+) (k(obs)(i-PrOH)/k(obs)(i-PrOD) = 0.39) is consistent with the intermolecular hydride-transfer mechanism. The dramatic reduction of the reaction rate for MA(+), when the water or i-PrOH cosolvent was replaced by AN, suggests that the hydride-transfer T.S. is stabilized by H-bonding between O of the solvent OH and the substrate alcohol OH(delta+). This result suggests an H-bonding stabilization effect on the T.S. of the alcohol dehydrogenase reactions.  相似文献   

4.
A mixed centroid path integral and free energy perturbation method (PI-FEP/UM) has been used to investigate the primary carbon and secondary hydrogen kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) in the amino acid decarboxylation of L-Dopa catalyzed by the enzyme L-Dopa decarboxylase (DDC) along with the corresponding uncatalyzed reaction in water. DDC is a pyridoxal 5'-phosphate (PLP) dependent enzyme. The cofactor undergoes an internal proton transfer between the zwitterionic protonated Schiff base configuration and the neutral hydroxyimine tautomer. It was found that the cofactor PLP makes significant contributions to lowering the decarboxylation barrier, while the enzyme active site provides further stabilization of the transition state. Interestingly, the O-protonated configuration is preferred both in the Michaelis complex and at the decarboxylation transition state. The computed kinetic isotope effects (KIE) on the carboxylate C-13 are consistent with that observed on decarboxylation reactions of other PLP-dependent enzymes, whereas the KIEs on the α carbon and secondary proton, which can easily be validated experimentally, may be used as a possible identification for the active form of the PLP tautomer in the active site of DDC.  相似文献   

5.
Proton transfer reactions are the rate-limiting steps in many biological and synthetic chemical processes, often requiring complex cofactors or catalysts to overcome the generally unfavourable thermodynamic process of carbanion intermediate formation. It has been suggested that quantum tunnelling processes enhance the kinetics of some of these reactions, which when coupled to protein motions may be an important consideration for enzyme catalysis. To obtain a better fundamental and quantitative understanding of these proton transfer mechanisms, a computational analysis of the intramolecular proton transfer from a carbon acid in the small molecule, 4-nitropentanoic acid, in aqueous solution is presented. Potential-energy surfaces from gas-phase, implicit and QM/MM (quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical) explicit solvation quantum chemistry models are compared, and the potential of mean force, for the full reaction coordinate, using umbrella-sampling molecular dynamics is analysed. Semi-classical multidimensional tunnelling corrections are also used to estimate the quantum tunnelling contributions and to understand the origin of the primary deuterium kinetic isotope effects (KIEs). The computational results are found to be in excellent agreement with the KIEs and the energetics obtained experimentally.  相似文献   

6.
Phosphoryl transfer reactions are ubiquitous in biology and the understanding of the mechanisms whereby these reactions are catalyzed by protein and RNA enzymes is central to reveal design principles for new therapeutics. Two of the most powerful experimental probes of chemical mechanism involve the analysis of linear free energy relations (LFERs) and the measurement of kinetic isotope effects (KIEs). These experimental data report directly on differences in bonding between the ground state and the rate‐controlling transition state, which is the most critical point along the reaction free energy pathway. However, interpretation of LFER and KIE data in terms of transition‐state structure and bonding optimally requires the use of theoretical models. In this work, we apply density‐functional calculations to determine KIEs for a series of phosphoryl transfer reactions of direct relevance to the 2′‐O‐transphosphorylation that leads to cleavage of the phosphodiester backbone of RNA. We first examine a well‐studied series of phosphate and phosphorothioate mono‐, di‐ and triesters that are useful as mechanistic probes and for which KIEs have been measured. Close agreement is demonstrated between the calculated and measured KIEs, establishing the reliability of our quantum model calculations. Next, we examine a series of RNA transesterification model reactions with a wide range of leaving groups in order to provide a direct connection between observed Brønsted coefficients and KIEs with the structure and bonding in the transition state. These relations can be used for prediction or to aid in the interpretation of experimental data for similar non‐enzymatic and enzymatic reactions. Finally, we apply these relations to RNA phosphoryl transfer catalyzed by ribonuclease A, and demonstrate the reaction coordinate–KIE correlation is reasonably preserved. A prediction of the secondary deuterium KIE in this reaction is also provided. These results demonstrate the utility of building up knowledge of mechanism through the systematic study of model systems to provide insight into more complex biological systems such as phosphoryl transfer enzymes and ribozymes.  相似文献   

