I am a bit confused about this paragraph because I am really new to this topic. So thanks to our friends at wiki, theta is defined as "fraction of occupied sites where the ligand can bind to the active site of the receptor protein". Are you saying, hypothetically speaking, if the hill coefficient is large (positive cooperativity?) and we apply pressure (Like actual pressure, a bit confused by this) this will bring about a large change in the fraction of sites that are occupied before and after the pressure is applied. And since we want to transport things this indicates that sites are opening/or being occupied and therefore we have an active transporter. I am really trying to understand this but I don't think I am getting it.
An important concept when thinking about the regulation of enzyme activity is the concept of dynamic range or sensitivity. Basically, for substrate concentration to regulate enzyme activity, varying the substrate concentration has to have an effect on enzyme activity. At very low substrate concentrations, the enzyme activity is essentially zero, so varying the substrate concentration will not have much of an effect on an enzyme's activity. At very high substrate concentrations, the enzyme is saturated (i.e. working at V
max), so increasing the substrate concentration will not increase the enzyme's activity any further. Only at intermediate substrate concentrations will variations in the concentration of substrate have an appreciable effect on the enzyme's activity. Another way of thinking about this is the range of concentrations where the enzyme goes from inactive to fully active (say going from 10% of V
max to 90% of V
max).
For a non-cooperative enzyme, enzyme activity is most sensitive to substrate concentration when the substrate concentration is near the K
M of the substrate. The dynamic range (the range of concentrations where the enzyme goes from inactive to fully active) extends from ~0.1K
M to ~10K
M.
Enzymes that display cooperative behavior, however, display a much reduced dynamic range. As a result, for most substrate concentrations, the enzyme will be either inactive or fully active, but in the small range around the K
M of the enzyme, smaller changes in concentration will have larger effects on enzyme activity. As a result, enzymes or processes that display positive cooperativity are often called
ultrasensitive or switch-like in their activity (an enzyme that exhibits infinite cooperativity would be completely inactive below a certain concentration of substrate and fully active above that concentration).
Negative cooperativity has the opposite effect: it makes the dynamic range of the enzyme larger. Enzyme activity varies over a larger range of concentration values, but in this region, changes to the concentration of substrate do not cause very large changes in enzyme activity.
Thus, one reason enzymes have evolved cooperative behavior has been to tune their sensitivity of their activity to substrate concentrations.
What kind of experiment do they usually do to determine the binding of the ligand for the protein? (fluorescene polarization, ITC, or SPR?) I am just curious as how these experiments are usually conduced. What you are saying makes sense. So one always looks for the hill coefficient to get any clues regarding cooperativity. And this only applies to proteins that have more than just one binding site cause, well, that makes sense this does not apply to myoglobin as Babcok mentioned.
Any type of binding experiment would work as long as you can get a reliable estimate of the free ligand concentration and the fraction of binding sites occupied. The details of how you would back out these numbers, of course, depend on the exact method by which they are measured.
For enzymes with only one binding site, you would expect to see non-cooperative behavior (i.e. a Hill coefficient of one). Observing a non-unity Hill coefficient could indicate that the protein you are studying is not monomeric, which could be investigated using techniques such as gel filtration chromatography.