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Page 1: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Lecture 9: Metals & EnzymesOct. 24th

Page 2: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Role of metals in basic geobiochemical cycles

Morel & Price Science (2003) 300:944

N cycle

Page 3: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Metalloproteins • in vivo metal concentrations (E. coli)

– K, Mg 108 atoms/cell ~10 mM– Ca, Zn, Fe 105 atoms/cell ~ 0.1 mM– Cu, Mn, Mo 104 atoms/cell ~ 10 µM– V, Co, Ni low abundance

• Estimated ~1/3 of all proteins contain metals– Na, Mg, K, Ca– V, Mn, Fe, Co, Ni, Cu, Zn– Mo, Cd, W

• Metalloproteomics:– Structural and functional annotation of

proteins in structural genomics– Shi et al Structure (2005)13:1473

• 10-15% contain stoichiometric amounts of transition metals

Finney & O’Halloran Science (2003) 300:931

Page 4: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Proteinligands• Majorligands

– Cys,His,Asp,Glu• Rarerexamples

– Met (cytochromec,azurin)– Tyr (dioxygenase,catalase)– Asn (Cabindingproteins,lipoxygenase)– Gln (subBlisinCa,stellacyanin?)– Ser (MoFe-protein,ferredoxins,DMSOreductase)– Lys (phosphoenolpyruvatecarboxykinase)– carbonylO (Ca2+sites)– amideN (Pcluster/nitrilehydratase)– aminoN (cytochromef,CooA(pro))– carboxyC (lipoxygenase),– formylMet (MgofBchlinLH2)– Arg (bioBnsynthase)– Trp? noexamplesyet;Trpasradical-CytCperoxidase

Page 5: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Idealized coordination geometries

Typical metal-ligand distances for first row metals:M - O/N 2.0-2.1 ÅM - S 2.3 Å

His/Glu/Asp coord

Smallest coordination motifs 3 res - sq planar - A-cluster Carbon monoxide

dehydrogenase-aCoA (1mjg) 6 res - sq planar - Nitrile hydratase 14 res - Tetr- some Zn fingers 12 res - Oct - calcium sites

Harding Acta Cryst (2006) D62:678

HN

N

Nε2

Nδ1

HN

N

M

M

Hpreferredmonoprotonated

preferred in proteins (75%)

preferred in peptides

C

O

O

C

O

O

anti

syn

bidentate-1 -1

tetrahedral octahedral trigonal bipyramid square planar

Page 6: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

distribution of Zn - N His in high resolution protein structures (res < 1.6 Å), relative to d = 2.00 Å observed in small molecule structures

Zn - O distances in PDB structures with bidentate carboxylate ligands(both d < 3.00 Å)

Distribution of metal ligand distances in protein structures

Harding Acta Cryst (2006) D62:678

Page 7: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Mg2+?

2.78

2.11

2.122.12,2.13 W2.39

2.29

Aldehyde ferredoxin oxidoreductaseChan et al Science (1995) 267:1463 (1aor)

Common components in protein solutions - often at high concIon M••O (Å) ion rad (Å) Favored coord num.Na+ 2.42 0.95 6Mg2+ 2.07 0.65 6K+ 2.84 1.33 7-8Ca2+ 2.39 0.99 6-8H2O ~2.8 4

Distinguishing Na+, Mg2+, K+, ( Ca2+) from H2O

?

Harding Acta Cryst (2006) D62:678

Page 8: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

• Metal composition and quantitation:– ICP-MS (inductively coupled plasma - mass spectrometry)– atomic absorption– chemical methods

• Protein quantitation – protein - most difficult in practice - colorimetric methods– can be off by 100%+/-

• Nitrogenase– FeMo-cofactor - 1Mo:5-8Fe:6-9S (actual 1:7:9)

• Prismane protein with “6Fe:6S cluster” – Actually 4Fe:4S and 4Fe:3S:2O clusters

Characterization of metal sites: Stoichiometry

Page 9: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Howard & Rees Adv Prot Chem (1991) 42:199

