A: What is an enzyme?

in #stemq6 years ago (edited)

Once upon a time, there was a molecule X. The molecule X was very stable with all its covalent bonds. But one day it was passing by this protein. The protein grabbed it at broke it into two small molecules. The Twitter of the molecular world went crazy, blaming the proteins as these evil giant molecules, who modify other molecules. In return many other proteins tweeted - #NotAllProtiens. They labelled the proteins responsible for modifying other molecules as 'Enzymes'.

IMG_20181119_111244.png


Image created using fake twitter message generator

Proteins vs enzymes

800px-Protein_folding.png

A protein is a polymer of Amino acid, that folds into a certain functional 3D structure
A public domain image

And, this is exactly where the difference lies. Proteins are just a long chain of amino acids, which fold onto itself to form a certain 3D structure. This 3D structures are just simple molecular machines, that does different functions to keep the cell or an organism alive. However, just because all proteins are made of amino acids that doesn't mean they do the same thing.

There are 20 amino acids that join together in different permutation and combinations. What a protein will fold as and function as depends of sequential arrangement of these amino acids.

IMG_20181119_111751.jpg

A protein folds to perform different functions based on its sequence and structure. It can be structural protein, a signal molecule or an enzyme
@scienceblocks

For instance, collagen protein in the tissue can be thought of as a mesh of iron rods supporting the structure of the tissue. Then there are these proteins on the surface of the cells which are always sensing the environment - such as growth factor receptors. And then the growth factors themselves are proteins which acts as signals. Then there are scaffold proteins which keeps the other proteins which need to remain in proximity, close by. Then there are proteins which act like transporters taking cargo on road of cytoskelton proteins. Finally, there are proteins that regulate the gene expression known as transcription factors.

But, all these elegant functions they do will be impossible without enzymes. There are chemical reactions that need to occur in the cells. For instance you need to derive energy by breaking down the glucose molecule. But rate at which the glucose will breakdown by itself is very low for it to be useful for a living cell. So there are these set of proteins which bind to glucose and acts as catalyst easing the rate of reaction.

IMG_20181119_112736.jpg

How do enzymes work?
@scienceblocks

The enzymes confine the molecule in a small pocket called active site. It also forms all kinds of bonds with it such as Hydrogen bonds, ionic bonds and hydrophobic interactions. What confinement and bonding ends up achieving is - 1) it increases the probability of collision between two or more molecules when required when two or more molecules need to combine with each other. It decrease the minimum amount of energy required to break the bonds and start the reaction, aka the activation energy. (If you are thermodynamically inclined, then it makes sure for the reaction change in Gibbs free energy < 0).

The catalysis is required not only to break glucose, or for synthesis of essential compounds like amino acids, DNA bases, and lipids, but also for many non enzymatic proteins described above. For example, body may need to break some proteins at times. Enzymes may modify them by adding a phosphate group or acetyl group on the surface of other proteins, which may act as molecular switch to turn some proteins on and off.

The protein that replicates the DNA and assures that the life goes on - DNA polymerase- is an enzyme that eases the formation of phosphodieaster bond. I mean that is not a joke - you have to bring two highly negatively charged molecules of DNA bases with phosphate groups together, and make them form a covalent bond. The protein that reads the DNA and copy its message to mRNA, is an enzyme called RNA polymerase. Well, mRNA is just a molecule carrying the message of DNA to ribosomes, where this message is read and translated into a protein.

RNA is no saint either!

PK-G12rRNA_secondary_structure.jpg

2D folding of 23S rRNA, that catalyzes peptide bond formation.
A public domain image from rfam database

You thought only proteins can be enzymes? Have you thought about RNA. No you only think about yourself!

To make a protein you need to put amino acids together by forming a peptide bond. The catalytic activity for formation of this bond is not provided by protein but rather via ribosomal RNA (rRNA). Just like proteins RNA is also capable to fold onto itself and form 3D structures. Hence, it is not surprising that RNA can also have catalytic activity. Though, I am sure it was surprising back in 1980s, when Thomas Chec and Altman got a Nobel Prize for showing catalytic activity of RNA in 1989. The fact that RNA is a molecule that can store genetic information and as well as catalyze reaction it made many wonder that what if RNA molecules we're indeed the first men to inhibit the earth! Well that's the RNA world hypothesis for origin of life - where RNA is the genetic code and at the same time an enzyme / a polymerase that makes its own copies.

Anyway, in a nutshell a protein is polymer of amino acids, polymerized via peptide bonds. But enzymes are any polymers - be it Protein or even RNA that are capable to act as catalysts. So neither all proteins are enzymes, nor all enzymes are proteins.

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For some reason it took me forever to learn that ribozymes were RNA strands that functioned as enzymes. It's a super cool, but rather complicated branch of biochemistry.

It's damn interesting. Especially, I find RNA catalyzed RNA polymerization quite intriguing.





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