I have been thinking a lot recently about competitive and allosteric inhibition of enzymes. I am very new to the field, so it is possible that I am being stupid. I would appreciate the input of an actual biochemist who understands the math better than I do.
A little background about me: I am a career changing pre-medical student but I deeply hate the medical and pre-medical way of thinking about science. I have no desire to 'just memorize it and get in', I want to understand. I am taking a biochemistry class now, and some of the explanations of inhibition and allosteric regulation are unsatisfying to me, and my instructor is unable to resolve the issues for me. I am here in the hope of getting a good explanation from an actual biochemist. I am not afraid of calculus or molecular biology, so the more thorough the explanation the better. Thank you so much in advance.
I first started thinking about this while reading Voet (p.493) and thinking through the derivations of the Michaelis-Menten equations for competitive and uncompetitive inhibition. These equations are actually only conditional on a competitive inhibitor *blocking* substrate binding, it doesn't have to be by a blockage of the active site. Similarly, an uncompetitive inhibitor doesn't have to bind allosterically, it just has to bind the Michaelis complex in a way that inhibits the actual reaction without blocking substrate binding.
Despite the fact that textbooks and undergrad teachers everywhere claim that competitive inhibition is always by a substrate analog, there appears to me to be nothing in the math that requires this.
Following this line of thought and looking through the literature, I came across the concept of non-classical or allosteric competitive inhibition. A paper by Tippett and Neet in 1982 entitled 'An Allosteric Model for the Inhibition of Glucokinase by Long Chain Acyl Coenzyme A' describes an actual biological feedback loop that makes use of this allosteric competitive inhibition. Another paper (Postma and Catterall 1984) describes an allosteric competitive mechanism for a local anaesthetic, and there are many more similar papers.
There is also a good book from the NIH that discusses what competitive and uncompetitive inhibition actually are in the context of drug discovery:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK92001/They make it quite clear that a competitive inhibitor does not need to be a substrate analog, nor does it need to bind the active site directly. It merely has to reversibly bind in such a way that is mutually exclusive with substrate binding.
Now the core of my confusion here has to do with allosteric regulation. None of my three textbooks (Stryer, Voet, Lehninger) really do a good job of explaining allosteric regulation, at least for me. My fundamental problem with the explanations is that it appears that there is a conflation of the properties of cooperative multi-subunit proteins, which follow n>1 Hill equations (and not the Michaelis-Menten equation (n=1)) with the role of allosteric regulation.
My simplistic understanding of an allosteric site is "a spot on the enzyme that isn't the active site, where some molecule binds either activating or inhibiting the enzyme". That activation/inhibition can come from a modification to the structure that prevents substrate binding or, more rarely, prevents a reaction from happening when substrate is bound. To me, it seems that inhibitory allosteric regulation is generally just non-classical competitive inhibition, or sometimes noncompetitive/uncompetitive inhibition. However, my three textbooks reject this saying that the enzyme kinetics of allosteric enzymes are 'fundamentally different' from examples of inhibition. That argument rings hollow to me, because the reason they cite for this 'fundamental difference' is cooperativity, and has nothing to do with the allosteric regulator itself.
From reading the UC Davis bio and chem wikis and learned that there are different types of allosteric inhibition, 'K systems' which affect K
0.5 but not V
max, and 'V systems' in which V
max is affected but K
M is not. To me this just sounds like competitive and noncompetitive inhibition from an allosteric site within a multi-subunit system. Is there a reason this is not the case?
This actually gets at something else that bothers me: ligand binding, enzyme kinetics, and allosteric regulation are all treated in my class as radically different processes with different equations that must be memorized, but the more I read and think about it, the more it feels like that just is not the case at all. These are the exact same processes with slight modifications in different systems. K
M is essentially the ratio of reactions that form a Michaelis complex to those that break it down, K
d expresses essentially the same thing but in a situation in which the ligand does not react. I know these are not directly comparable, but the similarity between the terms was just not emphasized in my course, and I feel that it was minimized in the textbook also. You already know my confusion over allosteric regulation vs reversible inhibition, and I feel that that falls into the same camp: extremely similar, if not identical processes, in
different systems, used differently by the cell.