7.
A significant contemporary question in enzymology involves the role of protein dynamics and hydrogen tunneling in enhancing enzyme catalyzed reactions. Here, we report a correlation between the donor-acceptor distance (DAD) distribution and intrinsic kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) for the dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) catalyzed reaction. This study compares the nature of the hydride-transfer step for a series of active-site mutants, where the size of a side chain that modulates the DAD (I14 in E. coli DHFR) is systematically reduced (I14V, I14A, and I14G). The contributions of the DAD and its dynamics to the hydride-transfer step were examined by the temperature dependence of intrinsic KIEs, hydride-transfer rates, activation parameters, and classical molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. Results are interpreted within the framework of the Marcus-like model where the increase in the temperature dependence of KIEs arises as a direct consequence of the deviation of the DAD from its distribution in the wild type enzyme. Classical MD simulations suggest new populations with larger average DADs, as well as broader distributions, and a reduction in the population of the reactive conformers correlated with the decrease in the size of the hydrophobic residue. The more flexible active site in the mutants required more substantial thermally activated motions for effective H-tunneling, consistent with the hypothesis that the role of the hydrophobic side chain of I14 is to restrict the distribution and dynamics of the DAD and thus assist the hydride-transfer. These studies establish relationships between the distribution of DADs, the hydride-transfer rates, and the DAD's rearrangement toward tunneling-ready states. This structure-function correlation shall assist in the interpretation of the temperature dependence of KIEs caused by mutants far from the active site in this and other enzymes, and may apply generally to C-H→C transfer reactions.  相似文献   

8.
The reaction catalyzed by the protein phosphatase-1 (PP1) has been examined by linear free energy relationships and kinetic isotope effects. With the substrate 4-nitrophenyl phosphate (4NPP), the reaction exhibits a bell-shaped pH-rate profile for kcat/KM indicative of catalysis by both acidic and basic residues, with kinetic pKa values of 6.0 and 7.2. The enzymatic hydrolysis of a series of aryl monoester substrates yields a Br?nsted beta(lg) of -0.32, considerably less negative than that of the uncatalyzed hydrolysis of monoester dianions (-1.23). Kinetic isotope effects in the leaving group with the substrate 4NPP are (18)(V/K) bridge = 1.0170 and (15)(V/K) = 1.0010, which, compared against other enzymatic KIEs with and without general acid catalysis, are consistent with a loose transition state with partial neutralization of the leaving group. PP1 also efficiently catalyzes the hydrolysis of 4-nitrophenyl methylphosphonate (4NPMP). The enzymatic hydrolysis of a series of aryl methylphosphonate substrates yields a Br?nsted beta(lg) of -0.30, smaller than the alkaline hydrolysis (-0.69) and similar to the beta(lg) measured for monoester substrates, indicative of similar transition states. The KIEs and the beta(lg) data point to a transition state for the alkaline hydrolysis of 4NPMP that is similar to that of diesters with the same leaving group. For the enzymatic reaction of 4NPMP, the KIEs are indicative of a transition state that is somewhat looser than the alkaline hydrolysis reaction and similar to the PP1-catalyzed monoester reaction. The data cumulatively point to enzymatic transition states for aryl phosphate monoester and aryl methylphosphonate hydrolysis reactions that are much more similar to one another than the nonenzymatic hydrolysis reactions of the two substrates.  相似文献   

9.
The temperature dependence of the primary kinetic isotope effect (KIE), combined temperature-pressure studies of the primary KIE, and studies of the alpha-secondary KIE previously led us to infer that hydride transfer from nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide to flavin mononucleotide in morphinone reductase proceeds via environmentally coupled hydride tunneling. We present here a computational analysis of this hydride transfer reaction using QM/MM molecular dynamics simulations and variational transition-state theory calculations. Our calculated primary and secondary KIEs are in good agreement with the corresponding experimental values. Although the experimentally observed KIE lies below the semiclassical limit, our calculations suggest that approximately 99% of the reaction proceeds via tunneling: this is the first "deep tunneling" reaction observed for hydride transfer. We also show that the dominant tunneling mechanism is controlled by the isotope at the primary rather than the secondary position: with protium in the primary position, large-curvature tunneling dominates, whereas with deuterium in this position, small-curvature tunneling dominates. Also, our study is consistent with tunneling being preceded by reorganization: in the reactant, the rings of the nicotinamide and isoalloxazine moieties are stacked roughly parallel to each other, and as the system moves toward a "tunneling-ready" configuration, the nicotinamide ring rotates to become almost perpendicular to the isoalloxazine ring.  相似文献   

