Enzyme Activity and Assays
Enzyme Activity and Assays
Introductory article
Article Contents
Enzyme activity refers to the general catalytic properties of an enzyme, and enzyme assays
are standardized procedures for measuring the amounts of specific enzymes in a sample.
. Summary
MichaelisMenten
Allosteric 'sigmoid'
Rate
Substrate concentration
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Effect of temperature
Temperature aects enzyme activity in much the same way
as it aects other chemical reactions. Rates increase by
between 4 and 8% per degree C, although at high
temperatures denaturation of the enzyme protein decreases product formation. Thus it is important when
carrying out an enzyme assay to ensure that the temperature remains constant, and also that you know exactly
what it is. For comparison with other results that may have
been reported at other temperatures, the exact temperature
coecient should be known; if not, a gure of 6% per
degree is a useful approximation.
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Continuous assays
The alternative to a stopped assay is a continuous one in
which the progress of the reaction is followed as it occurs.
Continuous assays are much more convenient in that the
result is seen immediately, and any deviation the initial rate
shows from linearity can be observed. On the other hand
not all enzymes have an assay method that can be observed
continuously. The simplest continuous assay is one in
which the action of the enzyme itself can be followed by
changes in absorbance (e.g. NAD(P)H at 340 nm with
dehydrogenases), uorescence, viscosity, pH, or one of
several other possible physical parameters. In many
examples of hydrolase assays, an articial substrate which
releases a coloured or uorescent product is used. But most
enzymes do not produce any change in a readily detectable
physical parameter by their activity. This can be overcome
using a coupled continuous method. In this process, the
product is acted on further (usually by other enzymes that
are added to the mixture), until an ultimate product is
formed which can be observed physically. A great
advantage of coupled assays is that the product is removed,
so helping to keep the measured rate constant over a long
period by avoiding product inhibition and reversal of
reaction.
Sucrose
Fructose + Glucose
1. Stopped assay. Measure reducing sugars (F + G) with the SomogyiNelson reagent (chemical)
2. Continous, direct assay. Measure change in optical rotation with polarimeter
This is the original assay, and the reason why the enzyme is called invertase,
as it is an 'inversion' of the rotation
3. Continous coupled assay. Uses glucose oxidase plus peroxidase to produce colour:
Glucose oxidase
Glucose
Gluconate + H2 O2
Peroxidase
Reduced dye
4. Continuous coupled assay. Converts the glucose to glucose 6-phosphate, which is then
oxidized using NAD +
Hexokinase
Glucose
ATP
ADP
Glucose 6-P
dehydrogenase
Glucose 6-P
6-P-Gluconate
+
NAD
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An alternative method involves the use of the farultraviolet, where the absorbance is mainly due to peptide
bonds. Since the peptide bond content is roughly proportional to mass of the protein, this method has relatively
little variability between proteins. It is very sensitive, but
also very susceptible to interference by other compounds
absorbing in the far-uv. By also making a measurement at
280 nm, the contribution in the far range by the aromatic
amino acids (Tyr, Trp) can be corrected for. A formula that
can give the extinction coecient at 205 nm to an accuracy
within 2% is:
O-PQRSPQTR STUVVQSQURP VTW / +X +Y
A]^_
,P ]_c R+ ]g:_ /]_
A]_c
Traditional methods
These have developed over a period of more than a century,
and have reached degrees of sophistication that can enable
rapid purication on scales varying from micrograms to
kilograms. Methods can be divided into categories, a
convenient grouping being the three categories of precipitation, adsorption and in solution methods.
Precipitation methods
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Adsorption methods
There are many adsorbents for proteins. They include ion
exchangers, specic anity adsorbents, hydrophobic and
mixed-function materials. Adsorption is generally carried
out in columns as chromatography. A mixture of proteins
containing the desired enzyme is applied to the column,
and if it is adsorbed, a change in buer properties is used to
elute it. By using subtle gradients of buer, a high degree of
resolution between dierent proteins can be obtained, and
so a high degree of purication of the desired enzyme.
Anity adsorbents are designed to interact specically
with the desired enzyme, either through its active site, or
with some other surface feature of the enzyme. The
interacting ligand is chemically attached to neutral beads
which constitute the adsorbent in the column. This ligand
can be an antibody to the enzyme, making an immunoadsorbent. Antibody columns are highly specic, but there
are many problems in using them on a routine basis.
Anity adsorbents are also used for modied proteins, as
described below. A further class is the pseudoanity or
biomimetic adsorbents, which consist of ligands that do
not necessarily resemble any known feature of the enzyme,
but which have been discovered by empirical experimentation to have a specic interaction with it. Important among
these are numerous dye molecules which interact with
proteins by a variety of electrostatic, hydrophobic and
other forces.
In solution methods
The third category of protein separation methods consists
of a group in which the proteins remain in solution while
the separation takes place. These are in turn either
electrophoretic separations based on net charge, or
ultraltration in which separation is by molecular size
by diusion through pores in a membrane or in a bead
particle. Electrophoresis separates principally according to
the charges on the protein molecules, and in some systems
by their relative size also. Although widely used for
analysis of protein mixtures, electrophoresis has had less
success as a preparative system, despite being an early
development in protein studies. The main problem is in the
design of suitable equipment that is easy and safe to use.
The ultraltration methods separate by molecular size,
and include procedures such as forcing samples through
porous membranes that do not allow the larger proteins
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column, which coordinates with the histidines. Alternatively there are several sequences that are recognized by
antibodies, and many other systems. If necessary, the tag
can be removed by specic proteolysis, but usually the
presence of a short tag does not aect the enzymes
properties. Some tags are very large; for instance whole
proteins such as glutathione S-transferase, which binds to a
glutathione column, and a maltose-binding protein which
binds to an amylose column. The main advantage of these
whole-protein tag systems is that the expression level of an
otherwise poorly expressed protein is much enhanced. But
because of the large tag, it is preferable to remove it after
purication; this is not always a simple matter.
Summary
For consistent and reproducible results, an enzyme assay
should be carried out in well-dened conditions that can be
duplicated in other laboratories. The parameters of
substrate concentration, pH and buer type, ionic strength
and temperature must be controlled. This will dene how
much enzyme is present in a sample compared with others,
Further Reading
Brooks SPJ and Suelter CH (1989) Review: practical aspects of coupling
enzyme theory. Analytical Biochemistry 176: 114.
Eisenthal R and Danson MJ (1992) Enzyme Assays: A Practical
Approach. Oxford: IRL Press.
Engel PC (ed.) (1996) Enzymology Labfax. Oxford: Bios Scientic.
Price NC and Stevens L (1989) Fundamentals of Enzymes. Oxford:
Oxford University Press.
Purich DL (ed.) (1996) Contemporary Enzyme Kinetics and Mechanisms.
New York: Academic Press.
Rossomando EF (1990) Measurement of enzyme activity. Methods in
Enzymology 182: 3849.
Scopes RK (1993) Protein Purication, Principles and Practice. New
York: Springer-Verlag.
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF LIFE SCIENCES / & 2002 Macmillan Publishers Ltd, Nature Publishing Group / www.els.net