Non-crystallographic methods for

characterizing metal centers

Page 10: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

1.0 Å 1.0 Å1.3 Å1.0 Å1.3 Å2.0 Å

r = 2.0 Å

1.0Å1.3Å2.0Å3.0Å

dmax

Resolution dependence of electron density profiles…get negative ripples at ~resolution from scatterers

Crystallographic characterization of metal sites: resolution, accuracy elemental and oxidation state identity

ρ r( ) = 4πs2 fFe s( )0

1 dmax

∫ sin2πsr2πsr

ds

Page 11: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Nitrogenase FeMo-cofactor 7Fe:1Mo:9S:homocitrate

Initial map3.5Å resolution

First “official” model2.8 Å resolution

2.2 Å resolution

Page 12: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Einsle et al Science (2002) 297:1696

6 Fe @ 2.0 Å and 9 S @ 3.3 Å from central ligand generate resolution dependent ripples at this site

FeMo-cofactor at 1.16Å resolution

A central light atom ligand (C)

Page 13: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Thelightatom!ItisCarbon!!

Spatzal..Rees&EinsleScience(2011)334:940 Lancaster..DeBeerScience(2011)334:974

X-rayemissionspectroscopy

Carbon

Nitrogen

Oxygen

Page 14: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Hintsatmechanism

Spatzal..Einsle,Howard&ReesScience(2014)345:1620 Anderson,Rifle&PetersNature(2013)501:84

Page 15: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Enzymes – biological catalysts• Not altered by reaction• Don’t change the

equilibrium (Keq)• Lower the activation

barrier• Unique

microenvironment (the active site)

• High specificity and efficiency

Catalyst Rate EnhancementPalladium (i.e.) 102-104

Enzyme >1020

E + S ⇋ ES ⇋ ES* ⇋ EP ⇋ E + P

Page 16: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Terminology• Typically ends in -ase• Established by IUBMB (1992)• EC numbers to classify enzymes

– EC 1 Oxidoreductases: catalyze oxidation/reduction– EC 2 Transferases: transfer a functional group– EC 3 Hydrolases: catalyze the hydrolysis of various bonds– EC 4 Lyases: cleave various bonds by means other than

hydrolysis and oxidation– EC 5 Isomerases: catalyze isomerization changes in a

molecule– EC 6 Ligases: join two molecules with covalent bonds

http://www.chem.qmul.ac.uk/iubmb/enzyme/

Page 17: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

EC 1 Oxidoreductases

EC 1.1 Acting on the CH-OH group of donors EC 1.17 Acting on CH or CH2 groups

EC 1.2 Acting on the aldehyde or oxo of donors EC 1.18 Acting on iron-sulfur proteins as donors

EC 1.3 Acting on the CH-CH group of donors EC 1.19 Acting on reduced flavodoxin as donor

EC 1.4 Acting on the CH-NH2 group of donors EC 1.20 Acting on phosphorus or arsenic in donors

EC 1.5 Acting on the CH-NH group of donors EC 1.21 Acting on X-H and Y-H to form an X-Y bond

EC 1.6 Acting on NADH or NADPH EC 1.22 Acting on halogen in donors

EC 1.7 Acting on other nitrogenous compounds as donors EC 1.97 Other oxidoreductases

EC 1.8 Acting on a sulfur group of donors EC 2 Transferases

EC 1.9 Acting on a heme group of donors EC 2.1 Transferring one-carbon groups

EC 1.10 Acting on diphenols and related substances as donors

EC 2.2 Transferring aldehyde or ketonic groups

EC 1.11 Acting on a peroxide as acceptor EC 2.3 Acyltransferases

EC 1.12 Acting on hydrogen as donor EC 2.4 Glycosyltransferases

EC 1.13 Acting on single donors with incorporation of molecular oxygen (oxygenases)

EC 2.5 Transferring alkyl or aryl groups, other than methyl groups

EC 1.14 Acting on paired donors, with incorporation or reduction of molecular oxygen

