Cleland W W, Kreevoy M M
Institute for Enzyme Research, University of Wisconsin, Madison 53705.
Science. 1994 Jun 24;264(5167):1887-90. doi: 10.1126/science.8009219.
Formation of a short (less than 2.5 angstroms), very strong, low-barrier hydrogen bond in the transition state, or in an enzyme-intermediate complex, can be an important contribution to enzymic catalysis. Formation of such a bond can supply 10 to 20 kilocalories per mole and thus facilitate difficult reactions such as enolization of carboxylate groups. Because low-barrier hydrogen bonds form only when the pKa's (negative logarithm of the acid constant) of the oxygens or nitrogens sharing the hydrogen are similar, a weak hydrogen bond in the enzyme-substrate complex in which the pKa's do not match can become a strong, low-barrier one if the pKa's become matched in the transition state or enzyme-intermediate complex. Several examples of enzymatic reactions that appear to use this principle are presented.
在过渡态或酶 - 中间体复合物中形成短(小于2.5埃)、非常强、低能垒的氢键,可能是对酶催化的重要贡献。形成这样的键每摩尔可提供10至20千卡能量,从而促进诸如羧酸盐基团烯醇化等困难反应。由于低能垒氢键仅在共享氢的氧或氮的pKa(酸常数的负对数)相似时形成,如果在过渡态或酶 - 中间体复合物中pKa匹配,那么在酶 - 底物复合物中pKa不匹配的弱氢键可以变成强的、低能垒的氢键。本文给出了一些似乎利用这一原理的酶促反应实例。