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001-es BibID:BIBFORM005993
Első szerző:Somogyi Béla (biofizikus)
Cím:The dynamic basis of energy transduction in enzymes / Béla Somogyi, G. Rickey Welch, Sándor Damjanovich
Dátum:1984
ISSN:0304-4173
Megjegyzések:The most important idea underlying our treatment herein is the unity of the enzyme molecule and the medium. Appreciation of this relationship is vital, if enzymology is to graduate from its present reductionistic status to a more holistic posture. Enzymes are biological entities firstly, and isolated objects of physicochemical analysis secondly. Perhaps the most crucial 'biological lesson', particularly apropos of enzymes in intermediary metabolism, concerns the 'cytosociology' of enzyme action in vivo [94,128]. The natural habitat of many enzymes in the living cell is far different from that in bulk aqueous solution in vitro. In order to obtain a real grasp of the nature of enzyme function, one must ultimately couch enzymology in concepts emerging from contemporary cell biology [95]. Notwithstanding, analysis precedes synthesis; and one must needs begin with the individual enzyme molecule. The trenchant efforts of the physical chemist and the organic chemist have produced a wealth of information on the nature of the binding and catalytic events at the enzyme active site. While it is not yet possible to explain precisely the complete sequence of events in the catalytic process, nevertheless, the basic mechanisms by which enzymes effect catalysis (i.e., reduce activation energy) now seem apparent [81,129]. The new frontier is to be found, in exploring the dynamic role of the protein matrix [17]. Not only does the protein provide the 3-D scaffolding for active-site processes, but, more importantly, it serves as the local solvent for the bound chemical subsystem. Thus, the dynamical aspects of enzyme catalysis (for thermally based systems) must arise from the fluctuational properties of the protein molecule. This notion is the common denominator in all of the models in subsection IIC. It is the anisotropic nature of this fluctuational behavior, which would characterize the energy-transduction phenomenon leading to localized catalytic events at the active-site. In Section III we attempted to show that all of the various enzyme models contribute pieces to a single, all-embracing jig-saw puzzle. Some models focus on the dynamical properties of the protein per se, whereas others deal with the stochastic aspects of protein-solvent interaction. The two approaches are complementary, as are mutually interlocking pieces of a puzzle. The ultimate picture depicted by this 'jig-saw puzzle' is still somewhat vague--owing to the present paucity of empirical information on protein motions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
Tárgyszavak:Orvostudományok Elméleti orvostudományok idegen nyelvű folyóiratközlemény külföldi lapban
analysis
Binding Sites
Catalysis
chemistry
Cytoplasm
Diffusion
Electrochemistry
Energy Metabolism
Enzymes
enzymology
Hydrogen Bonding
In Vitro
Kinetics
metabolism
Models,Biological
Protein Conformation
Protons
Solvents
Thermodynamics
Viscosity
Water
Megjelenés:Biochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA). Reviews on Bioenergetics. - 768 : 2 (1984), p. 81-112. -
További szerzők:Welch, Rickey G. Damjanovich Sándor (1936-2017) (biofizikus)
Internet cím:Intézményi repozitóriumban (DEA) tárolt változat
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