REVIEW: The Role of Active Site Flexibility in Enzyme Catalysis
Chen-Lu Tsou
National Laboratory of Biomacromolecules, Institute of Biophysics,
Academia Sinica, Beijing 100101, China; fax: +86-10-6202-2026; E-mail:
cltsou@sun5.ibp.ac.cn
Received July 24, 1997
It has been shown in this and other laboratories that during the
unfolding of a number of enzymes inactivation generally precedes global
unfolding of the enzyme molecule, leading to the suggestion that enzyme
active sites are usually more "fragile" and more easily
"perturbed" than the molecule as a whole and are therefore
conformationally more flexible than the rest of the molecule. However,
the role of active site flexibility in enzyme catalysis still remains
to be explored. In the induced fit hypothesis originally proposed by
Koshland, the presence of the substrate induces a conformational change
at the active site so as to fit with the structure of the substrate. By
X-ray crystallographic structural analysis of E. coli
dihydrofolate reductase liganded with cofactors and substrates, Sawaya
and Kraut showed the enzyme in different conformational states indeed
while complexed with different ligands, suggesting that the enzyme
molecule passes through different conformational states through the
whole process of catalysis. Muscle lactate dehydrogenase can be
stabilized either in concentrated ammonium sulfate or by cross-linking
with glutaraldehyde together with a decrease in enzyme activity which
can be restored to the original level in dilute guanidine hydrochloride
possibly by increased flexibility at the active site. It is known that
a number of enzymes can be activated by chaotropic agents such as urea
or guanidine hydrochloride. The activation of dihydrofolate reductase
by either urea or guanidine hydrochloride is accompanied by an increase
in susceptibility to proteolysis. Isolation of the tryptic peptides of
the activated enzyme and sequence analysis allowed identification of
the sites of proteolysis to be at or near the active site of the
enzyme, indicating an opening up of the active site conformation in the
activated state. All the above indicate that active site flexibility
plays an important role in enzyme catalysis. It is possible that during
the catalytic cycle, the enzyme molecule passes through different
stages and each stage requires the molecule to be in a different
conformation, especially at the active site. Rapid transition between
the different conformational states, and hence the flexibility of the
active site, is therefore mandatory for the maximal expression of
enzyme activity.
KEY WORDS: enzyme catalysis, flexibility of active site, enzyme
inactivation, dihydrofolate reductase, lactate dehydrogenase