10.
Using alpha-secondary kinetic isotope effects (2 degrees KIEs) in conjunction with primary (1 degrees ) KIEs, we have investigated the mechanism of environmentally coupled hydrogen tunneling in the reductive half-reactions of two homologous flavoenzymes, morphinone reductase (MR) and pentaerythritol tetranitrate reductase (PETNR). We find exalted 2 degrees KIEs (1.17-1.18) for both enzymes, consistent with hydrogen tunneling. These 2 degrees KIEs, unlike 1 degrees KIEs, are independent of promoting motions-a nonequilibrium pre-organization of cofactor and active site residues that is required to bring the reactants into a "tunneling-ready" configuration. That these 2 degrees KIEs are identical suggests the geometries of the "tunneling-ready" configurations in both enzymes are indistinguishable, despite the fact that MR, but not PETNR, has a clearly temperature-dependent 1 degrees KIE. The work emphasizes the benefit of combining studies of 1 degrees and 2 degrees KIEs to report on pre-organization and local geometries within the context of contemporary environmentally coupled frameworks for H-tunneling.  相似文献   

11.
The catalytic promiscuity of E. coli alkaline phosphatase (AP) and many other enzymes provides a unique opportunity to dissect the origin of enzymatic rate enhancements via a comparative approach. Here, we use kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) to explore the origin of the 109-fold greater catalytic proficiency by AP for phosphate monoester hydrolysis relative to sulfate monoester hydrolysis. The primary 18O KIEs for the leaving group oxygen atoms in the AP-catalyzed hydrolysis of p-nitrophenyl phosphate (pNPP) and p-nitrophenylsulfate (pNPS) decrease relative to the values observed for nonenzymatic hydrolysis reactions. Prior linear free energy relationship results suggest that the transition states for AP-catalyzed reactions of phosphate and sulfate esters are "loose" and indistinguishable from that in solution, suggesting that the decreased primary KIEs do not reflect a change in the nature of the transition state but rather a strong interaction of the leaving group oxygen atom with an active site Zn2+ ion. Furthermore, the primary KIEs for the two reactions are identical within error, suggesting that the differential catalysis of these reactions cannot be attributed to differential stabilization of the leaving group. In contrast, AP perturbs the KIE for the nonbridging oxygen atoms in the reaction of pNPP but not pNPS, suggesting a differential interaction with the transferred group in the transition state. These and prior results are consistent with a strong electrostatic interaction between the active site bimetallo Zn2+ cluster and one of the nonbridging oxygen atoms on the transferred group. We suggest that the lower charge density of this oxygen atom on a transferred sulfuryl group accounts for a large fraction of the decreased stabilization of the transition state for its reaction relative to phosphoryl transfer.  相似文献   

12.
It has been suggested that the magnitudes of secondary kinetic isotope effects (2 degrees KIEs) of enzyme-catalyzed reactions are an indicator of the extent of reaction-center rehybridization at the transition state. A 2 degrees KIE value close to the corresponding secondary equilibrium isotope effects (2 degrees EIE) is conventionally interpreted as indicating a late transition state that resembles the final product. The reliability of using this criterion to infer the structure of the transition state is examined by carrying out a theoretical investigation of the hybridization states of the hydride donor and acceptor in the Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase (ecDHFR)-catalyzed reaction for which a 2 degrees KIE close to the 2 degrees EIE was reported. Our results show that the donor carbon at the hydride transfer transition state resembles the reactant state more than the product state, whereas the acceptor carbon is more productlike, which is a symptom of transition state imbalance. The conclusion that the isotopically substituted carbon is reactant-like disagrees with the conclusion that would have been derived from the criterion of 2 degrees KIEs and 2 degrees EIEs, but the breakdown of the correlation with the equilibrium isotope effect can be explained by considering the effect of tunneling.  相似文献   

