S'identifier

Allosteric regulation of enzymes occurs when the binding of an effector molecule to a site that is different from the active site causes a change in the enzymatic activity. This alternate site is called an allosteric site, and an enzyme can contain more than one of these sites. Allosteric regulation can either be positive or negative, resulting in an increase or decrease in enzyme activity. Most enzymes that display allosteric regulation are metabolic enzymes involved in the degradation or synthesis of specific cellular molecules.

Allosteric Inhibition

In allosteric inhibition, the binding of an effector molecule to the allosteric site causes a conformational change that reduces the affinity of the enzyme for the substrate. Frequently, the allosteric inhibitor is a product of the enzyme or the enzyme pathway, allowing enzymatic products to limit their own production. This type of feedback inhibition prevents overproduction of products. As a classic example, isoleucine is an allosteric inhibitor of an enzyme important in its own synthesis.

Allosteric Activation

In contrast, an allosteric activator causes a conformational change that increases the affinity of the enzyme for its substrate. Allosteric activation dramatically increases the rate of reaction, as represented by the hyperbolic curve on a reaction rate versus substrate concentration graph. As an example, extracellular ligand binding to the transmembrane EGF receptor causes a conformational change that results in an increase in the intracellular kinase activity of the receptor. If an enzyme is composed of multiple subunits, binding of an allosteric activator to a single subunit can cause an increase in affinity and shape change for all of the affiliated subunits.

Suggested Reading

Tags

Allosteric RegulationEnzyme ControlAllosteric SiteConformational ChangeShape ChangeAffinitySubstrate Concentration GraphAllosteric ActivationPositive S shaped CurveLag TimeSubstrate BindingRapid Reaction SpeedEffector MoleculeAllosteric InhibitionEnzyme FunctionChemical Reaction RateEnzymatic Activity

Du chapitre 7:

article

Now Playing

7.14 : Allosteric Regulation

Metabolism

57.0K Vues

article

7.1 : What is Metabolism?

Metabolism

111.7K Vues

article

7.2 : First Law of Thermodynamics

Metabolism

60.1K Vues

article

7.3 : Second Law of Thermodynamics

Metabolism

56.0K Vues

article

7.4 : Kinetic Energy

Metabolism

38.4K Vues

article

7.5 : Potential Energy

Metabolism

38.0K Vues

article

7.6 : Free Energy

Metabolism

47.4K Vues

article

7.7 : Activation Energy

Metabolism

77.6K Vues

article

7.8 : Hydrolysis of ATP

Metabolism

73.9K Vues

article

7.9 : Phosphorylation

Metabolism

49.1K Vues

article

7.10 : Induced-fit Model

Metabolism

79.6K Vues

article

7.11 : Enzyme Kinetics

Metabolism

94.6K Vues

article

7.12 : Enzyme Inhibition

Metabolism

77.2K Vues

article

7.13 : Feedback Inhibition

Metabolism

53.2K Vues

article

7.15 : Cofactors and Coenzymes

Metabolism

80.2K Vues

JoVE Logo

Confidentialité

Conditions d'utilisation

Politiques

Recherche

Enseignement

À PROPOS DE JoVE

Copyright © 2025 MyJoVE Corporation. Tous droits réservés.