EC 2.6 Transferring nitrogenous groups

EC 1.15 Acting on superoxide radicals as acceptor EC 2.7 Transferring phosphorus-containing groups

EC 1.16 Oxidising metal ions EC 2.8 Transferring sulfur-containing groups

Page 18: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

http://www.genome.jp/dbget-bin/www_bget?ec:1.1.1.1

Example

Page 19: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Rate enhancement of enzymesEnzyme Uncatalyzed

rate (s-1)Catalyzed rate (s-1)

Rate enhancement

OMP decarboxylase 2.8 x 10-16 39 1.4 x 1017

Staphylococcus nuclease 1.7 x 10-13 95 5.6 x 1014

AMP nucleosidase 1.0 x 10-11 60 6.0 x 1012

Carboxypeptidase A 3.0 x 10-9 578 1.9 x 1011

Ketosteroid isomerase 1.7 x 10-7 66,000 3.9 x 1011

Triose phosphate isomerase 4.3 x 10-6 4,300 1.0 x 109

Chorismate mutase 2.6 x 10-5 50 1.9 x 106

Carbonic anhydrase 1.3 x 10-1 1,000,000 7.7 x 106

Cyclophilin 2.8 x 10-2 13,000 4.6 x 105

Radzicka & Wolfenden (1995) Science 267:90Rate enhancement is the catalyzed/uncatalyzed rates

Universeis1.4x1010

Page 20: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Reaction energetics• ΔG=ΔH-TΔS• ΔG=Gproducts-Greactants• ΔG < 0

– Proceeds forward– Exergonic (energy released)

• ΔG = 0 – At equlibrium– No net reaction

• ΔG > 0 – reaction goes in reverse– Endergonic (energy input)

• How do you get ΔG > 0 to move forward? Couple it to a ΔG < 0 reaction.

vF = kF S[ ]eqvR = kR P[ ]eqvF = vR∴kF S[ ]eq = kR P[ ]eq

Keq =P[ ]eqS[ ]eq

=kFkR

S" P"kF"kR"

Page 21: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Transition state theory

Page 22: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Carbonic anhydrase

Fig. 5.1 & 5.2

ES ES‡ EI

CatalyzesthehydraBonofcarbondioxide

α(2CBB)

β(1I6P)

γ(1QRE)

Page 23: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Ribonucleotide reductase

Fig. 5.3 & 5.4

Tetrameric Class ITetrameric Class III

Dimer shown

Dimeric Class II Monomeric Class I

Catalytic subunits in blue

Page 24: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

CatalyBcsubunit

ClassI&II

ClassIII

Page 25: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Two binding sites - multiple binding modes

Effector Substrate binding

dGTP dATP

dCTPDifferentbindingmodesoflooptoeffectacBvesite

Page 26: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Catalytic mechanism

Fig. 5.10

Free radical

Nordlund&Reinhard(2006)

Page 27: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Nucleotide hydrolases• Many different

nucleotide motifs– Gly-rich loop interacting

with P (Walker A/P-loop)– Aspartate to coordinate

Mg+2 (Walker B)• Needs a general base• Needs a positively

charged residue to stabilize build-up of negative charge

• Assembly of active site controls rate of NTP hydrolysis

• NTP binding sites often at subunit or domain interfacesCouples hydrolysis to conformational changes

Page 28: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Energetics• Concentrations

– [ATP] = 10mM– [ADP] = 0.1mM– [Pi] = 10mM

• ATP requirement– ~70kg person at rest

produces ~100 watts with a voltage drop of ~1.1V

– ~90 amps of current– ~2.6 ATP synthesized/

2e-

– ~50kg ATP synthesized daily

– ATP stores last 1-2 sec

ATP→ADP + Pi

ΔG = ΔG°'+RT ln ADP[ ] Pi[ ]ATP[ ]

$

% &

'

( )

ΔG = −30 + 2.5ln 10−6

10−2$

% &

'