13.
In recent years, the temperature dependence of primary kinetic isotope effects (KIE) has been used as indicator for the physical nature of enzyme-catalyzed H-transfer reactions. An interactive study where experimental data and calculations examine the same chemical transformation is a critical means to interpret more properly temperature dependence of KIEs. Here, the rate-limiting step of the thymidylate synthase-catalyzed reaction has been studied by means of hybrid quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics (QM/MM) simulations in the theoretical framework of the ensemble-averaged variational transition-state theory with multidimensional tunneling (EA-VTST/MT) combined with Grote-Hynes theory. The KIEs were calculated across the same temperature range examined experimentally, revealing a temperature independent behavior, in agreement with experimental findings. The calculations show that the H-transfer proceeds with ~91% by tunneling in the case of protium and ~80% when the transferred protium is replaced by tritium. Dynamic recrossing coefficients are almost invariant with temperature and in all cases far from unity, showing significant coupling between protein motions and the reaction coordinate. In particular, the relative movement of a conserved arginine (Arg166 in Escherichia coli ) promotes the departure of a conserved cysteine (Cys146 in E. coli ) from the dUMP by polarizing the thioether bond thus facilitating this bond breaking that takes place concomitantly with the hydride transfer. These promoting vibrations of the enzyme, which represent some of the dimensions of the real reaction coordinate, would limit the search through configurational space to efficiently find those decreasing both barrier height and width, thereby enhancing the probability of H-transfer by either tunneling (through barrier) or classical (over-the-barrier) mechanisms. In other words, the thermal fluctuations that are coupled to the reaction coordinate, together with transition-state geometries and tunneling, are the same in different bath temperatures (within the limited experimental range examined). All these terms contribute to the observed temperature independent KIEs in thymidylate synthase.  相似文献   

14.
Although there are considerable data demonstrating that quantum mechanical hydrogen tunneling (HT) occurs in both enzymatic and nonenzymatic systems, little data exist that address the question of whether enzymes enhance the amount of HT relative to the corresponding nonenzymatic reactions. To investigate whether 3-oxo-Delta (5)-steroid isomerase (ketosteroid isomerase, KSI) enhances HT relative to the nonenzymatic (acetate-catalyzed) isomerization of Delta (5)-androstene-3,17-dione ( 1) to Delta (4)-androstene-3,17-dione ( 3), alpha-secondary deuterium kinetic isotope effects (KIE) at C-6 of the steroid were determined for both the KSI- and acetate-catalyzed isomerizations. The normal intrinsic secondary KIE for both wild type (WT) KSI (1.073 +/- 0.023) and acetate (1.031 +/- 0.010) suggest the possibility of coupled motion (CM)/HT in both the enzymatic and nonenzymatic systems. To assess the contribution of CM/HT in these reactions, the secondary KIE were also measured under conditions in which deuterium instead of hydrogen is transferred. The decrease in secondary KIE for WT (1.035 +/- 0.011) indicates the presence of CM/HT in the enzymatic reaction, whereas the acetate reaction shows no change in secondary KIE for deuterium transfer (1.030 +/- 0.009) and therefore no evidence for CM/HT. On the basis of these experiments, we propose that KSI enhances the CM/HT contribution to the rate acceleration over the solution reaction. Active site mutants of KSI (Y14F and D99A) yield secondary KIEs similar to that of WT, indicating that mutations at the hydrogen-bonding residues do not significantly decrease the contribution of CM/HT to the KSI reaction.  相似文献   

15.
Kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) were measured for methyl glucoside (4) hydrolysis on unlabeled material by NMR. Twenty-eight (13)C KIEs were measured on the acid-catalyzed hydrolysis of alpha-4 and beta-4, as well as enzymatic hydrolyses with yeast alpha-glucosidase and almond beta-glucosidase. The 1-(13)C KIEs on the acid-catalyzed reactions of alpha-4 and beta-4, 1.007(2) and 1.010(6), respectively, were in excellent agreement with the previously reported values (1.007(1), 1.011(2): Bennet and Sinnott, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1986, 108, 7287). Transition state analysis of the acid-catalyzed reactions using the (13)C KIEs, along with the previously reported (2)H KIEs, confirmed that both reactions proceed with a stepwise D(N)A(N) mechanism and showed that the glucosyl oxocarbenium ion intermediate exists in an E(3) sofa or (4)H(3) half-chair conformation. (13)C KIEs showed that the alpha-glucosidase reaction also proceeded through a D(N)*A(N) mechanism, with a 1-(13)C KIE of 1.010(4). The secondary (13)C KIEs showed evidence of distortions in the glucosyl ring at the transition state. For the beta-glucosidase-catalyzed reaction, the 1-(13)C KIE of 1.032(1) demonstrated a concerted A(N)D(N) mechanism. The pattern of secondary (13)C KIEs was similar to the acid-catalyzed reaction, showing no signs of distortion. KIE measurement at natural abundance makes it possible to determine KIEs much more quickly than previously, both by increasing the speed of KIE measurement and by obviating the need for synthesis of isotopically labeled compounds.  相似文献   

