
Allosteric Activation of the Hydrolysis of Specific Substrates by Chymotrypsin
Author(s) -
ERLANGER Bernard F.,
WASSERMANN Norbert H.,
COOPER Anne G.,
MONK Raymond J.
Publication year - 1976
Publication title -
european journal of biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1432-1033
pISSN - 0014-2956
DOI - 10.1111/j.1432-1033.1976.tb10021.x
Subject(s) - chemistry , allosteric regulation , chymotrypsin , hydrolysis , enzyme kinetics , stereochemistry , active site , esterase , medicinal chemistry , enzyme , organic chemistry , trypsin
A variety of azobenzene compounds having bis‐quaternary nitrogens have been shown to accelerate the hydrolyis by chymotrypsin of certain specific substrates by an allosteric mechanism. One of the most potent, 2,2′‐bis[α‐(benzyldimethylammonium)methyl]azobenzene dibromide (2,2′‐Q‐Bzl) accelerated the hydrolysis of glutaryl‐ l ‐phenylalanine p‐nitroanilide 40‐fold at saturating concentration. Acceleration was by increasing k cat without altering K m . The hydrolysis of acetyl‐ l ‐tyrosine p‐nitroanilide and acetyl‐ l ‐tyrosine anilide was also accelerated by Q‐Bzl (25‐fold and 1.8‐fold respectively) while the hydrolysis of hemoglobin, azocoll and a number of esters was not affected. The inactivation of chymotrypsin by diphenylcarbamyl chloride and diphenylcarbamyl fluoride was accelerated by 2,2′‐Q‐Bzl. Reactivation in the presence of NH 2 OH was also accelerated, but in the absence of added nucleophile (i.e. of NH 2 OH) no increase in rate was detectable. An allosteric effector was covalently attached to chymotrypsinogen A by reaction with 2,2′‐bis[α‐(o‐bromomethylbenzyldimethylammonium)methyl]azobenezene dibromide. The product, when converted to active enzyme, was about 4 times more active than chymotrypsin as a result of an increase in k cat of hydrolysis; K m was unaffected. The mechanism of the allosteric acceleration process is not known but, because for all of the substrates affected acylation of the enzyme is rate‐limiting, it is tentatively suggested that the effectors facilitate proton transfer to the leaving group by an inductive effect on the ‘charge relay system’. Spectral studies indicate that the allosteric site is a portion of the enzyme with a polarity near that of water, possibly on the outside surface of the enzyme molecule.