( )

= −30 − 23= −53kJ /mole

ΔG˚´isthestandardstatefreeenergychangeNeed~6kJ/moletogetanorderofmagnituderaBochange

Page 29: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Cellular nucleotide requirements• Metabolic reactions – mechanistic or energetic

requirements• Transcription/replication• Mechanical – transport, motility, unfolding, unwinding• Signaling

• In E. coli, ~56% of ATP utilized for protein synthesis• In nitrogen fixing organisms, ~40% of ATP for NH3

synthesis• In humans, substantial requirement for Na+/K+ ion

gradients

Page 30: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

P-loop containing NTPases

SCOP classification (22 Families)http://scop.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/scop/data/scop.b.d.fb.A.html

CATH: 3.40.50.300 (149 Families)

Myosin (actin) & Kinesin (MTs)

ATPases associated with a variety of activities

Page 31: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

The glycine-rich loop• Nucleotide binding motif• P-loop or Walker-A• Examples

– GXXGXGK(S/T) – mononucleotide (Ras)

– GXGXXG – Dinucleotide (NAD in lactate dehydrogenase)

– GXGXXG – Protein kinase C– GXXG – Actin, hexokinase– GXXGXG – “GHKL”

domains – gyrases, histidine kinases

6q21 – Ras/GMPPCP

Page 32: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium
Page 33: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Ras(GTP)on

Ras(GDP)off

GDPGTPRas

Very unstable

0.02 min-1

GAPs 105X

GNEF/GEF

Ras has a slow off rate for GDP (~1.5 hr)

GDPGTP

Ras cycle

Effector

Effector*

30% of human tumors have altered versions of ras with mutations that retard GTP hydrolysis and leave in “on” state.

Page 34: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Ras-GTP vs Ras-GDP

Switch IT35 interacts

with Mg+2

Switch IIDXXGQ

D57 – Mg+2G60- γP

P-loop/Walker A6q21 GTP (Cyan)4q21 GDP (Green)

Switch loops sense γPiLeads to conformational changes

Mutations in G12 or Q61 most common in cancers

Page 35: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

GAP – GTPase Activating Protein

• Used AlF – mimics a transition state?

• Ras-GAP-GDP-AlF3

• “arg finger” hypothesis

Scheffzek..Wittinghofer (1997) Science 277:333

Page 36: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Ras-RasGAP structure

1wq1Ras

p120 - GAP

Page 37: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Respiratory chain‘Chemiosmosis’ or ‘osmotic energy’

• Protons are pumped across the membrane by complexes– I NADH dehydrogenase– III (cytochrome bc1

complex)– IV (cytochrome c oxidase)– (II – succinate

dehydrogenase doesn’t pump)

• The gradient drives ATP synthesis

Fig. 5.11

PeterMitchellNobelChemistry1978(proposed1961)

Page 38: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

ATP Synthase

Fig. 5.12 & 5.13

Page 39: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Structure of the F1 subunit

Fig. 5.14 & 5.15

1e79

α3β3γ

The asymmetric γ subunit has different contacts with the other subunits. This leads to conformational changes and differences in the nucleotide binding pocket in the β-subunits.

Abrahams et al. (1994) Nature 370:621

Page 40: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Model

• Model first proposed by Paul Boyer• In solution the reaction proceeds as shown• Synthesis is driven in reverse by the proton gradient

Fig. 5.17

Page 41: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Proof of principle

Fig. 5.18

Noji et al (1997) Nature 386:299

Page 42: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium
Page 43: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Active site

Fig. 5.19

Page 44: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium
Page 45: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Fo subunit

Fig. 5.20 & 5.22

Page 46: Lecture 9: Metals & Enzymes Oct. 24thsaf.bio.caltech.edu/bi170/BMB170_2017_LECTURE9.pdf · Enzymes – biological catalysts • Not altered by reaction • Don’t change the equilibrium

Animatedmodel

GrahamJohnsonwww.fiVth.com