So my fundamental questions are: 'Is there a reason that allosteric regulation is not described using the same language as inhibition? Why are non-classical competitive inhibition, noncompetitive, and uncompetitive inhibition not just types of negative allosteric regulation (even if they are generally not a normal part of the system)? Are they really so fundamentally different that they cannot be described similarly? Is there a good, understandable, resource describing the kinetics of allosteric regulation that explains the differences with other forms of inhibition without invoking cooperativity?' These questions may be simple, but what I am really after is a deeper understanding of the regulation of proteins, particularly enzymes, but proteins in general.
Right now, I have a feeling that the fundamental difference comes down to the existence of tense and relaxed states in multi-subunit proteins. However, my understanding was that substrate binding generally induced the R-state and resulted in the expulsion of any allosteric factor that stabilized the T-state. Is that not the case? If it is the case, how is that not just mutually exclusive binding, aka competitive inhibition? Even if that is not the case, what about single subunit allosteric regulation (e.g. Gohara and Di Cera 2011)? In that paper if you define α as (1+r) then the effect of the allosteric regulation on the kinetics would be just αK
M, sounds familiar right?
I tried looking online for a satisfying answer already, but most discussion seems to be a little too vague, or is just people getting confused by the difference between uncompetitive inhibition and allosteric regulation. The literature has a tendency to focus on specific examples (understandably), and I sadly don't have the time to really work my way through all of the relevant papers on the subject to develop and understanding that way. In the absence of time or a good explanation from my textbooks/teachers/the internet, here I am.
Any help would be really appreciated. I don't need this for my exam or any homework, these questions are way above the level of either of those, so this isn't urgent. Any help that goes deeper than just 'competitive inhibition is defined as active site binding' (it really isn't) or 'allosteric regulation only works for multi-subunit proteins' (that doesn't answer the questions here) or "that's the way it is silly" (why?) would be appreciated. Journal references and/or deep explanations/mathematics are particularly welcome. Thanks so much everyone and apologies if I am just being really dumb and missing something obvious, that happens to me frequently.
References
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Voet, Donald, and Judith G. Voet. 2010. Biochemistry, 4th Edition. 4th edition. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley.
Tippett, P. S., and K. E. Neet. 1982. “An Allosteric Model for the Inhibition of Glucokinase by Long Chain Acyl Coenzyme A.” Journal of Biological Chemistry 257 (21): 12846–52.
http://www.jbc.org/content/257/21/12846.
Postma, S. W., and W. A. Catterall. 1984. “Inhibition of Binding of [3H]batrachotoxinin A 20-Alpha-Benzoate to Sodium Channels by Local Anesthetics.” Molecular Pharmacology 25 (2): 219–27.
http://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/25/2/219.
Strelow, John, Walthere Dewe, Phillip W. Iversen, Harold B. Brooks, Jeffrey A. Radding, James McGee, and Jeffrey Weidner. 2004. “Mechanism of Action Assays for Enzymes.” In Assay Guidance Manual, edited by G. Sitta Sittampalam, Nathan P. Coussens, Henrike Nelson, Michelle Arkin, Douglas Auld, Chris Austin, Bruce Bejcek, et al. Bethesda (MD): Eli Lilly & Company and the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences.
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK92001/.
Nelson, David L., and Michael M. Cox. 2012. Lehninger Principles of Biochemistry. 6 edition. New York: W.H. Freeman.
Gohara, David W., and Enrico Di Cera. 2011. “Allostery in Trypsin-like Proteases Suggests New Therapeutic Strategies.” Trends in Biotechnology 29 (11): 577–85. doi:10.1016/j.tibtech.2011.06.001
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3191250/.