16.
Activated oxygen intermediates during copper zinc superoxide dismutase (SOD) catalysis were investigated using an isotope fractionation technique and natural abundance reagents. Competitive oxygen kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) are reported for the enzyme-catalyzed disproportionation of superoxide as well as the stoichiometric reaction of reduced SOD with molecular oxygen. Analysis within the context of quantum mechanical electron transfer theory provides evidence against an outer-sphere mechanism for O2*- oxidation. A CuII-O2-I intermediate is, therefore, proposed. The SOD-catalyzed oxidation of O2*- is characterized by an inverse (<1) KIE which is similar to those determined for the analogous reactions of synthetic copper compounds. An inverse kinetic isotope effect upon the enzymatic reduction of O2*- is also observed and proposed to arise from rate-determining proton transfer which leads to the formation of HO2* in the SOD active site.  相似文献   

17.
A model is presented for coupled hydrogen-electron transfer reactions in condensed phase in the presence of a rate promoting vibration. Large kinetic isotope effects (KIEs) are found when the hydrogen is substituted with deuterium. While these KIEs are essentially temperature independent, reaction rates do exhibit temperature dependence. These findings agree with recent experimental data for various enzyme-catalyzed reactions, such as the amine dehydrogenases and soybean lipoxygenase. Consistent with earlier results, turning off the promoting vibration results in an increased KIE. Increasing the barrier height increases the KIE, while increasing the rate of electron transfer decreases it. These results are discussed in light of other views of vibrationally enhanced tunneling in enzymes.  相似文献   

18.
Understanding the reaction mechanism underlying the functionalization of C−H bonds by an enzymatic process is one of the most challenging issues in catalysis. Here, combined approaches using density functional theory (DFT) analysis and transient kinetics were employed to investigate the reaction mechanism of C−H bond oxidation in d -glucose, catalyzed by the enzyme pyranose 2-oxidase (P2O). Unlike the mechanisms that have been conventionally proposed, our findings show that the first step of the C−H bond oxidation reaction is a hydride transfer from the C2 position of d -glucose to N5 of the flavin to generate a protonated ketone sugar intermediate. The proton is then transferred from the protonated ketone intermediate to a conserved residue, His548. The results show for the first time how specific interactions around the sugar binding site promote the hydride transfer and formation of the protonated ketone intermediate. The DFT results are also consistent with experimental results including the enthalpy of activation obtained from Eyring plots, as well as the results of kinetic isotope effect and site-directed mutagenesis studies. The mechanistic model obtained from this work may also be relevant to other reactions of various flavoenzyme oxidases that are generally used as biocatalysts in biotechnology applications.  相似文献   

19.
The intramolecular kinetic isotope effect (KIE) for hydride transfer from 10-methyl-9,10-dihydroacridine to 1-benzyl-3-cyanoquinolinium ion has been found to be 5-6 by both (1)H NMR and mass spectrometry. This KIE is consistent with other hydride transfers. It is inconsistent with the high intermolecular KIEs derived by fitting to a two-step mechanism with a kinetically significant intermediate complex, and it is inconsistent with the strong temperature dependence of those KIEs. We therefore reject the two-step mechanism for this reaction, and we suggest that other cases proposed to follow this mechanism are in error.  相似文献   

20.
The isochorismate-pyruvate lyase from Pseudomonas aeruginosa (PchB) catalyzes two pericyclic reactions, demonstrating the eponymous activity and also chorismate mutase activity. The thermodynamic parameters for these enzyme-catalyzed activities, as well as the uncatalyzed isochorismate decomposition, are reported from temperature dependence of k(cat) and k(uncat) data. The entropic effects do not contribute to enzyme catalysis as expected from previously reported chorismate mutase data. Indeed, an entropic penalty for the enzyme-catalyzed mutase reaction (ΔS(++) = -12.1 ± 0.6 cal/(mol K)) is comparable to that of the previously reported uncatalyzed reaction, whereas that of the enzyme-catalyzed lyase reaction (ΔS(++) = -24.3 ± 0.2 cal/(mol K)) is larger than that of the uncatalyzed lyase reaction (-15.77 ± 0.02 cal/(mol K)) documented here. With the assumption that chemistry is rate-limiting, we propose that a reactive substrate conformation is formed upon loop closure of the active site and that ordering of the loop contributes to the entropic penalty for converting the enzyme substrate complex to the transition state.  相似文献   

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